❤️ Heart Rate Zones Calculator

⚠️ Medical note: If you have a heart condition, are over 40 and sedentary, or have not exercised in a long time, consult your doctor before engaging in high-intensity exercise.

Maximum Heart Rate
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bpm (220 − age formula)

❤️ Heart Rate Zone Training Guide

Run the calculator first to see your personalised zone guide.

Run the calculator first.

📐 How Heart Rate Zones Are Calculated

Max HR Formulas

Classic (Fox, 1971): Max HR = 220 − Age Simple, widely used, but ±10-12 bpm error Tanaka (2001) - More Accurate: Males: Max HR = 208 − (0.7 × Age) Females: Max HR = 206 − (0.88 × Age) Validated on large samples, ±7 bpm error Gellish (2007): Max HR = 207 − (0.7 × Age) Better for older adults (60+) Best method: Actual lab max HR test (VO2 max test) or verified field test (e.g. 3-mile run all-out)

5 Zone System (% of Max HR)

Zone 1 - Recovery: 50–60% of Max HR Very light, active recovery, warm-up/cool-down Zone 2 - Aerobic Base: 60–70% of Max HR Fat burning zone, builds aerobic base, conversational Zone 3 - Aerobic: 70–80% of Max HR Improves cardiovascular efficiency, moderate effort Zone 4 - Threshold: 80–90% of Max HR Lactate threshold, hard effort, improves pace Zone 5 - Max: 90–100% of Max HR VO2 max intervals, very hard, short durations only

Karvonen Method (Heart Rate Reserve)

Target HR = ((Max HR − Resting HR) × intensity%) + Resting HR HRR (Heart Rate Reserve) = Max HR − Resting HR Zone 2 lower bound: ((190 − 60) × 0.60) + 60 = (130 × 0.60) + 60 = 138 bpm Why Karvonen is better: It accounts for YOUR resting heart rate (fitness level) A fitter person with lower resting HR gets different zones than a sedentary person of the same age. Lower resting HR → lower zone boundaries (fitter people need less absolute HR for same effort)

Fat Burn vs Cardio Zones

Zone 2 (60-70% Max HR) - "Fat Burning Zone": Higher % of calories from fat (60-65% fat) But LOWER total calories burned Zone 4 (80-90% Max HR) - "Cardio Zone": Lower % from fat (40-45%) But MUCH HIGHER total calories burned Example: 30-minute workout, 70 kg person: Zone 2: 200 cal total → 130 cal from fat Zone 4: 350 cal total → 157 cal from fat Zone 4 burns MORE fat in absolute terms despite lower fat percentage. Both zones improve health.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

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Heart Rate Zones Calculator - Training Smarter With the Right Intensity

Most recreational exercisers train at the same moderate intensity for every session - not too easy, not too hard. This "moderate always" approach is actually the least effective training distribution. Research and professional coaching consistently show that mixing structured low-intensity training (Zone 2) with occasional high-intensity work (Zone 4–5) produces better aerobic development, faster recovery, and better long-term fitness than constant moderate effort.

For a 35-year-old with a resting HR of 65 bpm: Max HR ≈ 185 bpm (Tanaka). Karvonen HRR = 185 − 65 = 120 bpm. Zone 2 range (65–75% HRR): 65 + (120 × 0.65) = 143 bpm to 65 + (120 × 0.75) = 155 bpm. So Zone 2 for this person is 143–155 bpm. The same person using Max HR %: Zone 2 = 60–70% × 185 = 111–130 bpm - noticeably lower and less personalised.

The 5 Training Zones - What Each One Does

Zone 1 & 2 - Aerobic Foundation

  • Zone 1 (50–60% MHR): Very easy. Active recovery, warm-up, cool-down. Breathing barely elevated. Could sing.
  • Zone 2 (60–70% MHR): Conversational pace. The fat-burning and aerobic base zone. Can hold a full conversation. Key long-session zone.
  • Builds: mitochondrial density, fat oxidation efficiency, aerobic base, metabolic health
  • Primary fuel: fat
  • Session duration: 45 min to multiple hours

Zone 3, 4 & 5 - Performance Zones

  • Zone 3 (70–80% MHR): "Comfortably hard." Breathing clearly elevated. Short sentences only. Tempo pace.
  • Zone 4 (80–90% MHR): Hard. Lactate threshold zone. Short sentences difficult. 10K–half marathon race pace.
  • Zone 5 (90–100% MHR): Maximum. Breathing laboured. Only sustainable minutes. Intervals and sprints.
  • Builds: lactate threshold, VO2 max, top-end speed
  • Primary fuel: carbohydrates (glycogen)

Karvonen vs Max HR Method - Which Is More Accurate?

The simple Max HR percentage method uses: Target HR = Max HR × Zone%. It's quick but doesn't account for your fitness level. Two people with the same age and identical max HR (185 bpm) will have very different cardiovascular fitness if one has a resting HR of 45 and the other 80. Their "Zone 2" should not be the same.

The Karvonen Heart Rate Reserve method uses: Target HR = ((Max HR − Resting HR) × Zone%) + Resting HR. By incorporating resting HR (which reflects aerobic fitness), it creates zones that are genuinely personalised to your current fitness level. A fit person's Zone 2 will be higher in absolute bpm than a deconditioned person's Zone 2, even with the same max HR.

Use Karvonen if you know your resting HR. It requires one extra input but produces more accurate and meaningful training zones.

Zone 2 Training - The Evidence Behind the Hype

Zone 2 has received enormous attention in endurance sports and longevity research in recent years, largely through work by exercise physiologist Iñigo San Millán (who coaches Tour de France cyclists) and researcher Peter Attia. The key evidence-backed benefits:

  • Mitochondrial biogenesis: Zone 2 is the primary stimulus for creating new mitochondria and improving existing mitochondrial function. More and better-functioning mitochondria means better aerobic efficiency at all intensities.
  • Fat oxidation efficiency: Training consistently in Zone 2 improves the body's ability to use fat as a fuel at higher intensities - this "metabolic flexibility" is central to both endurance performance and metabolic health.
  • Recovery tolerance: Low-intensity training produces significant aerobic adaptation with minimal fatigue - allowing more total training volume and faster recovery between hard sessions.
  • Cardiovascular health benefits: Zone 2 training is associated with measurable improvements in resting heart rate, blood pressure, and cardiac function even in sedentary individuals who add 3–4 hours per week.

The practical implication: if you currently do most of your cardio at a pace that's "challenging but not terrible," slowing down significantly for 70–80% of your sessions while adding occasional genuine hard intervals (Zone 4–5) is likely to improve your fitness more than always staying in Zone 3.

Training Zone Distribution - The Polarised Model

Elite endurance athletes (marathon runners, triathletes, cyclists) typically distribute their training approximately as follows, a pattern called "polarised training":

  • Zone 1–2: 70–80% of total weekly training time - easy, conversational pace, building aerobic base
  • Zone 3: 5–10% - some research suggests this "moderate" zone may actually be the least productive and should be minimised
  • Zone 4–5: 15–20% - quality sessions, intervals, threshold work

For beginners and recreational exercisers, a simpler approach: do the majority of sessions at a pace where you can hold a conversation (Zone 2), and once per week do an interval session or tempo run that genuinely challenges you (Zone 4). This avoids the "moderate always" trap and builds both aerobic base and speed simultaneously.