Target Heart Rate Calculator

Find your ideal exercise heart rate zones.

Your Details

Enter your information to calculate target heart rate zones.

years
bpm

Estimated Max Heart Rate

190 bpm

Target Heart Rate Zones

Light Intensity (50-60%)

130 - 142 bpm

Easy, conversational pace. Good for recovery and building aerobic base.

Moderate Intensity (60-70%)

142 - 154 bpm

Aerobic zone. Comfortable but with some effort. Improves cardiovascular fitness.

Vigorous Intensity (70-80%)

154 - 166 bpm

Hard effort. Improves VO2 max and lactate threshold.

High Intensity (80-90%)

166 - 178 bpm

Very hard effort. For advanced training and interval sessions.

Maximum (90-100%)

178 - 190 bpm

Maximum effort. Used for short bursts in interval training only.

Target Heart Rate Calculator

Everything you need to know

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Comprehensive Guide to Target Heart Rate Zones

Target heart rate is the number of beats per minute (BPM) your heart should reach during exercise to achieve specific fitness benefits. Different exercise intensities produce different cardiovascular adaptations. Training at the right heart rate zone ensures you're working hard enough to make progress without overtraining or training inefficiently.

Your heart rate zones are determined by your maximum heart rate (MHR) — the highest number of beats per minute your heart can achieve during maximum exertion. From this maximum, different intensity zones are calculated as percentages, each serving a different training purpose.

How to Use the Target Heart Rate Calculator

Our target heart rate calculator determines your personalized workout zones:

  1. Enter Your Age

    • Used to estimate your maximum heart rate
    • More accurate than using generic formulas
  2. Enter Your Resting Heart Rate (Optional)

    • For more accurate zone calculation
    • Normal resting heart rate: 60-100 BPM for adults
    • Athletes: 40-60 BPM (lower is better)
  3. Select Your Training Goal

    • Fat loss, cardio fitness, or performance/speed work
  4. View Your Heart Rate Zones

    • Zone-by-zone breakdown with BPM ranges
    • Time recommendations for each zone
    • Training benefits of each zone
    • How to monitor your heart rate during workouts

Maximum Heart Rate Formulas

The Age-Predicted Formula (Karvonen Formula)

The most common method for estimating maximum heart rate:

Formula:

Estimated Maximum Heart Rate = 220 - Age

Example: 30-year-old

  • Max HR = 220 - 30 = 190 BPM

Limitations:

  • Generic formula with ±12 BPM accuracy
  • Less accurate for athletes or those with high fitness levels
  • Individual variation is significant

The Karvonen Formula (Heart Rate Reserve Method)

More accurate method using resting heart rate:

Step 1: Calculate Heart Rate Reserve

HRR = Maximum HR - Resting HR

Step 2: Calculate Target Zone

Target HR = (HRR × Intensity %) + Resting HR

Example: 30-year-old with 60 BPM resting heart rate

  • Max HR = 220 - 30 = 190 BPM
  • HRR = 190 - 60 = 130 BPM
  • For 70% intensity zone: (130 × 0.70) + 60 = 151 BPM

This method is significantly more accurate than the age-predicted formula alone.

The Five Training Zones

Heart rate training divides intensity into distinct zones, each with specific benefits:

Zone 1: Recovery (50-60% Max HR or 50-60% HRR)

Intensity Level: Very Light

Example (30-year-old, Max HR 190):

  • Heart rate range: 95-114 BPM
  • Pace: Conversational, easy to maintain
  • Duration: Can sustain for hours

Training benefits:

  • Active recovery between hard workouts
  • Improves aerobic base without stress
  • Aids recovery and promotes blood flow
  • Low injury risk

Best used for:

  • Easy jog/walk days
  • Warm-ups and cool-downs
  • Recovery days between intense training
  • Building aerobic capacity in beginners

Time per week: 20-30% of total training

Zone 2: Aerobic/Endurance (60-70% Max HR or 60-70% HRR)

Intensity Level: Light to Moderate

Example (30-year-old, Max HR 190):

  • Heart rate range: 114-133 BPM
  • Pace: Slightly elevated, conversation difficult
  • Duration: 45 minutes to several hours

Training benefits:

  • Primary aerobic base building
  • Fat becomes primary fuel source (ideal for weight loss)
  • Develops efficient heart and lung function
  • Builds muscular endurance
  • Sustainable long-term cardio fitness

Best used for:

  • Steady-state cardio (running, cycling, swimming)
  • Long, easy efforts
  • Primary fat-loss training zone
  • Building aerobic capacity

Time per week: 40-50% of total training

Why this zone for fat loss: At 60-70% intensity, your body preferentially uses fat for fuel (about 50-60% of calories from fat vs 20-30% in higher zones). A 60-minute Zone 2 workout burns significant fat calories while being sustainable.

Zone 3: Tempo/Sweet Spot (70-80% Max HR or 70-80% HRR)

Intensity Level: Moderate to Moderately Hard

Example (30-year-old, Max HR 190):

  • Heart rate range: 133-152 BPM
  • Pace: Elevated effort, very hard to speak
  • Duration: 20-40 minutes per session

Training benefits:

  • Improves lactate threshold
  • Increases aerobic capacity
  • Builds mental toughness
  • Develops speed endurance
  • "Sweet spot" for performance gains

Best used for:

  • Tempo runs/rides
  • Threshold workouts
  • Building work capacity
  • Race-pace specific training

Time per week: 15-20% of total training

Why it's called "sweet spot": This zone offers maximum aerobic adaptation with minimal injury risk—the most efficient training zone for aerobic improvement without the joint stress of high-intensity work.

Zone 4: Threshold/VO2 Max (80-90% Max HR or 80-90% HRR)

Intensity Level: Hard

Example (30-year-old, Max HR 190):

  • Heart rate range: 152-171 BPM
  • Pace: Very hard, speech impossible
  • Duration: 8-20 minutes per interval

Training benefits:

  • Significantly increases VO2 max
  • Improves aerobic power
  • Enhances athletic performance
  • Increases metabolic rate post-workout

Best used for:

  • VO2 max intervals (4-8 minute repeats)
  • Pushing against resistance
  • Performance-focused training
  • Short, intense efforts

Time per week: 5-10% of total training

Warning: Higher injury risk; requires good fitness base before attempting.

Zone 5: Anaerobic/Maximum (90-100% Max HR or 90-100% HRR)

Intensity Level: Maximum Effort

Example (30-year-old, Max HR 190):

  • Heart rate range: 171-190+ BPM
  • Pace: All-out sprint effort
  • Duration: 30 seconds to 3 minutes maximum

Training benefits:

  • Maximum power and speed development
  • Peak cardiovascular adaptation
  • Sport-specific performance
  • Shortest, most intense adaptation stimulus

Best used for:

  • Sprint intervals (30 sec - 2 min repeats)
  • Competitive efforts
  • Maximum strength power work
  • Peak performance testing

Time per week: 2-5% of total training

Warning: Requires full recovery; risk of overtraining is high. Only use after adequate base training.

Heart Rate Zone Training Plans

Zone Distribution for Different Goals

Goal Zone 2 Zone 3 Zone 4 Zone 5
Fat Loss 60-70% 20-30% 5-10% 0-5%
General Fitness 50-60% 25-35% 10-15% 5-10%
Aerobic Base 70-80% 15-20% 5-10% 0-5%
Performance 40-50% 20-30% 20-30% 10-20%
Endurance 80-90% 10-20% 0-5% 0%

Sample Weekly Training Plan (Fat Loss Focus)

Day Zone Duration Purpose
Monday Zone 2 45 min Steady cardio
Tuesday Zone 3 30 min Tempo run
Wednesday Zone 1 30 min Easy recovery
Thursday Zone 4 20 min (4×5 min hard) VO2 intervals
Friday Zone 2 60 min Long, easy session
Saturday Zone 3 35 min Threshold work
Sunday Zone 1 20-30 min Light recovery walk

Total: ~220 minutes per week, ~70% in Zone 2 (fat loss zone)

How to Monitor Your Heart Rate

Methods for Tracking Heart Rate

  1. Heart Rate Monitor (Most Accurate)

    • Chest strap monitors: ±1-2 BPM accuracy
    • Wrist-based monitors: ±5-10 BPM accuracy
    • Smartwatch/Fitness tracker: ±5-15 BPM accuracy
  2. Manual Pulse Check

    • Place two fingers (index and middle) on your neck/wrist
    • Count beats for 15 seconds
    • Multiply by 4 for BPM
    • Less accurate during movement; requires stopping briefly
  3. Perceived Exertion + Heart Rate

    • Combine number with how you feel
    • Can perform "talk test" (ability to speak determines zone)
    • More subjective but practical for real training

Interpreting Your Results

If heart rate is too low:

  • Increase intensity/pace
  • May indicate need for fitness improvement
  • Check if resting heart rate is unusually high (illness, stress)

If heart rate is too high:

  • Decrease intensity/pace
  • May indicate overtraining or inadequate recovery
  • Stay in lower zones for base building

Practical Training Scenarios

Scenario 1: Fat Loss Program

Profile: 40-year-old, relatively untrained, wants to lose weight sustainably

Zone setup (Resting HR 75 BPM):

  • Max HR estimate: 220 - 40 = 180 BPM
  • Zone 2 target: 134-152 BPM

Weekly plan:

  • 4-5 sessions per week in Zone 2 (45-60 minutes each)
  • Burns ~300-400 calories per session
  • Total weekly deficit: 1,200-2,000 calories from cardio
  • Combined with diet, yields 1-2 lbs/week fat loss

Scenario 2: Performance/Speed Training

Profile: Intermediate runner, wants to improve race pace

Zone setup (Resting HR 58 BPM):

  • Max HR estimate: 220 - 35 = 185 BPM
  • HRR = 185 - 58 = 127 BPM
  • Zone 3 (Tempo): (127 × 0.75) + 58 = 153 BPM
  • Zone 4 (VO2): (127 × 0.85) + 58 = 166 BPM

Weekly plan:

  • Monday: Zone 2 (50 min easy)
  • Tuesday: Zone 4 (6×4 min hard, 2 min easy recovery)
  • Wednesday: Zone 1 (30 min very easy)
  • Thursday: Zone 3 (30 min tempo)
  • Friday: Zone 1 (20 min easy)
  • Saturday: Zone 2 or 3 (60-90 min moderate)
  • Sunday: Rest or Zone 1 (20 min walk)

Key Heart Rate Training Principles

  1. Individual variation: Your actual max HR may differ ±10-15 BPM from predicted
  2. Improves fitness: Your resting HR decreases with training (good sign)
  3. Recovery matters: Hard sessions require adequate recovery in lower zones
  4. Specificity: Train the zone most relevant to your goal
  5. Progression: Start with Zone 1-2, progress to harder zones as fitness improves

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I know if my max heart rate is accurate?

The best way is a max HR test: warm up, then perform 3-5 minutes of all-out effort (running, cycling, rowing) while monitoring HR. Your peak HR during this effort is your actual max HR. Subtract 10 BPM from the peak for safety during future training.

Why is my heart rate higher than expected?

Common reasons:

  • Dehydration
  • Inadequate recovery/overtraining
  • Illness or stress
  • High ambient temperature
  • Caffeine or stimulants
  • Poor fitness level (HR naturally higher at same pace)

If consistently elevated, take an easy week and reassess.

Can I build aerobic fitness only in Zone 2?

Yes, but slow. For faster adaptation, include some Zone 3-4 work (10-20% of training). However, Zone 2 base building is sustainable long-term and important for health.

Is a lower resting heart rate always better?

Generally yes. Athletes often have resting HR of 40-50 BPM (excellent aerobic fitness). However, if your resting HR suddenly drops dramatically, it could indicate overtraining.

Can I do all my training in high zones?

Not recommended. High-intensity zones create significant fatigue and injury risk. Training should follow the 80/20 rule: ~80% low-intensity (Zone 1-2), ~20% moderate-high intensity (Zone 3-5).