Heart Rate Recovery Calculator

Heart Rate Recovery Calculator

Score how quickly your pulse drops after a hard effort, compare 30-second, 1-minute, 2-minute, and 3-minute recovery markers, and keep repeat tests consistent.

📌Presets

Presets load realistic recovery profiles so you can compare how fitness level, stopping method, heat, and effort change the same heart-rate-recovery score.

Calculator

Units only affect body-size context.
Used for estimated maximum heart rate when needed.
Used for BMI context only.
Used for BMI context only.
Standing 1-minute HRR is the strictest common field check.
Use a calm morning average if possible.
Enter 0 to use the Tanaka age estimate.
Record the highest value right as the hard effort ends.
Optional but useful for early parasympathetic response.
The primary field marker for heart rate recovery.
Useful when the 1-minute value is borderline.
Shows how close you return toward baseline.
Use the hard portion that produced the peak HR.
Recovery scores are most comparable after similar effort.
Live output

Heart rate recovery snapshot

Enter peak and recovery pulse readings to score your recovery profile.

1-minute HRR
---
bpm drop
2-minute HRR
---
bpm drop
Recovery score
---
0-100 index
Return toward rest
---
after 3 minutes

📊Recovery Metrics

30-sec drop
15
Early recovery
Recovery slope
20
Bpm per minute
% peak drop
26%
At 2 minutes
Retest window
2-4 wks
Repeat same setup

📑Reference Tables

Field interpretation for heart rate recovery
MarkerNeeds AttentionTypical FitnessStrong Recovery
30-second HRRUnder 8 bpm10-16 bpm17+ bpm
1-minute HRRUnder 12 bpm18-24 bpm25+ bpm
2-minute HRRUnder 22 bpm35-49 bpm50+ bpm
3-minute HRRUnder 40 bpm55-74 bpm75+ bpm
Protocol differences that change the score
Recovery MethodExpected EffectUse CaseCompare With
Standing stillStrictest field scoreStep tests and treadmill checksStanding tests only
Walking cooldownSlightly slower dropRun workouts and intervalsSame cooldown pace
Seated recoveryOften faster dropClinical or gym checksSeated tests only
Lying downFastest recovery postureControlled recovery checkSame posture only
Common scenarios and practical reading
ScenarioLikely PatternWatchRetest
New runner1-minute drop improving firstOverreaching signsEvery 2-4 weeks
Endurance athleteLarge 2-minute and 3-minute dropHeat and dehydrationAfter recovery week
Strength athleteModerate HRR, strong peak powerConditioning gapEvery 4 weeks
Return from breakHigh peak and slower dropToo much intensityEvery 2 weeks
Formula reference used by this calculator
FormulaVariablesOutputPurpose
Absolute HRRPeak HR minus recovery HRBpm dropMain score
Percent HRRBpm drop divided by peak HRPercent dropSize context
HR reserveMax HR minus resting HRReserve rangeEffort context
Tanaka max HR208 minus 0.7 times ageEstimated max HRFallback max
BMIWeight and heightkg/m²Body context

💡Tips

Tip: Compare tests only when the hard effort, recovery posture, temperature, and measurement device are similar. HRR is very sensitive to protocol changes.
Tip: A single lower score after poor sleep, heat, or heavy training is not a trend. Look for repeated changes across several similar sessions.
DisclaimerThis calculator provides estimates only. Consult a healthcare professional or certified trainer before starting any fitness program.

Heart rate recovery is a measurement of how your body handle stress. Heart rate recovery provide information about how your autonomic nervous system is responding to the exertion of your body. If your heart rate drops quick after performing a period of hard exertion, your autonomic nervous system is responding well to the stress.

However, if your heart rate continues to drop slow after the exertion, it can mean that fatigue, heat or exertion harder than realized is to blame. The calculator will calculate the math for you after you enter your number. It will remove the guesswork of determining which heart rate value is the most important to use to describe your autonomic nervous systems response to exertion of your body.

What Is Heart Rate Recovery and How to Test It

Many people focus on the one minute heart rate recovery mark. This is the mark between sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous system response. Twenty beats dropped at one minute is the standard mark for trained athlete.

Trained athletes may see lower drops if the individual experienced poor sleep or exertion in hot weather. Two minutes into recovery is also important to consider. If the trained athlete drops another fifteen or twenty beat, the autonomic nervous system considers this a complete response.

However, if during the second minute, an athlete only drop five or six beats, their first minute heart rate drop may have been an optimistic reading. Your posture will change your heart rate recovery. When standing still, your heart has to work against the force of gravity.

Therefore, standing still will produce the strict score for heart rate recovery. Walking will keep the muscle in your legs pumped and active. This will slow the drop in recovery of heart rate by a few beat.

When you are sitting and resting, or lying down in a 躺 position, gravity will aid your heart in the pumping of blood. Therefore, sitting or lying down will speed up your heart rate recovery. The calculator will account for your posture.

Your posture should remain the same during your test for heart rate recovery. Age and fitness level will change the baseline of heart rate recovery. Younger athletes often experience a greater drop in heart rate.

This is because younger athletes has higher maximum rates and lower resting rates. The same is true of athletes of older age groups. The heart rate recovery difference is that older athletes have a smaller heart rate range.

The calculator will account for your age in the calculation of your heart rate recovery. This calculation will not penalize you for having a smaller heart rate range if you are of an older age. The level of effort you exert during your exertion will impact your heart rate recovery score.

The higher your level of exertion during your run or session, the lower your heart rate recovery will be. The score will always be lower after an easy session than after a hard session. The calculator will ask for your rate of perceived exertion to account for this.

Other factor such as heat or stimulants in your system like caffeine will also impact your heart rate recovery. The calculator will account for exertion in hot weather or after stimulants like caffeine. The calculator includes the reference tables for different reasons.

For instance, heart rate recovery calculations while standing will have different reference tables than those who are completing heart rate recovery while cycling. These tables provide a rough estimation of the heart rate recovery value that is normal for an individual. These estimation table will only be helpful if you use the same protocol to complete your tests for heart rate recovery as the one that you use for the table’s references.

Your test type, recovery posture and time of day should be the same for every test that you perform for heart rate recovery. Use heart rate recovery as one data point for your autonomic nervous system. Combine this with other data points regarding how your body feel during exertion, sleep and any change to your power or pace while running in the days after this test for heart rate recovery.

A single low score for heart rate recovery after a night of poor sleep is not a reason to change your training. However, three low score over time may indicate a change in your training. The calculator will assist in your observation of these value and trends without requiring any arithmetic calculation of your own.

The most important habit to develop in measuring your heart rate recovery is to ensure that your test for heart rate recovery are repeatable. To accomplish this, pick one type of test to perform every two to four week. Ensure that you use the same warm-up and exertion for your test of heart rate recovery each time.

Enter the same number into the calculator each time you perform this test. Using the same protocol will make the trend for your heart rate recovery score evident to you. The trend will help you to make decision regarding your training or if you should take a week off from more exertion.

The calculator can make the trend more easier for you to observe in comparison to performing the tests yourself.

Heart Rate Recovery Calculator

Author

  • Hadwin Blair

    Hi, I am Hadwin, a Gym lover and have set up my own home Gym for daily use. Empower Gym Equipment! I share my real personalized experiences on the Gym equipment!

Leave a Comment