Average Speed Calculator
Track your average speed with our free sports calculator. Get personalized stats, rankings, and performance comparisons.
Formula
Average Speed = Total Distance / Total Time
Where Total Distance is measured in miles or kilometers, and Total Time includes all time spent traveling including stops. Speed can be expressed in mph, km/h, m/s, or knots.
Worked Examples
Example 1: Road Trip Average Speed
Problem: You drive 150 miles in 2 hours and 30 minutes. What is your average speed?
Solution: Total time = 2 hours + 30/60 hours = 2.5 hours\nAverage speed = 150 miles / 2.5 hours = 60 mph\nConverted: 60 x 1.60934 = 96.56 km/h\nIn m/s: 60 x 0.44704 = 26.82 m/s\nPace: 2.5 hours / 150 miles = 1 min per mile
Result: Average Speed: 60 mph (96.56 km/h | 26.82 m/s)
Example 2: Marathon Runner Pace
Problem: A runner completes a marathon (42.195 km) in 3 hours and 45 minutes. What is the average speed?
Solution: Total time = 3 + 45/60 = 3.75 hours\nAverage speed = 42.195 km / 3.75 hours = 11.25 km/h\nConverted to mph: 11.25 / 1.60934 = 6.99 mph\nPace: 3.75 x 60 / 42.195 = 5:20 per km\nPace per mile: 8:35 per mile
Result: Average Speed: 11.25 km/h (6.99 mph) | Pace: 5:20/km
Frequently Asked Questions
How do you calculate average speed?
Average speed is calculated by dividing the total distance traveled by the total time taken to travel that distance. The formula is straightforward: Average Speed equals Total Distance divided by Total Time. For example, if you drive 150 miles in 2 hours and 30 minutes (2.5 hours), your average speed is 150 divided by 2.5, which equals 60 mph. It is important to note that average speed is different from instantaneous speed, which is your speed at any given moment. Average speed smooths out all the accelerations, decelerations, stops, and speed variations over the entire journey into a single representative value. The units depend on your distance and time units.
What is the difference between average speed and average velocity?
Average speed and average velocity are related but distinct concepts in physics. Average speed is a scalar quantity that measures total distance traveled divided by total time, regardless of direction. Average velocity is a vector quantity that measures displacement (straight-line distance from start to finish) divided by total time. For example, if you drive 100 miles north then 100 miles south in 4 hours total, your average speed is 200 miles divided by 4 hours equals 50 mph. However, your average velocity is zero because your displacement is zero since you returned to your starting point. Average speed is always positive and always greater than or equal to the magnitude of average velocity.
How does average speed apply to multi-segment trips?
For multi-segment trips, average speed must be calculated using total distance divided by total time, not by averaging the speeds of individual segments. This is a common mistake that leads to incorrect results. For example, if you drive 60 miles at 60 mph (1 hour) and then 60 miles at 30 mph (2 hours), the average speed is 120 miles divided by 3 hours, which equals 40 mph, not the arithmetic mean of 45 mph. The reason is that you spend more time at the slower speed, which pulls the average down. This concept is known as the harmonic mean and is the correct way to average rates. The formula for two equal-distance segments is: Average Speed equals 2 times Speed1 times Speed2 divided by the sum of Speed1 plus Speed2.
What are typical average speeds for different modes of transportation?
Average speeds vary widely by transportation mode and conditions. Walking speed averages 3 to 4 mph or about 5 to 6 km/h. Recreational cycling averages 10 to 15 mph while professional cyclists sustain 25 to 30 mph. City driving typically averages 20 to 35 mph due to traffic lights and congestion, while highway driving averages 55 to 75 mph depending on the road and traffic. Passenger trains average 50 to 80 mph for conventional rail and 150 to 220 mph for high-speed rail systems. Commercial aircraft cruise at approximately 550 mph or 885 km/h. Container ships travel at 12 to 16 knots, roughly 14 to 18 mph. These averages include stops, acceleration, and deceleration, so actual cruising speeds are typically higher than the stated averages.
Is my data stored or sent to a server?
No. All calculations run entirely in your browser using JavaScript. No data you enter is ever transmitted to any server or stored anywhere. Your inputs remain completely private.
Can I share or bookmark my calculation?
You can bookmark the calculator page in your browser. Many calculators also display a shareable result summary you can copy. The page URL stays the same so returning to it will bring you back to the same tool.