Apple WatchMay 8, 2026Aktualizováno May 8, 20267 min čtení

Apple Watch Cardio Fitness: What VO2 Max Categories Actually Mean

Aditya Ganapathi
Aditya Ganapathi

Spoluzakladatel Cory (YC W24). Výzkumník AI a robotiky s více než 500 citacemi z Google Brain a UC Berkeley.

Apple Watch Cardio Fitness: What VO2 Max Categories Actually Mean

Apple Watch's Cardio Fitness feature — its estimate of your VO2 max — classifies you into one of four tiers defined by Apple: Low, Below Average, Above Average, and High. Apple derives these thresholds from age-and-sex-stratified population percentiles, not from the clinical ACSM framework, and the difference between tiers has real health implications backed by large population studies.

Many Apple Watch users see their Cardio Fitness classification but do not know what it means beyond "good" or "not good." This page explains exactly what each Apple tier represents physiologically, how Apple's tiers relate to the broader clinical VO2 max literature, and what training approaches move you between categories.

What Apple Watch Actually Classifies: Apple's Four Cardio Fitness Tiers

Apple Watch displays your Cardio Fitness reading as one of four Apple-defined tiers. These levels — Low, Below Average, Above Average, and High — appear directly in the Health app. Notably, there is no "Average" tier in Apple's display; the classification jumps from Below Average to Above Average. The "Low" tier is the one that triggers Apple's Cardio Fitness Notification (the iOS alert powered by HKCategoryTypeIdentifierLowCardioFitnessEvent). Apple derives tier boundaries from age-and-sex percentiles based on population data, not from ACSM clinical categories.

A landmark 2018 study in JAMA Network Open analyzed 122,007 patients and found that each step up in cardiorespiratory fitness classification was associated with approximately 15–20% reduction in all-cause mortality risk — making this one of the most consequential health metrics your watch tracks. [Source]

Apple Watch Cardio Fitness Tiers — Apple's Own Four Levels

Apple Watch Tier Men 35–44 (mL/kg/min, approx.) Women 35–44 (mL/kg/min, approx.) Typical Profile
Low <33 <27 Sedentary; triggers Cardio Fitness Notification; elevated cardiovascular risk
Below Average 33–43 27–37 Lightly to moderately active; occasional exercise; moderate risk
Above Average 44–53 38–47 Consistently trains; solid aerobic base; meaningfully reduced risk
High >53 >47 Dedicated aerobic training or natural talent; lowest risk tier

Apple's tier boundaries are age-and-sex-stratified and shift across age groups — see the full breakdown at VO2 max on Apple Watch by age. The thresholds above are approximate for the 35–44 age group. Sources: Apple Support HT213248; Apple HealthKit docs.

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How Apple's Levels Map to Clinical VO2 Max Categories

Separate from Apple's own 4-tier display, the clinical literature commonly uses 6 categories from the American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM): Poor, Fair (sometimes called "Below Average"), Good, Very Good, Excellent, and Superior. These are the categories you will see cited in research papers and in clinical exercise testing. Apple's 4 tiers map approximately onto the ACSM framework as follows — but it is important to understand that Apple Watch does not display these ACSM labels; it only shows one of its own four tiers.

Approximate Mapping: Apple Watch Tiers vs. ACSM Clinical Reference Categories

Apple Watch Display Tier Approximate ACSM Equivalent Notes
Low Poor Triggers Apple's Cardio Fitness Notification
Below Average Fair / Below Average Apple's tier spans roughly two ACSM bands
Above Average Good / Very Good / Excellent Apple's tier spans roughly three ACSM bands
High Superior Apple's top tier; ACSM Superior is typically athletes

This is an approximate mapping for orientation — the exact boundaries differ between Apple's percentile-based thresholds and ACSM's published norms. ACSM categories are a clinical reference framework; Apple's are a consumer-facing display tier. For the ACSM age-stratified reference table, see VO2 max on Apple Watch by age.

What the Research Says About Each Tier

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The health implications of Cardio Fitness tiers are not theoretical. The 2018 JAMA study and a 2022 follow-up in JAMA Cardiology quantified risk reductions across cardiorespiratory fitness classifications. Moving from the lowest fitness category (corresponding to Apple's "Low" tier) to a mid-range category was associated with a 34% reduction in all-cause mortality risk. Moving further up was associated with an additional 21% reduction. The largest single gain comes from moving out of the "Low" tier — meaning that for sedentary individuals, even modest improvements carry enormous health value.

The British Journal of Sports Medicine published a 2022 meta-analysis confirming that each 3.5 mL/kg/min increase in VO2 max (approximately one-half category step) is associated with a 13% reduction in cardiovascular disease risk. [Source]

How Apple Watch Tracks Your Cardio Fitness Trend

Apple Watch updates your Cardio Fitness estimate after outdoor walks, runs, and hikes of at least 20 minutes with GPS. It shows your current category and a 3-month trend in the Fitness app. To ensure your estimate is accurate: do at least 2–3 outdoor GPS workouts per week, avoid stopping frequently during tracked workouts, and give the algorithm several weeks of data before evaluating your category.

The Cardio Fitness Low notification is enabled by default for users aged 20–79. If you have never received this notification, your estimate is above the Low threshold for your age group — a useful baseline reassurance. For the full age-stratified data tables, see VO2 max on Apple Watch by age.

What This Means for Your Training

The most efficient path from Apple's "Low" or "Below Average" tier is consistent Zone 2 aerobic training — the moderate-intensity work that builds mitochondrial density and cardiac stroke volume without generating excessive fatigue. Two to three sessions of 30–45 minutes per week at a conversational effort pace produces measurable Cardio Fitness improvements within 8–12 weeks for most adults starting from those lower tiers.

Moving from "Above Average" toward "High" requires a higher training load plus structured intensity. This is where interval training — either high-intensity intervals or threshold work — becomes the lever for further VO2 max gains. The risk at this level is overreaching, which is why tracking recovery metrics (RHR, HRV) alongside VO2 max is important. Cora integrates your Cardio Fitness trend with your daily recovery data to help you find the training intensity that moves you up the tiers without burning out. For the related recovery metrics, see resting heart rate on Apple Watch by age and HRV by age on Apple Watch.

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