Heart rate zones transform random cardio into structured training. Each zone produces specific physiological adaptations, from fat burning to maximum cardiovascular performance. Knowing your zones means every workout has a purpose.
Step 1: Find Your Maximum Heart Rate
Simple: Max HR = 220 − Age Tanaka (more accurate): Max HR = 208 − (0.7 × Age) A 35-year-old: Simple = 185 bpm, Tanaka = 184 bpm. For the most accurate result, do a supervised maximal exercise test.
Step 2: The 5 Training Zones
| Zone | % of Max HR | 35yr Example | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|
| Zone 1 (Recovery) | 50–60% | 92–111 bpm | Warm-up, active recovery |
| Zone 2 (Aerobic) | 60–70% | 111–129 bpm | Fat burning, endurance base |
| Zone 3 (Tempo) | 70–80% | 129–148 bpm | Aerobic capacity, moderate intensity |
| Zone 4 (Threshold) | 80–90% | 148–166 bpm | Lactate threshold, speed endurance |
| Zone 5 (Maximum) | 90–100% | 166–185 bpm | VO2 max, sprint power (unsustainable) |
Step 3: Apply the 80/20 Rule
Elite endurance athletes spend approximately 80% of training time in Zones 1–2 (easy/conversational pace) and only 20% in Zones 4–5 (hard intervals). This polarized approach builds a massive aerobic base while providing enough high-intensity stimulus for performance gains. Most recreational exercisers do the opposite — training mostly in Zone 3, which is too hard for recovery but too easy for maximum adaptation.
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Try the TDEE Calculator →Key Takeaways
- Max HR ≈ 208 − (0.7 × age) using the Tanaka formula.
- Zone 2 (60–70%) is where most endurance and fat-burning adaptations occur.
- The 80/20 rule: 80% easy training, 20% hard intervals for optimal fitness.
- Heart rate monitors make zone training practical — chest straps are more accurate than wrist sensors.