🏋️ Complete Guide to Exercise, Heart Rate Zones & Fitness
Everything you need to know about training effectively — from heart rate zones and calorie burn to building a balanced workout plan for your goals.
Heart Rate Training Zones
Heart rate zones are ranges of beats per minute (bpm) that correspond to different exercise intensities. Training in specific zones helps you target different fitness adaptations — from fat burning to maximum performance.
The 5 Training Zones
| Zone | % Max HR | Feel | Benefits | Example |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zone 1 | 50-60% | Very easy | Recovery, warm-up | Easy walk, gentle stretching |
| Zone 2 | 60-70% | Comfortable | Fat burning, endurance base | Brisk walk, easy jog (can hold conversation) |
| Zone 3 | 70-80% | Moderate | Aerobic capacity | Running, cycling at steady pace |
| Zone 4 | 80-90% | Hard | Anaerobic threshold, speed | Tempo runs, hard intervals |
| Zone 5 | 90-100% | Maximum | VO2max, peak power | All-out sprints (30s-2min) |
➡ Calculate your personal heart rate zones
Finding Your Max Heart Rate
Two common formulas:
- Standard: Max HR = 220 − age (simple, widely used)
- Tanaka (more accurate for older adults): Max HR = 208 − (0.7 × age)
The most accurate method is a supervised maximal exercise test with a healthcare provider.
The 80/20 Rule
Elite endurance athletes follow the 80/20 principle: 80% of training time in Zone 1-2 (easy), 20% in Zone 3-5 (moderate to hard). This builds a strong aerobic base while avoiding overtraining. Most recreational athletes do too much Zone 3 (the "gray zone") and not enough easy or hard training.
The Karvonen Formula
For more personalized zones, the Karvonen method uses your heart rate reserve (HRR):
Target HR = ((Max HR − Resting HR) × intensity%) + Resting HR
This accounts for your fitness level through your resting heart rate. Enter your resting HR in our heart rate calculator to see Karvonen zones.
Understanding MET Values & Calorie Burn
What Is a MET?
MET (Metabolic Equivalent of Task) measures the energy cost of an activity relative to rest. 1 MET = sitting quietly (~1 kcal/kg/hour). A 6-MET activity burns 6 times more energy than sitting.
Calorie Burn Formula: Calories = MET × Weight (kg) × Time (hours)
MET Values for Common Activities
| Activity | MET | Cal/hr (70 kg person) |
|---|---|---|
| Walking (3 mph) | 3.5 | 245 |
| Brisk walking (4 mph) | 5.0 | 350 |
| Jogging (5 mph) | 8.3 | 581 |
| Running (7 mph) | 11.0 | 770 |
| Cycling (moderate) | 8.0 | 560 |
| Swimming (moderate) | 7.0 | 490 |
| Jump rope | 12.3 | 861 |
| Weight training | 5.0-6.0 | 350-420 |
| Yoga (vinyasa) | 4.0 | 280 |
| HIIT / CrossFit | 12.0 | 840 |
➡ Calculate calories burned for 50+ activities
Types of Exercise
Cardiovascular (Aerobic) Training
Cardio improves heart health, endurance, and burns calories. Examples: running, cycling, swimming, rowing, brisk walking.
- Minimum recommendation: 150 minutes of moderate-intensity or 75 minutes of vigorous-intensity per week (WHO/AHA)
- Fat loss: Zone 2 burns a higher percentage of fat, but Zones 3-4 burn more total calories per minute
- Heart health: Consistent Zone 2 training strengthens the heart most effectively
Strength (Resistance) Training
Strength training builds muscle, increases metabolic rate, improves bone density, and enhances daily function.
- Minimum recommendation: 2-3 sessions per week targeting all major muscle groups
- For muscle growth: 3-4 sets of 8-12 reps at 65-80% of your 1-rep max
- For strength: 3-5 sets of 3-6 reps at 80-90% of your 1-rep max
- Afterburn effect (EPOC): Strength training elevates metabolism for 24-48 hours post-workout
- Muscle and metabolism: Each pound of muscle burns ~6-10 calories per day at rest
HIIT (High-Intensity Interval Training)
Alternating short bursts of maximum effort with recovery periods. Examples: sprint intervals, Tabata, circuit training.
- Efficiency: 20-30 minutes of HIIT can burn as many calories as 45-60 minutes of steady-state cardio
- Frequency: 2-3 sessions per week maximum (allow 48 hours recovery)
- Basic protocol: 30 seconds hard / 60-90 seconds easy, repeat 8-10 times
- Caution: Not suitable for complete beginners — build a cardio base first
Flexibility & Recovery
- Stretching: 10-15 minutes daily, focusing on major muscle groups
- Yoga: Improves flexibility, balance, and stress management (2.5-5.0 METs depending on style)
- Rest days: Essential for muscle repair and adaptation — at least 1-2 per week
- Sleep: 7-9 hours is critical for recovery, hormone production, and performance
Building a Weekly Workout Plan
Beginner (0-6 months)
| Day | Activity | Duration | Zone |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mon | Brisk walk or light jog | 30 min | Zone 2 |
| Tue | Bodyweight strength (squats, lunges, pushups) | 20 min | — |
| Wed | Rest or gentle yoga | 20 min | Zone 1 |
| Thu | Brisk walk or cycling | 30 min | Zone 2 |
| Fri | Bodyweight strength | 20 min | — |
| Sat | Longer walk, hike, or swim | 45 min | Zone 1-2 |
| Sun | Rest | — | — |
Intermediate (6-24 months)
| Day | Activity | Duration | Zone |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mon | Strength training (upper body) | 45 min | — |
| Tue | Easy run or cycling | 40 min | Zone 2 |
| Wed | Strength training (lower body) | 45 min | — |
| Thu | Interval training (HIIT or tempo run) | 25 min | Zone 4-5 |
| Fri | Strength training (full body) | 45 min | — |
| Sat | Long run, hike, or active sport | 60 min | Zone 2-3 |
| Sun | Rest or yoga | 30 min | Zone 1 |
Exercise & Hydration
Proper hydration is critical for exercise performance:
- Before: Drink 16 oz (500 ml) 2-3 hours before exercise
- During: 4-8 oz (120-240 ml) every 15-20 minutes during exercise
- After: Drink 16-24 oz (500-750 ml) for every pound lost during exercise
- Long workouts (60+ min): Add electrolytes (sodium, potassium) to your water
➡ Calculate your daily water needs including exercise
Key Takeaways
- Follow the 80/20 rule: 80% easy training, 20% hard training
- Include both cardio and strength training for optimal health
- Consistency beats intensity — a workout you do regularly is better than a perfect plan you don't follow
- Recovery is when adaptation happens — don't skip rest days
- Track your heart rate to ensure you're training in the right zone for your goals
- Heavier people burn more calories during the same activity (MET formula is weight-dependent)
Frequently Asked Questions
The best exercise for weight loss is one you enjoy and will do consistently. That said, combining strength training (to preserve muscle and boost metabolism) with cardio (to increase calorie burn) is the most effective approach. A calorie deficit through diet is still the primary driver of weight loss.
Do whichever is more important to your goal first, when you have the most energy. For muscle building, lift first. For endurance, do cardio first. If possible, separate them into different sessions or different days for best results.
Strength gains (neurological): 2-4 weeks. Visible muscle growth: 6-12 weeks. Significant fat loss (if in a deficit): 4-8 weeks. Cardiovascular improvements: 3-6 weeks. Be patient — real, lasting changes take months, not days.
Not exactly. Zone 2 (60-70% max HR) does burn a higher percentage of fat calories. But higher intensities burn more total calories per minute, which is what matters for weight loss. Zone 2 is still valuable for building aerobic base, recovery, and avoiding burnout.
The WHO and AHA recommend at least 150 minutes of moderate-intensity cardio (or 75 minutes vigorous) plus 2-3 strength sessions per week. This is the minimum for health benefits. For weight loss and fitness goals, 200-300 minutes per week is more effective.