Interval Training Zones Calculator

Build smarter HIIT, tempo, and sprint workouts fast. See ranges for heart rate, power, pace. Download reports, adjust settings, and train with purpose daily.

Calculator Inputs

Enter your values, choose a method, then submit to generate zones and a session plan.

Used for estimating max heart rate in auto mode.
Kept optional because formulas vary across sources.
Best measured upon waking for 3–5 days.
Use manual only if tested or well-estimated.
Pick one estimate and keep it consistent.
Example: from a hard test or recent race.
HRR often personalizes zones better.
More zones = finer control for advanced training.
This sets the default target zone and structure.
Switch to custom to control work/rest/rounds.
Used when you select “Use my durations”.
Rest between repeats (last rest excluded).
Total repeats of work segments.
Typically in Z1–Z2.
Easy pace until breathing normalizes.
Adds power zones for bike training.
Accepts mm:ss or decimal minutes.
Used only when threshold pace is provided.
Reset

Example Data Table

Sample inputs and typical outputs for quick reference.

Age Resting HR Method System Example Z4 Range Example Z5 Range Session Focus
30 60 bpm Karvonen HRR 5 zones 162–174 bpm 174–187 bpm VO2max Intervals
40 65 bpm %HRmax 5 zones 144–162 bpm 162–180 bpm Threshold Blocks

Formula Used

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter your age and resting heart rate.
  2. Select auto estimation or enter a tested max heart rate.
  3. Pick a method (HRR or %HRmax) and a zone system.
  4. Choose an interval focus, then submit to view zones.
  5. Use the session plan to structure your workout.
  6. Download CSV or PDF to save your report.

FAQs

1) Which is better: HRR or %HRmax?

HRR includes resting heart rate, so it often matches your fitness changes better. %HRmax is simpler and works fine when resting heart rate is unknown or unstable.

2) How do I measure resting heart rate accurately?

Measure right after waking, before caffeine or phone scrolling. Record 3–5 mornings and use the average. A chest strap or validated watch improves accuracy.

3) Is age-based max heart rate accurate?

It’s a population estimate, not a personal test. Many people differ by 10–20 bpm. If you have a recent hard effort value, manual entry can be closer.

4) Why do interval targets feel hard to reach?

Heart rate lags behind effort, especially for short sprints. Use perceived effort and breathing early, then let heart rate rise during later repeats. Power or pace can be more responsive.

5) What if my heart rate drifts upward?

Drift is common with heat, dehydration, or fatigue. Reduce intensity slightly, extend recovery, or shorten total volume. Track conditions and compare similar workouts over time.

6) How should I choose a zone system?

Use 3 zones for simplicity, 5 zones for most athletes, and 7 zones when you want fine control for threshold and high-intensity work. Consistency matters more than the exact model.

7) How do FTP power zones help?

Power responds instantly, so it’s great for intervals. If you know your FTP, the added power zones can guide work segments while heart rate catches up.

8) Can I use threshold pace for running workouts?

Yes. Enter your threshold pace to get pace ranges for easy, tempo, and interval efforts. Use pace on flat terrain and adjust for hills, wind, or surface changes.

Related Calculators

Max Heart RateTarget Heart RateTraining Zone CalculatorResting Heart RateFat Burn ZoneCardio Zone CalculatorAnaerobic Zone CalculatorAerobic Zone CalculatorHRV Score CalculatorHeart Rate Zones

Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.