Interesting. I haven't used a Fitbit so I don't know how to compare. It does sound like the 67 is an average. The Oura ring keeps track of HR separately during sleep, giving both a Sleep Score and a Readiness Score based on several metrics. I've struggled with sleep which is why I got the ring. |
| Mine is lower 80s. I was just at the doctor and they didn't say anything about it. |
Yeah, I'm pretty sure BP is a better indicator of overall heart health than RHR. -OP |
How do you track yours that you were able to tell them what it is? |
I'm the high 30s/low 40s poster - it will fluctuate a lot with stress/alcohol or if you just did a hard workout. |
Not that poster, but I have a garmin on 24/7 except when it's charging. It gives RHR and MANY other metrics. |
Agreed. Drinking even a little definitely raises my RHR. My biggest issue is deep sleep. I keep forgetting to say I'm the OP. |
I switched to the Oura ring (for sleep) because I can't sleep with my Garmin on. And the main reason I am tracking is for RHR and Deep Sleep. -OP |
30s/40s poster - I still don't fully trust the way these devices categorize sleep. I think they give you a decent idea, but I've had many nights where it just doesn't line up. Haven't tried Oura ring though. |
| 63 and I am obese and out of shape. My friend who is think and fit has one that is 85 |
| 68-77 usually resting. 80-90's when trying to ovulate!!! and 105-120 working out. |
Agreed. Hard to know. I think Oura gets the best ratings for sleep scoring. I use it to watch my trends. I've worn it for about 2 years now, though if I could sleep in a Garmin I would definitely just do that. What does your deep sleep look like, assuming Garmin tracks that. -OP |
Interesting. Not surprising that ovulation would raise RHR. What are you using to track HR? -OP |
Good example, as stated by a PP, that RHR is in part genetic. -OP |
| Mine is 44 at rest, 60 is working out upper end. I'm a 52 year old woman, 5'5" 110lbs. |