Why Treadmill Pace Doesn't Match Outdoor Pace
Two factors. First, on a treadmill the belt does some of the work — you're not propelling yourself across a fixed surface, you're cycling your legs to keep up with a moving floor. Second, no air resistance. Outdoors, even on a still day, your body pushes through air, which adds about 2-7% to energy cost depending on speed.
The standard fix: run at 1% incline on the treadmill to approximate outdoor flat-road effort at the same pace. The 1% correction comes from a 1996 Jones & Doust study and has held up reasonably well in follow-ups for paces between roughly 7:00/mile and 11:00/mile.
The Math (ACSM Energy-Cost Formula)
The calculator uses the American College of Sports Medicine's gross VO2 formula for running:
VO2 (ml/kg/min) = (0.2 × horizontal velocity) + (0.9 × vertical velocity) + 3.5Where velocity is in meters per minute, and vertical velocity = horizontal velocity × grade (as a decimal). The 0.2 coefficient is the cost of running on flat ground; the 0.9 coefficient is the extra cost per unit of climbing.
To convert outdoor pace at 0% grade to treadmill speed at grade g:
- Convert your outdoor pace into velocity in m/min.
- Compute your VO2 demand at that flat velocity.
- Solve for the treadmill velocity that produces the same VO2 at your chosen incline:
v_treadmill = (0.2 × v_outdoor) / (0.2 + 0.9 × grade) - Convert v_treadmill back to mph, kph, and pace.
At 1% grade the formula gives a treadmill speed about 4-5% slower than outdoor pace — close to the empirical Jones & Doust result.
When to Use the Treadmill
- Precise hill repeats. Find me an outdoor hill that's a steady 6% for exactly 90 seconds. A treadmill solves this.
- Bad weather. Ice, lightning, sub-zero windchill. The plan beats the courage to skip.
- Tempo runs. A treadmill enforces a constant pace — useful for runners who drift on tempos.
- Recovery from injury. Lower impact than asphalt; some plyometric benefit even at 1% grade.
Avoid making the treadmill your default for long runs if your goal race is outdoors. The gait is slightly different and the mental work of a 20-miler indoors is brutal.
See also: VDOT calculator for setting outdoor goal paces, and the heat-adjusted pace calculator for the opposite problem — adjusting outdoor pace down when the weather is hot.