BCBetter Calculators

Heart Rate Zone Calculator

Calculate all five heart rate training zones from your age and resting heart rate.

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Enter your values and click Calculate

How It Works

Step 1 — estimate max heart rate: Max HR = 220 − age. This is the most widely used formula despite having a standard deviation of ±10–12 bpm; a lab or field test provides a more precise figure. Step 2 — calculate Heart Rate Reserve (HRR): HRR = Max HR − resting HR. HRR represents the functional range of your heart rate from rest to maximum effort. Step 3 — apply the Karvonen formula for each zone boundary: Target HR = (HRR × intensity percentage) + resting HR. Zone 1 uses 50–60% of HRR, Zone 2 uses 60–70%, Zone 3 uses 70–80%, Zone 4 uses 80–90%, and Zone 5 uses 90–100%. Because resting HR is added back, zones for a fit person (low resting HR) are lower than for a sedentary person of the same age.

Examples

Healthy Adult
35 years old, resting heart rate 60 bpm.
Result: Max HR 185. Zone 2: ~129–147 bpm. Zone 4: ~166–175 bpm.
Fit Older Adult
50 years old, resting heart rate 55 bpm — well-conditioned.
Result: Max HR 170. Zone 2: ~124–143 bpm. Zones shift lower with age.
Beginner Exerciser
28 years old, higher resting heart rate of 75 bpm.
Result: Max HR 192. Zone 1: ~134–142 bpm — elevated by high resting HR.

Frequently Asked Questions

What zone should I train in most?
Zone 2 (aerobic base) is where most endurance experts recommend spending 70–80% of training time. It builds aerobic capacity with low injury risk. Zone 4–5 should be used sparingly — 1–2 sessions per week.
How is this different from the Target Heart Rate Calculator?
The Target Heart Rate Calculator gives a single target for a chosen intensity. This calculator gives all five zones at once for full training plan visibility.
Is 220 minus age accurate for everyone?
It's an estimate with a standard deviation of ±10–12 bpm. If you've had a lab or field max HR test, use that value for more accurate zones.

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