That headline is a bit misleading. Blood pressure doesn’t have sharply different “normal” values for every age group—the targets are mostly similar for adults, with some flexibility based on health and risk.
Here’s the evidence-based view of normal blood pressure:
🩺 Standard adult categories
- Normal: below 120 / 80 mmHg
- Elevated: 120–129 / below 80
- High (hypertension): 130 / 80 or higher
These apply broadly to most adults, not drastically different by age.
👴 Does age change “normal” values?
As people get older:
- blood vessels become stiffer
- systolic pressure (top number) tends to rise
So doctors may allow slightly higher targets in older adults, but not excessively high.
📊 General guide by age (not strict rules)
- Young adults (18–39):
Aim close to 120/80 - Middle age (40–59):
Ideally still below 130/80 - Older adults (60+):
Often acceptable up to around 130–139 systolic, depending on overall health
⚠️ Important reality check
- “Normal by age” charts online are often outdated or oversimplified
- A reading like 140/90 is not considered normal, even in older adults
- Individual targets depend on conditions like diabetes, heart disease, etc.
🧠 What matters more than age
- consistency of readings
- overall health
- risk factors (like Hypertension, diabetes, kidney disease)
✔️ Bottom line
There isn’t a completely different “normal” for each age. Most adults should aim for below 130/80 mmHg, with slight adjustments based on individual health.
If you want, you can share your blood pressure readings—I can help you interpret whether they’re in a healthy range.