A lot of athletes want to know what’s an appropriate pace when swimming. Unfortunately, there’s not one answer for every person in every situation.
It will depend a lot on your experience, the distance you’re trying to cover, and the environment you’re trying to cover it in.
This article will try to provide insight by providing different paces in different contexts, information you can use to determine what’s appropriate for you.
In almost every situation, the best approach is to find out where you’re at right now and aim to get better over time!
A good swimming pace in the pool will be determined by your ability levels as well as the distance that you’re swimming over. The first step in determining an appropriate pace for you is to start paying attention.
Note what pace you use over various distances. You can also perform several time trials over several distances and note your speed. You can use these results as a baseline to evaluate progress and for comparison.
Swimming speed in open water will often be dramatically slower than in a pool. This effect can be even more dramatic depending on weather conditions, and it affects different individuals differently.
You can expect to swim 5-20 seconds slower per 100m depending on the circumstances and the individual.
As a frame of reference, elite 10km open-water swimmers can finish their race well under 2 hours, which equates to a pace of 1:12/100m. These are elite athletes focusing exclusively on swimming, so adjust your expectations accordingly!
The world record over 100m for men is current 46.8 seconds (David Popovici, August 2022, see main image) and the world record for women is 51.7 seconds (Sarah Sjöström, 2017).
For someone without a competitive swimming background, swimming 100m under 60 seconds is exceptional and swimming under 1:10 is very good as well.
Different strokes will have a different impact on swimming speed and pace. Far and away, freestyle swimming is the fastest and most sustainable stroke.
For those comfortable with it, backstroke is also sustainable, although not as fast as freestyle.
Butterfly swimming can be fast over very short distance, but most individuals find it incredibly difficult to sustain speed with butterfly.
While breaststroke is the slowest stroke, many find it so be sustainable due to the ease of breathing.
The top 10% of Ironman swim legs average around 1:35 per 100m. However, pro triathletes that excel at the swim can achieve performances of under 1:20 per 100m for the women and under 1:15 per 100m for the men, depending on the water conditions.
Smooth water, the addition of a wetsuit, and a current will all aid performance. There can be a very large range of paces used by pro triathletes depending on their relative skill in the swim. Some excel, while others use it to prepare for the upcoming legs of the race.
Swimming 1km in 30 minutes is averaging 3:00 minutes/100 meters, which is not very fast assuming standard conditions. With proper instruction and training, many individuals are capable of achieving performances that are faster than this.
As typical Ironman swim performance average around 2:00 minutes/100 meters, 3:00 minutes is below average. However, that means there is a lot of opportunity for improvement!
At this level of performance, the fastest way to get faster is often through better body position, which can be improved through exercises like the Ball Float:
At the elite levels of pool swimming, men can swim 1km in under 10 minutes whereas elite women can swim it in less than 10:30.
When it comes to open-water swimming for the non-elites, swimming 1km in a time of under 20 is respectable and under 15 minutes is very good.
A good swim workout is one that challenges you and helps you move closer to your goals. If that can be accomplished in 1,000 meters, it’s absolutely a great swim workout for you.
Once the distance becomes manageable, or once more swimming is required to accomplish your goals, you may need to swim for longer.
Those aiming to compete over the Olympic triathlon distance or longer will need to complete longer workouts, at least on occasion.
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