What the Test Measures
Resting heart rate (RHR) is the number of times the heart beats per minute when the body is completely at rest. It is one of the most accessible and reliable indicators of cardiovascular fitness and overall health. A lower resting heart rate indicates a more efficient cardiovascular system — the heart pumps more blood per beat and therefore needs fewer beats to circulate an adequate volume.
For most untrained adults, resting heart rate falls between 70 and 80 beats per minute. Well-trained endurance athletes commonly measure below 50, and elite athletes sometimes below 40. Regular aerobic training consistently reduces resting heart rate over time — one of the most measurable adaptations to sustained cardiovascular work.
Beyond fitness, resting heart rate is a useful monitoring tool. A resting heart rate consistently elevated above its usual baseline — by 7 to 10 beats per minute — can indicate inadequate recovery, the onset of illness, dehydration or accumulated fatigue. Tracking it as part of a regular testing protocol provides an early warning system that many more expensive tools do not improve upon.
Protocol — Standard Measurement
- Perform the measurement first thing in the morning, before rising from bed, before caffeine, food or any physical activity — this produces the most accurate baseline reading
- If morning measurement is not possible, rest completely for a minimum of 5 minutes in a seated or lying position before measuring
- Locate the radial pulse on the inside of the wrist below the thumb — press gently with two fingers, not the thumb, which has its own pulse
- Alternatively, locate the carotid pulse on the side of the neck, just beside the windpipe — press very gently
- Count the beats for a full 60 seconds using a watch or phone stopwatch
- Record the result in beats per minute
- For most accurate tracking, take three readings on consecutive mornings and average the results
Always count for the full 60 seconds
Taking a 15-second count and multiplying by four is less accurate than counting for the full minute. Heart rate variability means that short counting periods introduce more error. Take 60 seconds every time for a consistent, comparable result.
Normative Data — Adults
The following ranges apply to adults at rest. Note that resting heart rate does not differ significantly by sex, though it tends to be slightly higher in women. Fitness category is the primary determinant.
| Category | Resting Heart Rate (bpm) | What It Indicates |
|---|---|---|
| Below 60 | Exceptional cardiovascular efficiency — typically long-term aerobic training | |
| 60–64 | Very high cardiovascular fitness | |
| 65–69 | Above average cardiovascular health | |
| 70–74 | Moderate to good cardiovascular fitness | |
| Average | 75–79 | Typical for a moderately active adult |
| 80–84 | Cardiovascular training would produce measurable improvement | |
| 85 and above | Priority area — regular aerobic exercise recommended |
Coaching Points
Resting heart rate is only meaningful when compared under consistent conditions. Caffeine, alcohol, illness, poor sleep and recent exercise all elevate it. Measure at the same time, under the same conditions, every time. Morning measurement before rising is the gold standard.
Establish a personal baseline over two weeks of consistent morning measurements. If the reading on any given day is 7 to 10 beats above the baseline, consider reducing training intensity that day. Persistently elevated readings over several days indicate accumulated fatigue requiring genuine recovery time, not pushing through.
With consistent aerobic training, resting heart rate typically decreases by 5 to 10 beats per minute over 3 to 6 months. This reduction reflects genuine cardiovascular adaptation — an increased stroke volume allowing the heart to circulate the same blood volume with less effort. It is one of the most satisfying objective improvements to track.