🩺 Everyone Has Made This Mistake: What Is Normal Blood Pressure by Age?
Many people assume blood pressure changes dramatically with age and that “a little high is normal when you get older.” That’s a common mistake—and it can be dangerous.
The truth is: ideal blood pressure stays fairly consistent across adulthood.
❤️ First: What is blood pressure?
Blood pressure is measured in:
- Systolic (top number): pressure when heart beats
- Diastolic (bottom number): pressure when heart rests
Normal is usually written as: 120/80 mmHg
📊 Normal blood pressure by age
👶 Children (1–12 years)
Blood pressure varies by height and age, but roughly:
- 90–110 / 50–70 mmHg
🧑 Teenagers (13–18 years)
- 100–120 / 60–80 mmHg
🧑🦱 Adults (18–40 years)
- Normal: around 110–120 / 70–80
- High-normal: up to 129/80
🧑🦳 Middle age (40–60 years)
- Normal target still: below 120/80
- Many people begin to rise slightly due to lifestyle
👴 Older adults (60+ years)
- Ideal still: below 120/80
- Acceptable range for some: up to 130–139 / 80–89 (depends on doctor and health condition)
👉 But importantly:
Higher BP is NOT automatically “normal with age.”
⚠️ When it becomes dangerous
You may have Hypertension if:
- Consistently ≥ 140/90 mmHg
- Or ≥ 130/80 mmHg in high-risk individuals (diabetes, kidney disease, etc.)
🧠 Common mistake people make
❌ “I’m old, so 150/90 is normal for me”
✔ Wrong—this increases risk of stroke and heart disease
🚨 Low blood pressure (also important)
- Below 90/60 mmHg
- May cause dizziness or fainting in some people
💡 Healthy target for most adults
Doctors generally aim for:
Around 120/80 mmHg or lower (if tolerated safely)
🧾 Bottom line
- Blood pressure does not have a different “normal” for each age in a large way
- It should stay close to 120/80 throughout life
- Higher readings with age are common—but not healthy or harmless
If you want, I can also show you a simple chart of “safe vs dangerous BP levels” or explain what causes blood pressure to rise silently over time.