There isn’t a separate “normal blood pressure for every age” in adults. Modern medicine uses one main healthy range, because high blood pressure is risky at any age.
Blood pressure is measured in mmHg (example: 120/80).
🩺 Standard blood pressure categories (adults)
- Normal: below 120 / 80
- Elevated: 120–129 / below 80
- High blood pressure (hypertension): 130 / 80 or higher
- Crisis: 180 / 120 or higher (urgent care needed)
👶 Children & teens
- No fixed number
- “Normal” depends on age, height, and sex
- Doctors use percentile charts instead of one universal value
🧑 Young adults (18–39)
- Ideal: ~110–120 / 70–80
- Persistent readings above 120/80 should be watched
🧔 Middle age (40–59)
- Blood pressure tends to rise gradually
- Target still generally below 120/80 or at least below 130/80
👴 Older adults (60+)
- Slightly higher readings are more common due to stiffer arteries
- But this is not considered “normal for age”
- Treatment is individualized based on overall health and risk
High BP still increases risk of:
- stroke
- Heart disease
- Kidney damage
⚠️ Common misunderstanding
Many people believe:
“High blood pressure is just part of aging.”
This is incorrect. Aging may increase risk, but hypertension is always a medical condition, not a normal stage of life.
🧠 Bottom line
- Adults generally share the same healthy target: below 120/80
- Below 130/80 is often acceptable depending on risk factors
- Age affects risk, not the definition of “normal”
If you want, tell me your age and recent readings—I can interpret them clearly for you.