There isn’t a single perfect “normal blood pressure for each age” that applies to everyone. In modern medicine, adults are generally assessed with the same target, while children use age/height percentiles.
Here’s a clear breakdown:
🩺 Normal Blood Pressure by Age
👶 Newborns
Hypertension reference ranges:
- 60–90 / 20–60 mmHg
🍼 Infants (1–12 months)
- 80–100 / 50–65 mmHg
👧 Children (1–10 years)
- Rough range: 90–110 / 55–75 mmHg
- Doctors use percentiles based on height and age, not one fixed number
🧑 Teenagers (11–17 years)
- 100–120 / 60–80 mmHg
- Similar to adult range as they grow
🧑🦱 Adults (18–59 years)
High blood pressure categories:
- Normal: less than 120 / 80
- Elevated: 120–129 / <80
- Stage 1 hypertension: 130–139 / 80–89
- Stage 2 hypertension: ≥140 / ≥90
- Crisis: ≥180 / ≥120 (emergency)
👴 Older adults (60+ years)
- Ideal: still around <130 / 80
- Some doctors may accept slightly higher depending on health:
- ~130–139 / 80–89 (individualized targets)
🧠 Important truth
- Blood pressure does not have a completely different “normal” for every age in adults
- The main change with age is that risk tolerance and treatment goals may adjust
⚠️ When to worry
Seek medical advice if:
- Regular readings are ≥140/90
- Or symptoms like chest pain, dizziness, headaches occur
💡 Bottom line
- Children → age-based ranges
- Adults → universal standard (<120/80 is ideal)
- Older adults → sometimes individualized targets
If you want, tell me your age and BP reading, and I can interpret it for you accurately.
