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Home Running & fitness

What Is a Healthy Resting Heart Rate?

WeMaple AI by WeMaple AI
May 1, 2026
in Running & fitness, Sports & Fitness
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What Is a Healthy Resting Heart Rate?
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Our hearts beat faster when we exercise, which is why heart-rate training can be so useful. But when we aren’t doing anything, our heart rate can still be useful to know. Most wearables, including smart rings and watches, will report your resting heart rate (RHR). Here’s how to understand what it’s telling you.

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What is a normal resting heart rate? 

Medical professionals usually consider anything between 60 and 100 beats per minute (bpm) to be a “normal” resting heart rate. But this isn’t a guideline for the number you see on wearables. The standard numbers usually assume that you are measuring resting heart rate in people who are in a healthcare setting, sitting quietly. Notably, they are awake, and some may be a bit nervous about being in a doctor’s office. 

Your smartwatch or other wearable device may be able to capture lower numbers, especially if you wear it while you’re sleeping. Oura, maker of smart rings, reports that its members tend to have a resting heart rate between 50 and 60 bpm. Whoop says that its users average 59 bpm for women, 55 for men. 

Users of Oura, Whoop, and similar devices probably have lower than average heart rates, because these platforms are popular among athletes and the health-conscious. (I’ve also noticed that Oura reports lower numbers than most other devices when I compare them side-by-side.) The more typical 60 to 100 figure is meant to apply to the entire population a healthcare professional might encounter. So it’s OK if you’re not hitting those lower numbers. 

A lower resting heart rate is usually better

Athletes and people in good cardiovascular health tend to have lower resting heart rates. People who improve their cardio fitness tend to see their resting heart rate decrease over time, and that’s often considered a good sign that what you’re doing is working. So in the long term, it’s good for your resting heart rate to decrease or to stay at a lower number. In the short term, noticing a resting heart rate a few beats higher than your usual may mean: 

  • You are stressed, either mentally or physically (for example, fatigued from hard workouts)

  • You’re in your follicular phase (if you’re a person with a menstrual cycle)

  • You’re getting sick

  • You’re taking medication that affects your resting heart rate (including some stimulants and decongestants)

  • Something disrupted your sleep (if your RHR is measured during sleep—for example, drinking alcohol and staying up late can both result in a higher RHR reading)

I find resting heart rate (along with HRV, which is different) to be a useful number to track for understanding how stressed or recovered my body is. If it goes up, that’s fine, so long as it comes back down within a few days. A resting heart rate that stays elevated for weeks may indicate illness or other issues that may call for medical attention. I wouldn’t go to the doctor just because my resting heart rate is a bit high, but I would take it as a nudge to pay attention to my health and see the doctor if I’m realizing other things aren’t right.

Why you shouldn’t compare your resting heart rate to others’

As tempting as it is to want a “good” resting heart rate, it’s not useful to treat RHR as a competition. People are built differently, and just as your friend might be taller or shorter than you, they may have a naturally higher or lower heart rate, even before you take fitness or health factors into account. 

In general, smaller people tend to have slightly higher resting heart rates, which is why the average RHR for women is a few beats higher than the average man’s. Resting heart rates can also change with age, increasing slightly in early adulthood and then leveling off. (Note that your resting heart rate doesn’t necessarily say anything about your maximum heart rate or exercise heart rate, which I discuss in more detail here.)

If you’re using a watch or wearable to tell you your resting heart rate, there’s also a difference from device to device. When I wore five different devices to track my RHR and HRV for several nights in a row, the Fitbit gave a resting heart rate number that was often 10 beats higher than the reading from Oura. The other devices—a Garmin, a Whoop, and an Apple Watch—were in between. 

Ultimately, the best way to use your RHR data is to keep an eye on long- and short-term trends. If your RHR is lowering gradually over time as you exercise a little more, that’s a good sign. And when it varies from day to day, you can use those changes as a nudge to check in on your health, stress, fatigue, and sleep. And of course, if you’re ever concerned about your heart rate being unusually high or low, check with a medical professional.

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