Endurance Heart Rate Calculator

Endurance Heart Rate Calculator

Set long-run and long-ride heart rate targets using HR reserve, optional lactate threshold HR, aerobic threshold estimates, duration caps, drift, and weekly base goals.

📌Endurance presets

Presets are examples for endurance planning. Replace them with your tested max HR, resting HR, or lactate threshold HR when you have those values.

Athlete and method

Used only for context tables and body-size conversion.
If max HR is blank, Tanaka 208 - 0.7 x age is used.
Saved for training context; HR zones are not weight based.
Unit labels update when you switch systems.
HRR needs resting HR. LTHR is best from a field or lab test.
Leave blank to estimate from age.
Use an average of several calm morning readings.
Average HR from a threshold test or steady hard effort.

📈Session and base targets

Longer sessions get a slightly lower HR ceiling.
Warm conditions lower the suggested starting target.
Used to estimate base minutes and long-session share.
Helps spread base minutes across the week.
Most endurance plans keep this near 25 to 35 percent.
Use the same pace/power segment when checking drift.
Drift near 0 to 5 percent is usually endurance-friendly.
Endurance targets

Long-session HR plan

Enter your data and calculate to see a focused endurance heart rate plan.

Long target
--
bpm
Aerobic threshold
--
estimated bpm
Cardiac drift
--
session check
Base minutes
--
weekly easy-aerobic target

📊Endurance reference metrics

Drift target
0-5%
Good aerobic durability for a steady session.
Base share
75-90%
Common easy-aerobic share in base phases.
Long share
25-35%
Useful weekly share for many runners and riders.
Retest
4-8 wk
Recheck LTHR, resting HR, or drift after a block.

📘Zone and formula references

Endurance zone guide
ZoneHRR RangeLTHR RangeEndurance Use
Recovery50 to 60%65 to 80%Short recovery, warm-up, cool-down, low-stress volume.
Easy aerobic60 to 70%80 to 88%Main base volume when the session should feel conversational.
Aerobic threshold70 to 78%88 to 92%Upper endurance cap for many long runs and rides.
Steady endurance78 to 84%92 to 95%Controlled durability work, used sparingly in long sessions.
Duration adjustment guide
DurationSuggested StartCeiling CueDrift Check
30 to 75 minMiddle of easy aerobicBrief AeT touches are acceptableOptional
75 to 150 minLow to middle easy aerobicStay below estimated AeTUseful
150 to 240 minLower easy aerobicReduce cap by about 3 bpmImportant
240+ minRecovery to easy aerobicReduce cap by about 5 bpmVery important
Formula reference
FormulaInputsOutputBest Use
Tanaka max HRAge208 - 0.7 x ageFallback when tested max HR is unknown.
Heart rate reserveMax HR, resting HRRest + HRR percentPersonalized zones when resting HR is reliable.
LTHR percentLactate threshold HRThreshold-based rangesEndurance athletes with recent threshold data.
Cardiac driftFirst-half HR, second-half HRPercent HR riseChecks whether the target was sustainable.
Common endurance scenarios
ScenarioPrimary TargetWeekly Base GoalWatch Point
Marathon baseEasy aerobic to AeT cap80 to 90% of minutesLong-run share creeping above 35%.
Bike baseLow to middle easy aerobic75 to 90% of minutesHeat and cadence changes raising HR.
Ultra preparationRecovery to easy aerobic85 to 90% of minutesLate-session drift above 5 to 8%.
Triathlon durabilitySport-specific easy aerobic75 to 85% of minutesRun HR after hard bike sessions.

💡Endurance HR tips

Use the right method. HRR works well when resting HR is stable. LTHR works well when you have a recent threshold test and want training zones tied to endurance performance.
Start lower on long days. A target that feels perfect at 30 minutes can become too high at two or three hours because heat, fatigue, and fueling all affect HR.
Check drift carefully. Compare similar halves of the same steady session. If HR rises more than pace or power, your long-session target may need to drop.
Keep base work boring. Most endurance base volume should feel repeatable. If every long run or ride finishes near threshold, recovery cost usually rises.
Fitness estimate disclaimer This calculator provides estimates only. Consult a healthcare professional or certified trainer before starting any fitness program.

Endurance training demand a balance between the physical effort that you expend during training and the physical recovery that you allow your body after training. Heart rate is the metric that demonstrate to you the balance between training and recovery. You must determine whether the effort that you are expending during training is manageable for long periods, and you must ensure that your training wont prevent you from training effective in the future.

Heart rate is an signal of the effort that you are expending during training, but you must understand how to read heart rate during long and steady training sessions. To employ the heart rate calculator, you will have to provide personal data to the calculator to obtain targets for your training. Your age, your resting heart rate, and your maximum or threshold heart rate will be required.

How to Use Heart Rate to Plan Your Training and Recovery

Your resting heart rate is the measurement of your heart rate while you are resting. Your resting heart rate will indicate how recovered your body system is at any given time. Additionally, the lower your resting heart rate, the more farther the distance between your resting heart rate and your maximum heart rate.

You can employ your maximum heart rate with different calculation methods to determine your target heart rate for training. The distance that you will ride and the environment in which you will ride will impact your target heart rate with the heart rate calculator. For instance, riding in hot weather will increase your heart rate even when you dont increase your pace or power.

Therefore, a two hour ride in cool weather will yield different results than a two-hour ride in warm weather. Additionally, your heart rate will change during a session. For instance, cardiac drift occur when your heart rate increases but your pace and power remain the same.

If your heart rate increases during the second half of your training session when your pace remains the same, then your training session was too intense for your body. The number of minutes that you will spend on easy aerobic intervals must be planned for your training. Many athlete spend the majority of their training minutes on easy aerobic intervals.

The number of minutes that you should train at easy aerobic intensities will depend upon your experience level and your goals for your body and endurance. For example, an athlete returning from an extended break in training will need more easy aerobic training than an experienced athlete. The heart rate calculator will use your current number of training minutes each week and the number of training sessions that you performs each week to calculate your target number of minutes for easy aerobic training.

Heart rate zones will change with changes in your fitness level. Your resting heart rate will change with your health and the weather, which will alter your calculation of your heart rate zone targets. Additionally, heart rate targets will differ for different sports.

Running will have higher heart rate targets than cycling targets, for instance. Therefore, if you used cycling targets for running training, you would likely exhaust yourself too quick. The heart rate calculator will ask for your primary sport to calculate your targets for that particular sport.

The effort that you can maintain for thirty minutes may not be the same as your effort after three hours of training. For instance, the conversational test for determining your intensity in training becomes less accurate the longer that you train. After the halfway point of your training session, you should monitor your heart rate to ensure that your intensity is accurate.

If you find that your heart rate has increased during the second half of your training session yet your pace and power remains the same, you should decrease your target heart rate by a few beat per minute for the next training session. The reference tables will demonstrate the relationship between each of the different training heart rate zones. For instance, there will be a table that demonstrates the relationship between recovery, easy aerobic, aerobic threshold and steady endurance ranges for training.

Additionally, you can see the various calculation methods in relation to one another within these tables. However, these tables isnt a replacement for your personal data. These tables can help you to understand whether your heart rate calculations are accurate with the reference tables, yet they can also allow you to adjust your data to better reflect your heart rate target.

Your heart rate targets must be periodically retested to ensure that they correspond to your current fitness. For instance, after performing blocks of training, your resting heart rate will likely decrease and your threshold heart rate will increase. Additionally, a decrease in your resting heart rate and an increase in your threshold rate will increase the width of your aerobic zone.

You can enter these altered heart rate targets into the calculator to adjust your heart rate training zones. Overall, the use of heart rate monitors will allow you to finish each training session with enough energy or reserve to remain productive in your training goals.

Endurance Heart Rate 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!

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