Context first
Pulse is easier to interpret when you know whether the reading was taken at rest, after activity, or during stress or illness.
Review your resting or measured pulse with SelHealth and understand how heart rate fits into your wider health routine.
Simple daily estimate based on body weight and activity.
Classify your blood pressure reading using systolic and diastolic values.
Estimate your resting heart rate status and basic target zone.
Estimate your heart age using age, blood pressure, resting heart rate, and smoking status.
A simple educational estimate based on age, resting heart rate, waist, and smoking.
A simple educational screener based on age, waist, fasting glucose, and activity.
An educational cardiometabolic risk snapshot using a few common inputs. This is not a validated event-risk calculator.
A simplified educational review of common lipid patterns. It does not replace clinician interpretation within overall cardiovascular risk.
A simplified motivational estimate based on age, body size, and activity—not a validated clinical metabolic measure.
Estimate a simplified population-style life expectancy using age, sex, smoking, and activity.
The Heart Rate Checker helps you read pulse values with more confidence. It is most useful when you look at your resting pattern, routine changes, symptoms, and exercise context together rather than relying on one isolated number.
Pulse is easier to interpret when you know whether the reading was taken at rest, after activity, or during stress or illness.
Not always. Pulse can rise normally with activity, anxiety, caffeine, fever, or dehydration.
Yes, resting pulse is often the most useful baseline when you want a more consistent comparison.
Use these nearby tools when you want to place pulse readings within hydration, blood-pressure, and cardio-risk context.