Calculate My Heart Rate

Calculate My Heart Rate

Free personalized heart rate training zones (Karvonen)

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@foureleventech
Published on Jun 26, 2026
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Categories
Fitnessexercise
Pricing
Free
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Web

About Calculate My Heart Rate

Calculate My Heart Rate is a free browser-based tool that calculates personalized heart rate training zones using the Karvonen formula (Heart Rate Reserve method). Most heart rate calculators give you one number: 220 minus your age. They split it into zones, slap a label on each one, and send you on your way. The problem is that formula was never validated in a clinical study. It was an offhand observation from the 1970s, and it ignores the one variable that matters most: your resting heart rate. That is what this calculator was built to fix. The Science Behind It: The Karvonen formula calculates your zones based on the range between your resting heart rate and your maximum heart rate. That range is your Heart Rate Reserve, and it reflects your actual cardiovascular capacity far better than max heart rate alone. Here is why it matters. Two athletes can have the exact same maximum heart rate but very different resting heart rates. A trained endurance athlete might rest at 42 bpm. A sedentary adult might rest at 72 bpm. The 220-minus-age method treats them identically. The Karvonen method does not. Five Zones That Actually Mean Something: - Zone 1 is active recovery. Easy movement, blood flow, helping your body repair between harder sessions. - Zone 2 gets a lot of attention right now, and for good reason. Coaches, sports scientists, and longevity researchers increasingly agree it is the most neglected zone for most athletes. Training here builds mitochondrial density, improves fat oxidation, and raises your aerobic ceiling without the stress that leads to overtraining. Most people do not spend nearly enough time here. - Zone 3 is moderate aerobic work. Builds capacity and sustains pace for longer efforts, though it can be overused at the expense of Zones 2 and 4. - Zone 4 is threshold training, where you build the ability to sustain high intensity over time. Productive, but needs to be dosed carefully. - Zone 5 is short, hard intervals. VO2 max work, peak power, speed. You sharpen here, but you have to build the base first. Four Other Formulas, Side by Side: - The Tanaka formula is more recently validated and tends to be more accurate for older athletes. - The Gulati formula was developed specifically for women, because most max heart rate formulas were derived from male study populations and do not translate well. - The Nes formula comes out of research at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology and holds up well for active adults. - The classic 220-minus-age formula is included too, because so many training plans and devices still use it and athletes often need to compare. Run any of them in seconds and see exactly where your numbers land. Track Your Resting Heart Rate Over Time: A downward trend over months tells you your aerobic fitness is improving. An unexpected spike is often the first sign of illness, poor sleep, or accumulated fatigue before you feel it anywhere else. The built-in tracker lets you log morning measurements and watch the trend. No wearable needed. Nothing to Sign Up For: No download, no account, no subscription. Enter your age and resting heart rate, get your zones instantly. The tracker saves locally so your data stays on your device. Free, because accurate zone calculation should not require a coach or a lab test. Who Gets the Most Out of It: Runners structuring easy runs, long runs, and track sessions by zone. Cyclists cross-referencing heart rate with power data. Triathletes setting zones across three disciplines. Coaches setting client zones quickly without a detour into exercise physiology. Longevity-focused athletes dialing in Zone 2 work. And anyone just starting to train with structure who wants to stop guessing. One more thing worth knowing for coaches and site owners: the embeddable widget lets you drop a fully functional zone calculator into your own website. Coaching site, running blog, triathlon community, it fits anywhere with no technical setup required. Why It Was Built: Honest answer: frustration. The tools that existed either ignored resting heart rate entirely or buried the Karvonen option somewhere obscure. Heart rate training works, but only if your zones reflect your actual physiology. A calculator that skips resting heart rate is skipping the most important part. So this one does not skip it.

Product Insights

This free web-based fitness tool utilizes the Karvonen formula and Heart Rate Reserve method to generate personalized training zones. It provides comparative data across five different scientific formulas to help users refine aerobic and anaerobic workout planning.

  • Supports five distinct formulas including Karvonen, Tanaka, Gulati, and Nes.
  • Calculates zones based on individualized Heart Rate Reserve rather than age alone.
  • Includes a tracking feature for monitoring resting heart rate trends over time.
  • Provides a free browser-based interface accessible without specialized hardware.

Ideal for: Athletes, personal trainers, and coaches can use this tool to establish precise heart rate training zones for improved workout planning and aerobic capacity goals.

Product Video

Watch a video demo of Calculate My Heart Rate.

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Comments (1)

F
@foureleventech

Frustrated that other calculators were either paywalled, too complicated, or ignored resting heart rate entirely. Built this to fix that. Free, browser-based, and does the math the right way.