AlphaPeak

400m Pace Lab

The definitive 400m pacing resource. 100m split analysis with differential tracking and speed endurance metrics from the world's greatest quarter-milers.

39 Men · 37 Women · 1968–2025

The Art of 400m Pacing

How the world's best athletes pace the 400m.

The Differential: Key to Performance

The 400m is defined by the differential — the time difference between the first 200m and second 200m. Elite men average 1.3-1.9s differential, while elite women average 1.5-2.5s. A smaller differential indicates better speed endurance and more disciplined pacing.

Even pacing (reference): Michael Johnson's 43.18 from Seville (1999) is the classic tight line — only a 0.74s differential between 200m halves (21.22 + 21.96). Current world record: Wayde van Niekerk's 43.03 in Rio (2016) is faster overall with a larger +1.87s differential — more front-loaded, then holding on — showing record pace does not require the smallest split gap. For contrast, Kirani James' 43.76 Olympic win carried a 2.54s differential: explosive start, pronounced fade.

Two Schools of Pacing

Elite 400m mixes even pacing (Johnson, Reynolds) with front-loaded WR attempts (van Niekerk): you can break the record with a bigger differential if your peak speed and speed endurance align. Slower differentials are not always slower clocks — they reflect how evenly the athlete trades energy across the lap.

The Final 100m

Regardless of strategy, every 400m runner slows in the final 100m. The fastest segment is almost always 100-200m (the "free speed" portion after acceleration, before significant fatigue). The 300-400m segment accounts for 26-29% of total race time depending on performance level — a higher percentage indicates greater fatigue-induced deceleration.

Split Distribution by Performance Tier
How each segment's share of total time changes across performance levels.
Velocity Profile
Speed (m/s) per segment for the top performances. Your target is overlaid when using the calculator.
Differential Analysis
Finish time vs. half-race differential, with a least-squares trend line. Lower differential = more even pacing between halves.
Pacing Trends
How first and last segment percentages have evolved over time.

Pace Calculator

Enter a target 400m time and gender to get recommended split targets based on elite pacing data.

Men's 400m Split Database

Elite race split data sourced from official timing systems and biomechanical analyses.

Women's 400m Split Database

Elite race split data from the world's top performers.

Pacing Models by Performance Tier

Average split distribution percentages derived from the database, organized by performance level.

Men's Models

Women's Models

About & Sources

This database compiles 400m race split times from major international competitions. All data comes from official timing systems and published biomechanical analyses.

The pacing calculator uses split distribution percentages derived from this database, adjusted for gender and performance level. The model interpolates between performance tiers to generate smooth, realistic pacing recommendations.

Key features: Confidence bands show the typical range of split variation among athletes at similar performance levels. The database ranking shows where your target time falls among recorded elite performances.

Primary Sources