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Heart Rate Training Zones

Training by heart rate zones helps you run at the right intensity for each session — easy enough on recovery days, hard enough on interval days. This reference explains the five standard zones, how to calculate them, and what each zone feels like.

The Five Heart Rate Zones

ZoneName% Max HR% HRREffort FeelTypical Sessions
Zone 1Recovery50–60%50–60%Very easy; can hold full conversationWarm-up, cool-down, recovery runs
Zone 2Aerobic / Easy60–70%60–70%Comfortable; can chat in sentencesEasy runs, long runs, base building
Zone 3Tempo70–80%70–80%Moderate; can speak in short phrasesTempo runs, marathon pace, steady state
Zone 4Threshold80–90%80–90%Hard; only a few words at a timeThreshold runs, 10K pace, cruise intervals
Zone 5VO&sub2; Max90–100%90–100%Maximum; cannot speakShort intervals, hill reps, 1500m–5K race pace

% Max HR is the simpler method — just a percentage of your maximum heart rate. % HRR (Heart Rate Reserve) uses the Karvonen formula and accounts for your resting heart rate, making it more personalised. Both methods are widely used.

How to Estimate Your Max Heart Rate

MethodFormulaNotes
Classic formula220 − ageSimple but can be ±10–15 bpm off
Tanaka formula208 − (0.7 × age)More accurate for older runners
Gulati (women)206 − (0.88 × age)Developed specifically for women
Field test3 × 3 min hard efforts, take highest HRMost accurate; requires fitness and a HR monitor

No formula is perfectly accurate for every individual. If you have access to a heart rate monitor, a field test gives the most reliable result. Alternatively, your highest heart rate recorded during an all-out race effort is a good proxy.

Karvonen (HRR) Method

Target HR = Resting HR + (% × (Max HR − Resting HR))

Example: Age 35, resting HR 55 bpm, max HR 185 bpm. Zone 2 (60–70%):
Lower: 55 + 0.60 × (185 − 55) = 133 bpm
Upper: 55 + 0.70 × (185 − 55) = 146 bpm

How Much Time in Each Zone?

Zone% of Weekly VolumeGuideline
Zone 1–2 (easy)75–80%The bulk of your mileage should be easy
Zone 3 (tempo)5–10%Tempo and marathon-pace work
Zone 4–5 (hard)10–20%Intervals, threshold, race-pace sessions

The 80/20 rule is widely supported by research: roughly 80% of training time at easy effort (zones 1–2) and 20% at moderate-to-hard effort (zones 3–5). This approach builds aerobic fitness while minimising injury risk.

Related Calculators

Heart rate zones are guidelines, not rigid boundaries. Individual variation is significant — two runners of the same age can have max heart rates differing by 20+ bpm. If you have a heart condition or are new to exercise, consult your GP before training at high intensities.