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Darrell

Resting Heart Rate Longevity Signal

February 05, 20265 min read

Your body is always talking. Most people just don’t know how to listen.

Introduction:

One of the easiest signals to track is Resting Heart Rate (RHR)—how fast your heart beats when you’re truly at rest. It’s simple, it’s powerful, and it tells you a lot about fitness, stress, recovery, sleep, and long-term health.

At Resist Rx Longevity Lab, we don’t guess. We measure. And we teach you what your numbers mean—so you can take action.


What is resting heart rate?

Resting heart rate is your heart beats per minute when your body is calm and resting.

A strong, efficient heart can pump more blood with each beat—so it doesn’t need to beat as often.

Think of it like this:

  • A weak engine revs high just to keep moving.

  • A strong engine cruises smooth at low RPM.

That’s the goal.


What’s a “good” resting heart rate?

There’s no perfect number for everyone. But here’s a helpful range:

  • Most adults: 60–80 bpm

  • Fit adults: 50–65 bpm

  • Highly trained endurance athletes: 40–55 bpm

If your true resting heart rate is consistently over 80, that’s a signal worth paying attention to. It doesn’t mean “panic.” It means plan.

Important: One random reading doesn’t matter. Trends matter.


Measure it the right way (this matters more than people think)

If you measure it wrong, you’ll get a fake story.

Do this instead (best method):

  1. Measure right after waking up

  2. Before caffeine, before your phone, before you get up

  3. Stay still and relaxed for 60 seconds

  4. Track it for 7 days and take the average

That 7-day average is your baseline.


Why your resting heart rate goes up

When RHR rises, your body is usually carrying stress—physical, mental, or both.

Common reasons:

  • Poor sleep or inconsistent sleep schedule

  • Stress / anxiety (cortisol + adrenaline = higher heart rate)

  • Dehydration or low electrolytes

  • Alcohol (yes, even “a couple” can raise night heart rate)

  • Illness or inflammation (often before symptoms show)

  • Overtraining (too many hard days, not enough recovery)

  • Big late meals (digestion keeps the system “on”)

  • Caffeine late in the day

  • Heat (hot room, sauna late, fever)

Here’s the punchline:
High RHR usually isn’t a motivation problem. It’s a recovery problem.


RHR + HRV (heart rate variability): your dashboard (not a judgment)

We love HRV at Resist Rx because it adds context.

  • RHR = your body’s workload / stress load

  • HRV = your recovery / readiness signal

A simple way to read it:

  • RHR up + HRV down → you’re under-recovered (stress, sleep, illness, or too much intensity)

  • RHR down + HRV up → you’re adapting and recovering well

This is how you stop training blind.


The “Resist Rx” rule: use RHR like a traffic light

Compare today’s RHR to your 7-day baseline:

  • Green: baseline to +3 bpm → train as planned

  • Yellow: +4 to +7 bpm → reduce intensity (Zone 2 + strength technique)

  • Red: +8+ bpm (or you feel off) → recovery day (walk, mobility, early bedtime)

This is how you get results without burning out.


How to lower your resting heart rate (the real levers)

If you want lower RHR, you need two things:

  1. Build the engine

  2. Calm the system

1) Zone 2 cardio (the king)

This is the most reliable tool for improving heart efficiency.

Do this:

  • 30–45 minutes

  • 3–5 days per week

  • Easy enough to talk in short sentences

  • Walk, bike, row—whatever you’ll actually do

2) Strength training (protect the machine)

Strength training supports:

  • muscle (metabolic health)

  • insulin sensitivity

  • stress resilience

  • fat loss without muscle loss

Do this:

  • 2–3 days per week

  • Full body basics (push, pull, squat, hinge, carry)

3) Sleep consistency (the cheat code)

Not just “more sleep.” Regular sleep.

Do this:

  • Same wake time most days

  • Same bedtime most days

  • Cool, dark room

  • Screens off or dim 60 minutes before bed

If your sleep is messy, your RHR will fight you.

4) Downshift your nervous system (lower cortisol = lower RHR)

This is where most people miss the boat.

Do this daily (5 minutes):

  • Inhale 4 seconds

  • Exhale 6–8 seconds

  • Slow and easy

Long exhales activate the “brake pedal” of your nervous system. More calm = better recovery = better numbers.

5) Hydration + electrolytes

If you’re dehydrated, your heart has to work harder.

Simple rule: drink water steadily through the day. If you sweat a lot, include electrolytes.

6) Cut the sneaky RHR spikes

Two big ones:

  • Alcohol (wrecks sleep quality and raises night heart rate)

  • Late heavy meals (digestion keeps heart rate elevated)


A simple 14-day plan to start lowering RHR

If you want a plan you can follow without overthinking:

Daily

  • 30–45 min Zone 2 (walk/bike)

2–3x/week

  • Full body strength

Every day

  • 5 minutes slow breathing (long exhale)

Lifestyle

  • No caffeine after lunch

  • Keep alcohol low (especially weeknights)

  • Eat dinner 2–3 hours before bed

  • Track morning RHR (and HRV if you have it)

You’re looking for a trend: even 2–5 beats lower is a meaningful win.


When to take RHR seriously (don’t ignore this)

If your resting heart rate jumps 8+ bpm above baseline for 2 days, or you feel unusually run down:

  • treat it as a recovery warning

  • reduce intensity

  • check sleep, stress, hydration, alcohol, and illness

And if you have symptoms like dizziness, fainting, chest pain, or shortness of breath—get medical help.


Want help reading your numbers?

This is exactly what we do at Resist Rx.

If you want to know:

  • what your RHR trend means,

  • how your HRV is tracking recovery,

  • what your VO₂ says about your longevity engine,

  • and what to do next…

Book a consultation. We’ll measure, interpret, and build your plan—so you stop guessing and start progressing.

Welcome to the resistance.

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blog author image

Darrell MacLearn

Darrell MacLearn is the Director at Resist Rx Longevity Lab. He helps people replace guessing with data—so they can improve recovery, build fitness, reduce visceral fat, and live longer with strength and confidence. His approach blends training, diagnostics, and simple daily habits that actually stick.

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