| Mine is currently 67. 67. |
| Mine is normally 44-51. I'm a long-time athlete so I assume that's why. My blood pressure is also low, and so is my body temp. My HR will go as high as 150 during a very strenuous run. |
As someone who posted up thread, yes. I try to ride the bike 3x a week. Has definitely made a difference. |
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My resting HR is around 70 and it does not matter if I am in marathon running shape, or haven't worked out in months. It's around 70. I am assuming it's just genetics because it never changes.
Some days it's higher if I'm overheated, and some days it's a little lower like 67, but in general? It's around 70, for about a decade now. When I was younger (20s) it was around 80. And I was literally running marathons. My HR can hit 195 when I'm running hard, but it drops super fast when I stop, so, the cardiologist said it was totally fine. |
Yeah, it's just one metric that often correlates with fitness, but not 100%. I'm the 30s/40s poster and I think mine was always naturally low, but did get much lower once I started training more seriously (and goes up when I slack off for a few months). Another point that came up in the thread - RHR actually has a definition from the watches/medical community. It's not just randomly measuring your HR sitting down during the day. I'm not going to bother looking up the specifics, but you can probably get a quick overview on a google search. |
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In the 70s here.
Now what are you going to do with that data? |
+1 My heart rate is naturally high, never below 70 and often in the 90s. I’m 5’3” and petite, was 110 pounds until recently. BP is normal, |
| Mine is 0! Did I win? |
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I work out for 60 minutes a day, 7 days a week (strength and cardio) and have 17% body fat. My RHR is 77. My blood pressure is great.
No plans to try to lower my RHR. |
Nor should you. Healthy RHR is between 60 and 100. |
RIP |
| I just got a Garmin watch. I seem to have pretty high variability. 50s when asleep, 60s when awake and chilling, 80s or 90s with routine activity, 110s with moderate activity, 160s with intense exercise. |
You’re me! I’m 47 and always surprised at how my overnight heart rate jumps 10 bpm just from a few drinks. Bothering me just enough to get me to try and cut back on drinking. |
Mine is similar, except intense exercise is 150s. I’m a 52yo woman in average shape. |
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Good job DC!
(Yes it's paywalled, but you can see the graph) https://www.axios.com/2026/02/20/states-low-high-resting-heart-rates-exercise |