Blood Pressure Calculator

Check your AHA 2017 blood pressure category, Mean Arterial Pressure, and Pulse Pressure from a single reading or the average of multiple readings.

๐Ÿฉบ Blood Pressure Calculator
Systolic Pressure (top number)120 mmHg
mmHg
70220
Diastolic Pressure (bottom number)80 mmHg
mmHg
40140
Heart Rate (optional)72 bpm
bpm
30200

Enter up to 5 readings. The calculator will average all valid entries and classify the result.

Reading 1 (Systolic / Diastolic)
/ mmHg
Reading 2
/ mmHg
Reading 3
/ mmHg
Reading 4 (optional)
/ mmHg
Reading 5 (optional)
/ mmHg

BP Category (AHA 2017)
Systolic
Diastolic
Mean Arterial Pressure
Pulse Pressure
Heart Rate
BP Category (Averaged)
Average Systolic
Average Diastolic
Mean Arterial Pressure
Pulse Pressure
Readings Used

๐Ÿฉบ What is a Blood Pressure Calculator?

Blood pressure is the force exerted by circulating blood against the walls of your arteries. It is expressed as two numbers in millimetres of mercury (mmHg): systolic pressure (when your heart beats) over diastolic pressure (between beats). A reading is written as 120/80 mmHg and spoken as "120 over 80." Understanding what your numbers mean requires comparing them against validated medical guidelines.

This calculator applies the 2017 American Heart Association and American College of Cardiology (AHA/ACC) blood pressure classification, which defines five categories: Normal (below 120/80), Elevated (120-129 systolic with diastolic below 80), High Blood Pressure Stage 1 (130-139 systolic or 80-89 diastolic), High Blood Pressure Stage 2 (at or above 140/90), and Hypertensive Crisis (above 180/120). These thresholds replaced the older 140/90 Stage 1 definition and significantly expanded the proportion of adults classified as hypertensive.

Beyond category classification, the calculator computes two derived metrics. Mean Arterial Pressure (MAP) represents the average pressure throughout a cardiac cycle and is critical in intensive care settings as an indicator of organ perfusion. Pulse Pressure (systolic minus diastolic) reflects arterial stiffness; a wide pulse pressure above 60 mmHg in middle-aged and older adults is an independent cardiovascular risk marker even when both absolute numbers appear manageable.

The Average Multiple Readings mode is designed to address a fundamental limitation of single measurements. Blood pressure varies significantly throughout the day and is elevated by stress, caffeine, and the clinical environment itself. Taking multiple readings at different times over several days and averaging them gives a far more clinically meaningful result. This matches the approach recommended by the AHA for confirming hypertension outside a doctor's office.

๐Ÿ“ Formula

MAP  =  Diastolic + (Systolic − Diastolic) ÷ 3
Systolic = peak arterial pressure when the heart contracts (mmHg)
Diastolic = arterial pressure when the heart is at rest between beats (mmHg)
MAP = Mean Arterial Pressure, the average pressure over one cardiac cycle
Pulse Pressure = Systolic − Diastolic
AHA 2017 thresholds: Normal below 120/80; Elevated 120-129/below 80; Stage 1 at 130/80; Stage 2 at 140/90; Crisis above 180/120
Example: 130/85 mmHg: MAP = 85 + (130-85)/3 = 100 mmHg. Pulse Pressure = 45 mmHg. Category: Stage 1 Hypertension.

๐Ÿ“– How to Use This Calculator

Steps

1
Choose Single Reading or Average Multiple - Single Reading classifies one measurement. Average Multiple Readings accepts up to 5 readings and classifies the computed average, which is more reliable for assessing hypertension.
2
Enter your systolic pressure - This is the top (larger) number from your blood pressure cuff reading, in mmHg. Drag the slider or type the value directly.
3
Enter your diastolic pressure - This is the bottom (smaller) number, in mmHg. Systolic must be greater than diastolic.
4
Add heart rate (optional) - Enter beats per minute from your device or a manual pulse count for a heart rate classification alongside the BP result.
5
Check results - See your AHA category, MAP, Pulse Pressure, and recommended action. For multiple readings, the averaged values and their combined classification are displayed.

๐Ÿ’ก Example Calculations

Example 1 - Healthy Adult, Normal Blood Pressure

Reading: 115/75 mmHg with resting heart rate of 65 bpm

1
Category: Systolic 115 is below 120 AND diastolic 75 is below 80. Classification: Normal per AHA 2017.
2
MAP = 75 + (115 - 75) / 3 = 75 + 13.3 = 88 mmHg (normal range: 70-100 mmHg).
3
Pulse Pressure = 115 - 75 = 40 mmHg (normal range: 40-60 mmHg). Heart rate: Normal (65 bpm).
Category = Normal
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Example 2 - Stage 1 Hypertension (Elevated Risk)

Reading: 135/87 mmHg

1
Category: Systolic 135 is in 130-139 range. Classification: Stage 1 High Blood Pressure. (Either number reaching the threshold triggers Stage 1.)
2
MAP = 87 + (135 - 87) / 3 = 87 + 16 = 103 mmHg (slightly above normal upper limit).
3
Pulse Pressure = 135 - 87 = 48 mmHg. Action recommended: discuss lifestyle changes with your doctor and monitor regularly.
Category = High BP - Stage 1
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Example 3 - Averaging 3 Home Readings Over a Week

Readings: 128/82, 132/85, 130/83

1
Average systolic = (128 + 132 + 130) / 3 = 130 mmHg.
2
Average diastolic = (82 + 85 + 83) / 3 = 83 mmHg.
3
Averaged reading: 130/83 mmHg. Category: Stage 1 (systolic exactly at 130 threshold). MAP = 99 mmHg. Pulse Pressure = 47 mmHg.
Averaged Category = High BP - Stage 1
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Example 4 - Hypertensive Crisis Requiring Emergency Action

Reading: 185/115 mmHg

1
Category: Systolic 185 exceeds 180 threshold. Classification: Hypertensive Crisis.
2
MAP = 115 + (185 - 115) / 3 = 115 + 23 = 138 mmHg (critically elevated; normal is 70-100).
3
Action: If accompanied by chest pain, shortness of breath, vision changes, or severe headache, call 911 immediately. If no symptoms, seek urgent care promptly.
Category = Hypertensive Crisis
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โ“ Frequently Asked Questions

What is a normal blood pressure reading for adults?+
Per AHA 2017 guidelines, normal blood pressure is below 120/80 mmHg. Elevated is 120-129 systolic with diastolic below 80. Stage 1 starts at 130/80 and Stage 2 at 140/90. A single measurement in any of these ranges is informative, but hypertension is confirmed only after multiple readings on separate days.
What do systolic and diastolic pressure mean?+
Systolic is the top number: peak pressure when your heart contracts and pumps blood into arteries. Diastolic is the bottom number: pressure when your heart relaxes between beats and refills with blood. Both values carry clinical significance independently. You can have high blood pressure with only one elevated number.
How often should I check my blood pressure at home?+
For initial assessment or medication management, the AHA recommends measuring twice in the morning before medications and twice in the evening before dinner, for 7 days. Average all readings (discarding Day 1 to eliminate new-monitor anxiety effect). For long-term maintenance monitoring once hypertension is controlled, weekly or monthly measurements are sufficient.
Why is my blood pressure higher at the doctor's office?+
This is white-coat hypertension, a well-documented phenomenon where blood pressure rises in clinical settings due to anxiety. It affects 15-30% of patients diagnosed with hypertension and can lead to unnecessary medication. Home monitoring with a validated upper-arm device is the recommended approach to distinguish true hypertension from white-coat effect.
What is a normal MAP (Mean Arterial Pressure)?+
Normal MAP is 70-100 mmHg. Below 60 mmHg, vital organs may not receive adequate blood flow, which is a medical emergency. In intensive care, maintaining MAP above 65 mmHg is a target for patients in septic shock. A MAP above 110 mmHg suggests significant hypertension. The formula is: MAP = Diastolic + (Systolic - Diastolic) / 3.
What causes high Pulse Pressure?+
Pulse Pressure is systolic minus diastolic. A wide pulse pressure above 60 mmHg in adults over 50 typically indicates arterial stiffness, a process where arteries lose elasticity with age. It is an independent predictor of cardiovascular events. Other causes include aortic regurgitation, thyrotoxicosis, and severe anemia. A narrow pulse pressure below 25 mmHg may indicate reduced cardiac output or aortic stenosis.
Does high blood pressure have symptoms?+
Hypertension is called the "silent killer" because most people with high blood pressure have no symptoms, even at dangerously high levels. Symptoms can appear in a hypertensive crisis: severe headache, visual disturbances, chest pain, shortness of breath, nausea, or confusion. Without a measuring device, most people cannot detect hypertension. Regular monitoring is the only reliable way to know your numbers.
How does exercise affect blood pressure readings?+
Aerobic exercise temporarily raises systolic blood pressure during activity, sometimes to 200 mmHg or more in healthy adults. This is normal and expected. Blood pressure returns to resting levels within 30-60 minutes of stopping. Wait at least 30 minutes after exercise before measuring for an accurate resting reading. Regular aerobic exercise over time reduces resting blood pressure by 4-9 mmHg on average.
What is the difference between hypertension stages 1 and 2?+
Stage 1 Hypertension is 130-139 systolic OR 80-89 diastolic. Stage 2 is 140 or higher systolic OR 90 or higher diastolic. Stage 1 is typically managed with lifestyle changes first; medication may be added based on overall cardiovascular risk. Stage 2 generally warrants both lifestyle changes and medication simultaneously. The threshold for each stage is met if either systolic or diastolic reaches it.
Can this blood pressure calculator replace a doctor's assessment?+
No. This tool provides educational classification based on standard AHA 2017 thresholds and is not a medical diagnosis. Blood pressure management requires clinical context: other cardiovascular risk factors, medication history, organ damage assessment, and laboratory tests. Use this calculator to understand your readings and track trends, then discuss the results with a qualified healthcare provider for any clinical decisions.