VO2 Max Calculator

Estimate your maximum aerobic capacity using field-test methods, compare protocols, and project your improvement.

Your Details

Your VO2 Max

-- ml/kg/min
--
Classification --
Percentile (est.) --
Max HR (est.) --
Aerobic Age --
Method Used --
Goal VO2 Max --
-- --

Enter Test Data

Enter data for each test you have completed. Leave fields blank to skip a test.

1

Cooper 12-Minute Run

2

Rockport 1-Mile Walk

3

Astrand Cycle Test

4

Beep Test (Shuttle Run)

5

1.5-Mile Run

Method Comparison Results

Enter data for at least one test to see results.

Training Plan Settings

Your Training Zones

Recommended Distribution

12-Week Improvement Projection

Projected VO2 Max --
Expected Gain --
% Improvement --

12-Week Training Plan

Elite Athlete Reference

  • Eliud Kipchoge (Marathon WR): ~85 ml/kg/min
  • Tour de France cyclist: 80-90 ml/kg/min
  • Olympic rower: 60-75 ml/kg/min
  • Average fit adult: 40-55 ml/kg/min

How to Use This Calculator

1
Choose a method -- Rockport Walk Test requires a 1-mile walk; Cooper Run needs 12 minutes on a track; Non-Exercise uses demographics; HR Ratio uses resting and max heart rate.
2
Compare methods -- Switch to the Test Method Comparison tab and enter data from multiple protocols to see how your estimates stack up.
3
Project your gains -- Use the Improvement Projector tab to see a 12-week training plan with personalized training zones and expected VO2 max gains.

Formulas Used

Rockport132.853 - 0.0769W - 0.3877A + 6.315G - 3.2649T - 0.1565HR
Cooper RunVO2max = (d - 504.9) / 44.73
1.5-Mile RunVO2max = 483 / time_min + 3.5
Non-Exercise56.363 + 1.921 PA - 0.381 Age - 0.754 BMI + 10.987 G
HR RatioVO2max = 15 x (HRmax / HRrest)
AstrandVO2max = Work / (HR - 61) x CF (age-corrected)

Key Terms

VO2 Max
Maximum oxygen consumption in ml per kg of bodyweight per minute. The gold standard for aerobic fitness.
Aerobic Capacity
The body's ability to take in, transport, and use oxygen during sustained exercise.
Lactate Threshold
The exercise intensity at which lactic acid begins to accumulate in the blood -- roughly 80-85% of VO2 max.
Training Zones
Intensity bands (Z1-Z5) based on VO2 max or heart rate percentages, each targeting different physiological adaptations.
Polarized Training
An 80/20 model where 80% of training is low intensity (Zone 1-2) and 20% is high intensity (Zone 4-5), skipping Zone 3.
Beep Test
A multi-stage shuttle run test where participants run 20m shuttles at increasing speeds. Level and shuttle number estimate VO2 max.

Real-World Examples

35-year-old recreational runner

Male, 175 lbs, runs 25 miles/week. Cooper test: 2,700m in 12 min. VO2 max of about 49.3 ml/kg/min -- "Good" for his age group. Zone 2 runs at 130-148 bpm would improve it to "Excellent" in 3 months.

28-year-old sedentary office worker

Female, 145 lbs. Non-exercise method with sedentary PA score. VO2 max of about 32 ml/kg/min -- "Fair" for her age. Starting with 3x weekly Zone 2 walks could raise it to about 38 in 12 weeks.

50-year-old cyclist

Male, 165 lbs, active 5 days/week. HR Ratio method: resting HR 52 bpm, max HR 168. VO2 max of about 48.5 ml/kg/min -- "Good" for his 50-59 age bracket. Polarized training could push him to "Excellent."

Understanding VO2 Max: The Ultimate Guide to Aerobic Fitness

VO2 max -- maximal oxygen uptake -- is the single most important number in endurance sports. It measures how efficiently your cardiovascular system can deliver oxygen to working muscles and how well those muscles can use it. Expressed in milliliters of oxygen per kilogram of bodyweight per minute (ml/kg/min), it is the gold standard for aerobic fitness and a powerful predictor of long-term health outcomes.

Why VO2 Max Matters Beyond Athletics

Research consistently shows that higher VO2 max is associated with lower all-cause mortality, reduced cardiovascular disease risk, and better metabolic health. A landmark 2018 study in JAMA Network Open found that cardiorespiratory fitness (as measured by VO2 max) was the strongest predictor of longevity -- even stronger than traditional risk factors like hypertension or diabetes. Every 1 ml/kg/min increase in VO2 max was associated with an 8-10% reduction in mortality risk.

How VO2 Max Is Measured

The gold standard is a maximal exercise test in a lab, using a treadmill or cycle ergometer with a metabolic cart measuring expired gases. This test is expensive and not widely accessible. The field methods used in this calculator provide validated estimates within +/-5-10% of lab-measured values, making them practical for most people.

Comparing Test Methods

Different field tests suit different populations. The Rockport Walk Test is ideal for beginners and older adults. The Cooper 12-Minute Run is better for trained runners. The 1.5-Mile Run test is commonly used by military and law enforcement. The Astrand Cycle test is excellent for those with joint issues who prefer cycling. The Beep Test (multi-stage shuttle run) is widely used in team sports. Using the Test Method Comparison tab, you can enter data from multiple tests and see how they compare.

Training to Improve VO2 Max

The most efficient training stimulus for VO2 max improvement is high-intensity interval training (HIIT) at 90-100% VO2 max (Zone 4-5). However, a polarized approach -- 80% low intensity (Zone 1-2) and 20% high intensity (Zone 4-5) -- produces the best long-term results. The Improvement Projector tab models your expected gains based on training frequency and intensity over 12 weeks.

Realistic Improvement Expectations

Sedentary beginners starting a consistent training program can expect gains of 2-4 ml/kg/min in the first 3 months. Moderately fit individuals typically gain 1-2 ml/kg/min per month initially, slowing as they approach their genetic ceiling. Well-trained athletes improve much more slowly. Detraining reverses gains rapidly -- VO2 max declines significantly within 2-4 weeks of inactivity.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a good VO2 max for my age?

For men 20-29, good is 44-51 ml/kg/min; excellent is 52-60. For women 20-29, good is 35-43; excellent is 44-52. Standards decline with age -- check the norms table in the Calculator tab for your age-specific ranges.

How accurate are field tests vs lab tests?

The Rockport Walk Test has a standard error of about +/-5 ml/kg/min. The Cooper Run is similar. Lab tests using metabolic carts are the gold standard, but field tests are practical and give useful relative comparisons. Use the Test Method Comparison tab to cross-validate your results.

What is the beep test and how accurate is it?

The beep test (multi-stage shuttle run) involves running 20m shuttles at progressively faster speeds. It correlates well with lab VO2 max (r=0.92) and is widely used in sports, military, and school fitness testing. Results depend on motivation and running technique.

How does the Astrand cycle test work?

The Astrand-Ryhming cycle test uses your steady-state heart rate at a submaximal workload (typically 6 minutes at a constant wattage) to estimate VO2 max. It assumes a linear relationship between HR and oxygen consumption and applies an age correction factor.

What is polarized training (80/20)?

Polarized training means spending about 80% of training time at low intensity (Zone 1-2) and about 20% at high intensity (Zone 4-5), with minimal time in Zone 3. Research shows this produces better long-term VO2 max improvements than threshold-heavy training.

Can I improve my VO2 max at 50+?

Yes. Studies show significant improvements are possible at any age. Older adults may gain relatively less than younger people, but the cardiovascular and longevity benefits are substantial. Consistency matters more than age.

How often should I test my VO2 max?

Every 8-12 weeks is a good testing frequency. Testing more often adds noise without meaningful signal since adaptations take weeks to accumulate. The Improvement Projector gives you week-by-week expectations to track against.

What does "aerobic age" in the results mean?

Aerobic age is the age at which your VO2 max score falls in the "average" category. If you are 40 with a VO2 max of a fit 30-year-old, your aerobic age is approximately 30. It is a motivating comparison metric.

Why do different tests give different results?

Each test uses a different regression equation calibrated on different populations. The Cooper test rewards running fitness, while the Rockport test suits walkers. The Astrand cycle test favors cyclists. Averaging multiple tests gives the most reliable estimate.

How does body weight affect VO2 max?

Since VO2 max is expressed per kilogram of bodyweight, losing body fat improves relative VO2 max even if absolute oxygen consumption stays the same. This is one reason weight loss improves endurance performance.