Калькулятор Вікової Оцінки Бігу – Показник Ефективності
Calculate your age-graded running performance score. Compare your time to world-class athletes of your age and gender using the WMA age-grading tables.
Як користуватися цим калькулятором
- Введіть Age (years)
- Введіть Gender
- Введіть Distance
- Введіть Finish Time – Hours
- Введіть Finish Time – Minutes
- Натисніть кнопку Розрахувати
- Прочитайте результат, відображений під калькулятором
What is Age-Graded Running Performance?
Age-graded running performance compares your race time to the world-record standard for your specific age and gender, expressed as a percentage. A 100% age-graded score would mean you matched the age-group world record. Most competitive masters athletes score between 60–80%; elite age-groupers can exceed 85%.
Age grading tables were developed by the World Association of Veteran Athletes (WAVA, now World Masters Athletics) and updated periodically by World Athletics. The tables use regression analysis of peak age-group performances to model how physiological decline affects race times across the lifespan. The current standard tables (last updated 2015, with WMA-2023 in development) cover distances from 100m to 100 miles.
Age grading serves two key purposes: (1) fair comparison between masters athletes of different ages — enabling fair competition in age-group categories, and (2) tracking your own performance trend over time relative to your potential. A runner who runs slower at age 65 than at 40 might have a higher age-graded score, meaning they've actually improved relative to their age-adjusted capacity.
Example: A 60-year-old woman running a 1:55 half marathon. The age-graded open standard for her age/gender might be 1:26 (based on world records for that age group). Her age-graded score = 1:26 / 1:55 = 75.2% — an excellent performance for a competitive masters athlete.
Age-Graded Score Interpretation Table
Understanding what your age-graded percentage means in context:
| Age-Graded % | Level | Description |
|---|---|---|
| 90%+ | World Class | Among the best in the world for your age. World record territory. |
| 80–90% | National Class | Elite masters competitor. Qualifying for international age-group championships. |
| 70–80% | Regional Class | Highly competitive masters runner. Top 5–10% nationally for age group. |
| 60–70% | Local Class | Competitive recreational runner. Strong age-group placer at local level. |
| 50–60% | Above Average | Active recreational runner with consistent training. |
| 40–50% | Average | Typical recreational runner / fitness participant. |
| Below 40% | Beginner | Just getting started. All upside from here. |
Age-graded scores allow a meaningful comparison between a 70-year-old and a 30-year-old who both run marathons. The 70-year-old running 3:45 might outscore the 30-year-old running 3:30 on an age-graded basis, reflecting superior performance relative to physiological capacity.
How Performance Declines with Age: The Science
Running performance declines with age primarily because of changes in the cardiovascular and musculoskeletal systems. Understanding these changes helps masters athletes train most effectively:
- VO2 max: Decreases ~1% per year after age 25 for sedentary individuals; 0.5–0.7% per year for active runners. Driven mainly by reduction in maximal cardiac output (max heart rate × stroke volume).
- Maximal heart rate: Declines approximately 1 beat per minute per year. The 220-minus-age formula is a rough estimate; individual variation is large (±10–15 bpm).
- Muscle mass and strength: Sarcopenia (age-related muscle loss) reduces strength and power from the 30s onward. Strength training can largely offset this for runners.
- Tendon stiffness: Tendons become less stiff with age, reducing elastic energy return with each running stride — affecting economy more than VO2 max.
- Recovery capacity: Slower muscle repair and higher inflammatory response mean masters athletes need more recovery time between hard sessions.
The decline is not linear: performance is relatively stable from ages 25–35, accelerates from 35–50, and decelerates as the rate of loss moderates in older age groups. Masters runners who maintain high training volume see significantly slower decline than those who reduce volume.
Training Adjustments for Masters Runners
A 50-year-old runner cannot train identically to a 25-year-old and expect the same outcomes. Evidence-based modifications for masters athletes:
- Increase recovery between hard sessions: Instead of quality work every 3–4 days, masters runners typically need 5–7 days. This means fewer quality sessions per week (2 instead of 3) but maintaining intensity on those sessions.
- Prioritize strength training: Adding 2 strength sessions per week (targeting glutes, hamstrings, calf complex, and core) largely offsets sarcopenia and maintains running economy. Strength training is one of the highest-value interventions for masters athletes.
- Maintain some intensity: Research shows masters athletes who eliminate high-intensity training lose fitness faster than those who maintain it even at reduced volume. Keep at least one threshold or interval session per week.
- More warm-up, longer cooldown: Cold starts are riskier after age 40. Spend 10–15 minutes warming up gradually before any quality effort. Stiffness on easy days is normal — don't mistake first-mile stiffness for injury.
- Prioritize sleep: Recovery hormones (GH, IGF-1) that peak during deep sleep are crucial for muscle repair. Masters athletes benefit more from 8–9 hours than younger athletes who can recover well on less.
Age-Graded Equivalent Performances Across Distances
Age-graded tables can tell you what time you 'should' be able to run at various distances given your best performance at one distance and your age. This is useful for setting realistic multi-distance goals.
Sample equivalent age-graded performances for a 55-year-old male with a marathon PR of 3:30:
| Distance | Age-Graded Equivalent | Open Equivalent |
|---|---|---|
| 5K | 21:00 | 19:20 (open age-graded) |
| 10K | 43:30 | 40:00 |
| Half Marathon | 1:38:00 | 1:30:00 |
| Marathon | 3:30:00 | 3:10:00 |
Note: these are approximations. Actual age-graded factors vary by distance and age. The point is that a masters runner's 3:30 marathon may represent equivalent fitness to a 30-year-old's 3:10 marathon — something raw time comparisons miss entirely.
For competitive masters athletes, age-graded scores are a more motivating performance metric than absolute times. Seeing your age-graded score improve from 68% to 72% over a training year represents genuine fitness gains, regardless of what the clock shows.
Setting Masters Running Goals with Age Grading
Age grading provides a framework for setting ambitious but realistic performance goals across a running career:
- Tracking career progress: Calculate your age-graded score for each PR at each age. If your score has been consistently around 65% and you can push it to 68%, that's meaningful performance improvement.
- Cross-age comparison: Compare your current age-graded scores to your scores from 5–10 years ago. If you're maintaining or improving your %, you're beating the statistical aging curve — a genuine accomplishment.
- Setting achievable PRs: As you age, raw PRs become increasingly difficult to match. Age-group PRs (performances that surpass your previous age-group best) are a motivating alternative goal structure. Many masters runners set 10-year PRs — best-ever performances in their current decade of age.
- Predicting peak masters performance: Some physiologists use career age-grading trajectories to estimate peak masters performance. If your open-age performances peaked at 70% age-graded, projecting forward into your 60s and 70s at the same % gives time predictions that account for expected decline.
Останнє оновлення: March 2026
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a good age-graded running score?
Scores above 60% are above average for recreational runners. 60–70% is local-competitive level. 70–80% is regionally elite masters runner level. Above 80% is national-class masters performance. Most recreational masters runners score 45–65%.
How is age-graded performance calculated?
Age-graded % = (Age-standard time ÷ Your time) × 100. The age-standard is the world record performance for your specific age and gender at that distance, taken from World Masters Athletics tables. A 100% score equals the world record for your age group.
Are age-grading tables accurate?
Age-grading tables are statistical models based on peak performances across age groups. They're accurate at the population level but individual variation means your personal physiological aging rate may differ. The tables are periodically updated as masters athletes continue to improve records. The 2015 World Masters Athletics tables are currently most widely used.
At what age does running performance decline?
Performance typically starts declining around age 30–35, with the rate accelerating after 50. However, the decline is much slower for active runners than sedentary people — trained masters runners maintain a VO2 max equivalent to sedentary people 20 years younger. Many runners run personal bests (absolute times) well into their 40s with consistent training.
Can I compare my marathon time to a faster younger runner using age grading?
Yes, that's exactly what age grading is designed for. If you're 60 and run 4:00, your age-graded % might exceed that of a 30-year-old who runs 3:00 — meaning your performance relative to your physiological potential is actually better. Age grading makes this objective comparison possible.
How do I improve my age-graded score?
Improve your absolute race time relative to your age-group world record standard. This comes from the same methods as improving general running performance: consistent training, quality workouts, strength training (especially important for masters), adequate recovery, and good nutrition. Masters runners who add strength training often see age-graded scores improve even as raw times slightly decline.
Do women have higher age-graded scores than men for the same absolute time?
Yes — women's age-graded scores are calculated against female world records, which are slower in absolute terms than men's records. A woman running 3:30 marathon gets a higher age-graded % than a man running 3:30, because the female world record standard is slower. This makes age grading gender-fair for comparison within sex categories.