First, let’s clear up the main point:
👉 120/80 mmHg is considered normal for adults.
It is not “wrong” — but it is also not the only normal value, and “normal” does not drastically change with every age.
Blood pressure is classified by ranges, not one exact number.
✅ Normal Blood Pressure for Adults (According to Major Guidelines)
For adults (18+ years):
| Category | Systolic (Top) | Diastolic (Bottom) |
|---|---|---|
| Normal | Less than 120 | Less than 80 |
| Elevated | 120–129 | Less than 80 |
| Hypertension Stage 1 | 130–139 | 80–89 |
| Hypertension Stage 2 | 140+ | 90+ |
So:
✔ 118/75 → Normal
✔ 110/70 → Normal
✔ 120/80 → Still acceptable
⚠ 138/75 → Stage 1 (because systolic is high)
📊 Does “Normal” Change With Age?
This is where confusion happens.
Blood pressure tends to rise with age, but that does NOT mean higher numbers are “healthy.”
Children (varies by height & age)
- Normal depends on percentiles, not fixed numbers.
Teens (13–17 years)
- Similar to adults
- Around 110–120 / 65–80 is typical
Adults 18–60
- Target: Below 120/80
- Treatment often starts at 130/80+
Adults Over 60–65
- Slightly more flexible targets in some cases
- Many doctors aim for:
- Under 130–140 systolic (depending on health status)
But:
High blood pressure is still harmful at any age.
🧠 Important Clarification
There is a myth online that:
“120/80 is outdated” or “normal BP should be 100 + your age.”
That is incorrect and not supported by modern cardiology guidelines.
🔎 About the Numbers You Posted
You wrote:
- 138
- 75
- 68
- 13
If this refers to 138/75, that would mean:
- Systolic: slightly high
- Diastolic: normal
That pattern is common in early hypertension.
🚨 When to Worry
See a doctor if:
- BP consistently ≥130 systolic
- Diastolic ≥80
- You have symptoms (headache, chest pain, dizziness)
- You have diabetes, kidney disease, or heart disease
💡 Bottom Line
✔ 120/80 is normal for adults
✔ Lower (like 110/70) is also normal if you feel fine
❌ “Normal by age” charts claiming higher is better are misleading
If you want, tell me:
- Your age
- Recent BP readings (a few of them, not just one)
- Any medical conditions
I can help you interpret them properly.