Target Heart Rate Zones for a 35-Year-Old
Based on a default resting heart rate of 70 bpm. Use the calculator below to enter your own.
Estimated Maximum Heart Rate
185 bpm
Example
At age 35 with a resting heart rate of 70 bpm, your estimated max heart rate is 185 bpm. Moderate-intensity exercise (50%-70%) targets 128-150 bpm, and vigorous-intensity exercise (70%-85%) targets 150-168 bpm.
Moderate Zone (50%-70%)
128-150 bpm
Vigorous Zone (70%-85%)
150-168 bpm
What Is Target Heart Rate?
Target heart rate zones are ranges of heart beats per minute that correspond to different exercise intensities, expressed as a percentage of your estimated maximum heart rate. Training within a specific zone helps target particular fitness goals — lower zones for fat-burning and base endurance, higher zones for building speed, power, and cardiovascular capacity.
The Karvonen method used by this calculator accounts for your resting heart rate in addition to your age, producing more personalized zones than a simple percentage of max heart rate alone — two people with the same max heart rate but very different fitness levels (and therefore different resting heart rates) get meaningfully different target zones.
Heart rate zones (bpm)
| Zone | % of Max HR | bpm Range | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|
| Warm Up | 50%-60% | 128-139 bpm | Light activity — easy walking, warming up before exercise. |
| Fat Burn | 60%-70% | 139-150 bpm | Low-to-moderate intensity where a higher share of energy comes from fat. |
| Aerobic | 70%-80% | 150-162 bpm | Moderate-to-vigorous cardio that builds endurance and heart/lung capacity. |
| Anaerobic | 80%-90% | 162-174 bpm | High-intensity effort that builds speed and power, sustainable only briefly. |
| Max Effort | 90%-100% | 174-185 bpm | Near-maximal effort reserved for short intervals under close supervision. |
How Is Target Heart Rate Calculated?
Maximum heart rate is estimated with the classic formula 220 minus age. The Karvonen method then adds your resting heart rate back in after applying the intensity percentage to your heart rate reserve — the gap between max and resting heart rate — rather than applying the percentage to max heart rate alone.
Target HR = ((Max HR − Resting HR) × Intensity %) + Resting HR
Why Resting Heart Rate Matters
A lower resting heart rate generally reflects better cardiovascular fitness. Because the Karvonen method scales intensity off your heart rate reserve rather than max heart rate alone, a fitter person with a lower resting heart rate gets a wider heart rate reserve and therefore different — usually lower — target zone boundaries at the same percentage than a less-conditioned person of the same age.
Choosing the Right Zone for Your Goal
Lower zones (50%-70%) are sustainable for long durations and build aerobic base fitness while burning a higher relative proportion of fat for fuel. Higher zones (80%+) improve speed and power but can only be sustained briefly and require adequate recovery between sessions to avoid overtraining.
These Formulas Are Estimates
The 220-minus-age formula is a population average with meaningful individual variation — actual max heart rate can differ by 10-15 bpm or more from the estimate. A supervised maximal exercise test provides a more accurate number for anyone training seriously around specific heart rate targets.
Example — Your Current Inputs
At age 35 with a resting heart rate of 70 bpm, your estimated max heart rate is 185 bpm. Moderate-intensity exercise (50%-70%) targets 128-150 bpm, and vigorous-intensity exercise (70%-85%) targets 150-168 bpm.
Additional Example — A 45-Year-Old Runner
A 45-year-old with a resting heart rate of 60 bpm has an estimated max heart rate of 175 bpm and a heart rate reserve of 115 bpm. Their moderate zone (50%-70%) works out to roughly 118-141 bpm — noticeably different from simply taking 50%-70% of 175 bpm directly (88-123 bpm), which illustrates why the Karvonen method produces higher, more personalized targets.
About These Parameters
- Age
- Used in the 220-minus-age formula to estimate your maximum heart rate — the single biggest driver of your training zones.
- Resting Heart Rate
- Best measured immediately upon waking, before getting out of bed or having caffeine. A typical adult resting heart rate falls between 60 and 80 bpm, with well-trained endurance athletes often measuring lower.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a good target heart rate zone for beginners?
Most beginners should start in the 50%-70% moderate zone, which is sustainable for longer durations and builds aerobic base fitness before progressing to higher- intensity training.
Is 220 minus age accurate for everyone?
It's a reasonable population average, but individual max heart rate can vary by 10-15 bpm or more from the formula's estimate — some people's true max heart rate is notably higher or lower regardless of fitness level.
Why does the Karvonen method give higher numbers than a simple percentage?
Because it applies the percentage to your heart rate reserve (max minus resting) and then adds resting heart rate back in, rather than applying the percentage to max heart rate directly — this generally produces higher, more individualized targets.