Calculate your target heart rate range for any exercise intensity. Uses both %HRmax and Karvonen methods. Perfect for beginners and fitness enthusiasts.
Your target heart rate (THR) is the ideal range of beats per minute to aim for during exercise to get the most benefit. Working too low means less fitness improvement; working too high risks overexertion and burnout. This calculator gives you personalized targets based on your age and fitness goal.
Whether your goal is fat burning, building aerobic endurance, or improving cardiovascular performance, the target heart rate range tells you exactly how hard to push. This calculator provides two methods: the simple %HRmax approach (great for beginners) and the more accurate Karvonen method (which factors in your resting heart rate).
Simply enter your age, resting heart rate, and your training goal to get clear, actionable heart rate targets you can use during any workout. Whether you are a beginner or experienced professional, this free online tool provides instant, reliable results without manual computation. By automating the calculation, you save time and reduce the risk of costly errors in your planning and decision-making process.
Training without a heart rate target is like driving without a speedometer. You might go too easy and not improve, or too hard and burn out. A target heart rate range ensures every minute of exercise counts toward your specific goal, whether that's burning fat, building endurance, or boosting speed.
%HRmax Method: Target HR = HRmax × intensity% HRmax = 220 − age Karvonen Method: Target HR = ((HRmax − HRrest) × intensity%) + HRrest Training Goals: • Fat Burning: 50–70% intensity • Aerobic Endurance: 60–80% • Cardio Performance: 70–90% • Max Performance: 85–100%
Result: %HRmax: 114–152 bpm | Karvonen: 140–165 bpm
For a 30-year-old with resting HR 65 bpm, HRmax = 190 bpm. %HRmax method at 60–80%: 114–152 bpm. Karvonen method at 60–80%: ((190 − 65) × 0.60) + 65 = 140 bpm to ((190 − 65) × 0.80) + 65 = 165 bpm. The Karvonen values are higher because they account for the resting HR offset.
The %HRmax method is the simpler approach: just multiply your estimated max heart rate by the desired percentage. It's a great starting point for beginners and works well if you don't know your resting heart rate. The Karvonen method is more accurate because it accounts for your current fitness through resting heart rate. Two people of the same age but different fitness levels will get different Karvonen targets.
Fat burning (50–70%) is the easiest intensity and suitable for beginners, recovery days, and long-duration sessions. Aerobic endurance (60–80%) builds your cardiovascular base and is the foundation of most fitness programs. Cardio performance (70–90%) pushes your lactate threshold higher and improves race times. Max performance (85–100%) is for advanced athletes doing interval training and should be limited to 1–2 sessions per week.
When starting an exercise program, begin in the lower zones (50–60%) and gradually work up over 4–6 weeks. Use the “talk test” as a simple check: if you can talk comfortably, you're likely in Zones 1–2. If you can only say short phrases, you're in Zone 3+. If you can't talk at all, you're in Zone 5.
The traditional “fat burning zone” is 50–70% of max HR. At this intensity, a higher percentage of calories come from fat. However, higher intensities burn more total calories (and more total fat) per unit of time. For weight loss, the best zone is whichever one you can sustain for the longest duration while still challenging yourself.
%HRmax simply converts your max heart rate into intensity percentages. Karvonen accounts for your resting heart rate by using Heart Rate Reserve (HRmax − HRrest). Karvonen is more personalized and generally more accurate, especially for people with unusually high or low resting heart rates.
Measure first thing in the morning while still lying in bed. Stay still for 2 minutes after waking, then count your pulse at your wrist or neck for a full 60 seconds. Repeat for 3 mornings and average the results. Alternatively, many fitness trackers automatically record resting HR overnight.
For healthy individuals, briefly exceeding your target zone during intervals is normal and generally safe. However, consistently exercising well above your target — especially near maximum — increases risk of overtraining, arrhythmias, and cardiac stress. People with heart conditions, hypertension, or on beta-blockers should consult a doctor before any high-intensity exercise.
Yes. Beta-blockers significantly lower both resting and max heart rate, making standard formulas inaccurate. If you take beta-blockers or other heart-rate-affecting medications, use the Rate of Perceived Exertion (RPE) scale instead, or consult your physician for personalized HR targets.
The AHA recommends at least 150 minutes per week of moderate-intensity activity (60–75% zone) or 75 minutes of vigorous activity (75–90% zone). For weight loss, aim for 200–300 minutes per week. Even 10-minute bouts in your target zone count toward the weekly total.