Triathlon Cutoff Calculator
The clock is brutal at a full-distance race. Enter your planned paces and see whether you'll beat the swim, bike and overall cutoffs — and by how much. Free, instant, fully editable.
The clock is brutal at a full-distance race. Enter your planned paces and see whether you'll beat the swim, bike and overall cutoffs — and by how much. Free, instant, fully editable.
Cutoffs are measured from the race start (the gun), not from when you personally start — so they're cumulative. Miss one and your day ends there. The standard limits:
| Checkpoint | Full (140.6) | Half (70.3) |
|---|---|---|
| Swim done by | 2:20 | ~1:10 |
| Bike done by | 10:30 | ~5:30 |
| Overall finish | 17:00 | ~8:30 |
Many races also have mid-bike and mid-run "sweep" cutoffs. The biggest danger zone for most age-groupers is the bike cutoff — a slow swim plus a steady-but-modest bike can leave too little margin. Aim to exit the swim comfortably under its limit and protect your bike pace.
Standard cutoffs shown; your specific race may differ. Always confirm in the official athlete guide.
17 hours overall for a full Ironman (a midnight finish from a 7am start), with a 2:20 swim cutoff and the bike done by 10:30. A 70.3 is typically 8:30 overall.
Usually the bike cutoff. A slow swim eats into the time you have to finish the bike by 10:30, so exit the water with margin and keep the bike steady.
No — they run from the official race start. With a rolling swim start, your personal clock and the cutoff clock differ slightly; this tool assumes a mass-start basis. Check your race's timing rules.