What Is The Normal Blood Pressure For Each Age

There isn’t a separate “normal blood pressure for every age” anymore in modern medicine. Instead, doctors use mostly the same healthy range for adults, with small differences for children.


🩺 Normal blood pressure (adults)

For most adults (including older adults), the target is:

  • Normal: around less than 120/80 mmHg
  • Elevated: 120–129 / less than 80
  • High blood pressure (Stage 1): 130–139 / 80–89
  • High blood pressure (Stage 2): 140+/90+

This applies broadly to adults, including middle-aged and older people, with some individual adjustments.


👶 Children and teens

Blood pressure varies by age, height, and sex, so doctors use percentiles instead of one fixed number.

Approximate guides:

  • Toddlers (1–5 years): ~95–110 / 55–75
  • School-age (6–12 years): ~97–115 / 57–76
  • Teens (13–17 years): close to adult range, often ~110–130 / 65–85

👴 Older adults (60+)

There is a common myth that “higher BP is okay with age,” but guidelines now say:

  • Aim for under 130/80 if tolerated
  • Some older adults may have slightly higher targets depending on frailty or other conditions

⚠️ When blood pressure is dangerous

  • Low BP concern: below ~90/60 with symptoms (dizziness, fainting)
  • Urgent high BP: 180/120 or higher (especially with chest pain, headache, or vision changes)

🧠 Key takeaway

There is no special “safe high BP” just because of age. Healthy blood pressure is generally:
👉 Around 120/80 mmHg or lower for most adults


If you want, tell me your age and typical readings—I can help you understand whether they’re in a healthy range or not.

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