Recipe

What Is The Normal Blood Pressure For Each Age

“Normal blood pressure by age” is a common question, but medically there isn’t a different “normal” for every age group in adults. Instead, doctors use a general target range, with some adjustments for children and older adults.

Blood pressure is measured in:

  • Systolic (top number)
  • Diastolic (bottom number)

Adults (18+ years)

For most adults, including older adults:

Normal blood pressure:

  • Around 120/80 mmHg

Current medical guideline categories:

  • Normal: Less than 120 / 80
  • Elevated: 120–129 / less than 80
  • High (Stage 1): 130–139 / 80–89
  • High (Stage 2): 140+ / 90+
  • Crisis: 180+ / 120+ (emergency)

So even in older age, 130/80 is not considered “normal,” just common.


Children & teenagers (approximate ranges)

Normal varies by height, sex, and age:

  • Newborns: ~60–90 / 20–60
  • Infants: ~80–100 / 40–70
  • Children (6–12): ~90–110 / 50–75
  • Teens: closer to adult range (~110–120 / 60–80)

Doctors use percentiles, not fixed numbers, for children.


Older adults (60+)

  • Ideal still around 120/80
  • Slightly higher readings are more common due to stiffening arteries
  • But consistently 140/90+ is still considered high blood pressure

Important reality check

  • There is no “safe high blood pressure because of age”
  • Risk of stroke, heart disease, and kidney problems increases even if high BP is “common”

When to worry

Seek medical advice if:

  • BP is consistently above 130/80
  • You have headaches, chest pain, dizziness, or shortness of breath
  • Readings suddenly spike much higher than usual

If you want, I can also show:

  • How to correctly measure blood pressure at home
  • Natural ways to lower it safely
  • Or a simple diet plan for BP control (like DASH-style eating)

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *