Blood pressure does change with age, but modern medical guidelines don’t give a separate “ideal number” for every single age. Instead, they use general healthy ranges and then interpret them differently for children vs adults.
Here’s a clear breakdown:
🧑 Adults (18+ years)
Normal blood pressure:
- Around <120 / <80 mmHg
- Example: 115/75 is considered normal
Elevated:
- 120–129 / <80
High blood pressure (Hypertension):
- Stage 1: 130–139 / 80–89
- Stage 2: ≥140 / ≥90
📌 For most adults, the target is: below 120/80
🧒 Children & Teens (1–17 years)
Blood pressure varies strongly with age, height, and gender, so there is no single fixed number.
General idea:
- Younger children: much lower than adults
- Older teens: gradually approach adult levels
Approximate ranges:
- Toddlers (1–5 years): ~90–105 / 55–70
- School age (6–12 years): ~95–115 / 60–75
- Teenagers (13–17 years): ~105–120 / 65–80
📌 Doctors usually compare children to percentile charts, not fixed numbers.
👵 Older adults (60+ years)
- Still generally considered normal if under 120–130 / <80
- Slightly higher systolic readings (like 130–139) are more common with age due to stiffening arteries
- But very high pressure is not “normal aging”
⚠️ Important takeaway
- “Normal” is not really age-based in adults anymore
- Instead, it’s based on risk of heart, brain, and kidney disease
- A healthy target for most people is still: around 120/80 or lower
If you want, I can also show:
- how to check blood pressure correctly at home
- or what causes it to suddenly go high or low in daily life
