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Heart Rate Zones

Your personalized training intelligence dashboard — zones, VO2 Max, pacing, and weekly mix.

Configure
bpm
Karvonen Method Active
60
Zone 2 would change to…
Advanced Physiology
ml/kg/min
Enter RHR above to auto-estimate.
Performance Zones
Standard Method Estimated
Max HR = 208 − (0.7 × 30) = 187 bpm
Zone 2 = 187 × 0.60 = 112131 bpm
Max HR 187 bpm
HR Reserve bpm
VO2 Max Est. ml/kg/min
Fitness Age yrs
FatMax Zone bpm
RHR Percentile %ile
187 Max BPM click to edit
HR Reserve
40 HR RANGE 190
🔴 Live HR Zone Detector
Enter your current heart rate above
Zone 1 94 – 112 BPM
Warm Up
Very light intensity. Active recovery. 50–60% of max.
Zone 2 112 – 131 BPM
Fat Burn
Light, conversational pace. Builds aerobic base. 60–70% of max.
Zone 3 131 – 150 BPM
Aerobic
Moderate effort. Tempo pace. Improves efficiency. 70–80% of max.
Zone 4 150 – 168 BPM
Threshold
Hard effort. Heavy breathing. Raises lactate threshold. 80–90% of max.
Zone 5 168 – 187 BPM
VO2 Max
Maximum effort. Sprint intervals only. 90–100% of max.
RPE & Talk Test Correlation
Race Pace Correlations
Optional: enter your 10K pace for better estimates
/km
💓 Recovery Heart Rate Test
BPM drop in 1 min
Weekly Training Mix
Chart: weekly training mix.
Formula Comparison at Your Age
Formula Max HR Zone 2 Low Zone 2 High Zone 4 Low Zone 4 High
Fitness Scenario Comparison (Zone 2 & Zone 4)
Zone 2 Upper Limit Across Ages
Chart: zone 2 upper limit across ages.
Zone 2 Top BPM — RHR × Age Sensitivity Matrix

Karvonen + Tanaka formula. Gold border = your current values.

Cardiac Drift Calculator

Measures HR creep during sustained sub-max effort — a key indicator of dehydration or heat stress.

Drift % = (HR₄₅ − HR₁₅) / HR₁₅ × 100
Weekly Zone Distribution by Training Goal
Chart: weekly zone distribution by training goal.
Training Impulse (TRIMP) Calculator
TRIMP Score
Enter values above
Composite Fitness Score
out of 100
Enter RHR to score
10-Year Zone 2 Projection
Chart: 10-year zone 2 projection.

Baseline assumes no fitness change. Optimistic assumes 1 bpm RHR improvement per year from consistent training.

How to Use the Heart Rate Zones

1

Enter Your Details

Fill in the input fields with your data — age, biological sex, primary methodology, and resting heart rate. The calculator updates results instantly as you type, so there's no submit button to press.

2

Explore Different Views

Use the tabs (⚡ HR Zones, 📊 Scenario Analysis, 📅 Training Planner) to switch between different analysis modes. Adjust presets, toggle options, or compare scenarios to see how changes affect your results.

3

Review & Share Results

Read your results in the output panel. Use the Share button to generate a link with your inputs pre-filled, or copy results to your clipboard. All calculations happen locally in your browser — your data is never sent to a server.

Formula & Methodology

Maximum Heart Rate (Fox)

MHR = 220 − Age

The classic formula developed by Fox et al. (1971). Simple and widely used, but may overestimate MHR in younger individuals and underestimate it in older adults. Best used as a quick reference point.

Maximum Heart Rate (Tanaka)

MHR = 208 − (0.7 × Age)

A more accurate formula proposed by Tanaka et al. (2001), validated across a wide range of ages and fitness levels. Produces lower estimates for younger adults and higher estimates for older adults compared to the Fox formula.

Karvonen Method

THR = ((MHR − RHR) × %Intensity) + RHR

The Heart Rate Reserve method accounts for individual fitness by incorporating resting heart rate. This produces more personalized training zones, especially for well-conditioned athletes with lower resting heart rates.

Heart Rate Reserve

HRR = MHR − Resting Heart Rate

The difference between your maximum and resting heart rate represents your available working range. A higher HRR indicates greater cardiovascular capacity and is the foundation for Karvonen-based zone calculations.

Key Terms

AgeAn input parameter used in heart rate zones calculations. Adjust this value to see how it affects your results.
Biological SexAn input parameter used in heart rate zones calculations. Adjust this value to see how it affects your results.
Primary MethodologyAn input parameter used in heart rate zones calculations. Adjust this value to see how it affects your results.
Resting Heart RateAn input parameter used in heart rate zones calculations. Adjust this value to see how it affects your results.
What-If: RHR drops to…An input parameter used in heart rate zones calculations. Adjust this value to see how it affects your results.
Max HR FormulaAn input parameter used in heart rate zones calculations. Adjust this value to see how it affects your results.

Real-World Examples

AL

Alex

28-year-old software engineer starting a fitness journey

Age
32
Biological Sex
Female
Primary Methodology
Standard
Resting Heart Rate
62 bpm
Training range
118-137 bpm

Try entering Alex's values above to see the detailed breakdown.

📄

Understanding Heart Rate Zones for Better Training

Why Heart Rate Training Matters

Heart rate training transforms exercise from guesswork into science. By monitoring your heart rate during workouts, you can ensure you are training at the right intensity for your specific goals, whether that is burning fat, building endurance, or improving race speed. Without heart rate data, most people either train too hard on easy days or too easy on hard days, leading to slower progress and higher injury risk.

The concept is straightforward: different heart rate ranges trigger different physiological adaptations. Training at 60 to 70 percent of your maximum heart rate primarily develops your aerobic energy system and teaches your body to burn fat efficiently. Training at 80 to 90 percent pushes your lactate threshold higher, allowing you to sustain faster paces before fatigue sets in. Understanding these zones gives you control over which systems you develop in each session.

How to Find Your Resting Heart Rate

Your resting heart rate is one of the most important numbers in fitness. To measure it accurately, take your pulse first thing in the morning before getting out of bed. Count the beats for a full 60 seconds, or count for 15 seconds and multiply by four. Do this on three consecutive mornings and take the average for the most reliable reading. A chest strap or wrist-based heart rate monitor can also capture this automatically overnight.

The average adult resting heart rate falls between 60 and 100 beats per minute, but well-trained endurance athletes often have resting rates in the low 40s or 50s. As your fitness improves, you should see your resting heart rate decrease over weeks and months. A sudden increase of five or more beats above your normal baseline can signal overtraining, illness, or inadequate recovery.

The Five Training Zones Explained

Zone 1, the recovery zone, keeps your heart rate between 50 and 60 percent of maximum. This gentle intensity is perfect for warm-ups, cool-downs, and active recovery days. Zone 2, often called the fat burning zone, operates at 60 to 70 percent and is where elite endurance athletes spend the majority of their training time. This zone builds mitochondrial density and teaches your muscles to use fat as fuel.

Zone 3, the aerobic zone at 70 to 80 percent, develops cardiovascular efficiency and is a common intensity for tempo runs and steady-state cardio. Zone 4, the anaerobic threshold zone at 80 to 90 percent, is where your body starts accumulating lactate faster than it can clear it. Training here improves your sustainable race pace. Zone 5, the VO2 max zone at 90 to 100 percent, is reserved for short, intense intervals that push your cardiovascular system to its absolute limit.

Tips for Effective Heart Rate Monitoring

Invest in a reliable heart rate monitor. Chest straps generally provide the most accurate readings, while optical wrist sensors have improved significantly but can lag during rapid intensity changes. Calibrate your zones using a tested maximum heart rate rather than relying solely on age-based formulas, especially if you are over 40 or highly trained. Review your heart rate data after each workout to confirm you spent the appropriate time in your target zone, and adjust your pace or resistance in future sessions accordingly. Consistency in zone-based training yields compounding improvements in fitness over time.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a good resting heart rate?+

A normal resting heart rate for adults is 60-100 bpm. Well-trained athletes often have resting rates of 40-60 bpm due to a more efficient heart. A consistently lower resting heart rate generally indicates better cardiovascular fitness and more efficient heart function.

How do I find my maximum heart rate?+

The simplest estimate is 220 minus your age, but this can be off by 10-20 bpm. More accurate formulas like Tanaka (208 - 0.7 x age) or Gulati (for women: 206 - 0.88 x age) are available in this calculator. A supervised graded exercise test provides the most precise measurement.

Which heart rate zone is best for burning fat?+

Zone 2 (60-70% of max HR) uses the highest percentage of fat as fuel, but higher-intensity zones burn more total calories per minute. For weight loss, total calorie expenditure matters more than the fuel source. A mix of Zone 2 endurance and Zone 4 intervals is most effective.

What is the Karvonen method and why is it more accurate?+

The Karvonen method calculates heart rate zones using your heart rate reserve (max HR minus resting HR) rather than just max HR. This accounts for your fitness level since a fitter person with a lower resting HR has a larger reserve. It produces more personalized and accurate training zones.

Should I be concerned if my heart rate is high during light activity?+

An unusually elevated heart rate during light activity can indicate dehydration, stress, lack of sleep, overtraining, illness, or medication effects. If your heart rate is consistently higher than expected at rest or during easy exercise without an obvious cause, consult a healthcare provider.

What is a good resting heart rate?

A normal resting heart rate for adults is 60-100 beats per minute (bpm). Well-trained athletes may have rates as low as 40 bpm. Your maximum heart rate is approximately 220 minus your age, and target exercise zones are percentages of this maximum.

What is a good resting heart rate?

A normal resting heart rate for adults is 60-100 beats per minute (bpm). Well-trained athletes may have rates as low as 40 bpm. Your maximum heart rate is approximately 220 minus your age, and target exercise zones are percentages of this maximum.