cardio fitness apple watch — Wearable Metrics Explained
Your Apple Watch estimates your cardio fitness—a VO2 max number that tells you how efficiently your body uses oxygen. It's a solid proxy for aerobic capacity, but raw numbers mean little without context. That 20-minute workout requiring zero planning can shift the needle. More importantly, knowing which Apple Watch metrics actually drive adaptation—and which are noise—matters more than staring at the trend graph. Dorsi takes that data and builds a strength training program that responds to your real-world fatigue and readiness. No guesswork, just incremental adjustments. Let's break down what VO2 max really tracks, how to interpret your reading, and what you can start doing tomorrow to improve.
Practical Playbook
Find your cardio fitness level on Apple Watch
Open the Health app on your iPhone, then tap Browse > Heart > Cardio Fitness. You'll see a VO2 max estimate—usually ranges from 30 to 50 for most adults. Below 40 is low for men; below 35 for women. The number updates after any outdoor walk, run, or hike where your heart rate stays elevated for at least 20 minutes.
Choose zone training to push VO2 max up
Set heart rate zones on your watch—Zone 2 (easy conversational pace) builds aerobic base. Zone 4 (hard but sustainable) raises lactate threshold. Aim for 80% of weekly volume in Zone 2, 20% in Zone 4. Even two 30-minute Zone 4 sessions a week can boost cardio fitness by 5-10% in three months.
Look at 6-month trends, not daily numbers
Day-to-day VO2 max readings bounce around—sleep, hydration, temperature all play a part. In the Health app, switch from a week to 6 months. A steady upward slope means your training is working. Flat or down? Time to rethink intensity or recovery. Don't worry about a single bad day.
Drop training when your cardio fitness drops
A sudden 5% decline over a month usually signals something wrong—illness, junk sleep, or overtraining. Instead of pushing harder, back off. Swap a hard run for a 45-minute walk for a week. Watch your fatigue levels. Restoration often brings the number back up faster than more effort.
Run a 15-minute walk test to check accuracy
The watch's estimate relies on a good calibration. Go to an outdoor track, start a 'Walk' workout, and walk steadily for 15 minutes covering at least 1 km. This calibrates the accelerometer and heart rate sensor. Do it once a month after forgetting your phone at home—consistency improves precision.
Common Mistakes
- Mistake
- Relying on a single cardio fitness reading as absolute truth.
- Why
- Apple Watch estimates are based on heart rate and motion data, which can swing wildly day to day due to sleep, hydration, or even how tight the band is. A single low number might just be noise, not a real drop in fitness.
- Fix
- Track the 30-day trend instead of obsessing over daily values; the algorithm is designed to smooth out short-term blips and show your actual direction.
- Mistake
- Skipping outdoor walks or runs with GPS calibration.
- Why
- Without GPS, the watch guesses your pace from wrist motion—less accurate than knowing your actual speed during exertion. The cardio fitness estimation improves significantly when it can match heart rate to real-world pace.
- Fix
- Take at least a few outdoor walks or runs per month with GPS enabled so the watch can calibrate its algorithm to your stride and terrain.
- Mistake
- Comparing your cardio fitness number directly to a friend's.
- Why
- VO2 max estimates are personalized based on age, weight, and sex—differences in these make direct comparisons misleading. The watch's percentile actually matches you to similar demographics.
- Fix
- Focus on your own trend line and personal improvement rather than stacking your number against others. Your goal is to see the line go up, not to match someone else's.
- Mistake
- Assuming a low cardio fitness number means you're unhealthy.
- Why
- This metric estimates aerobic capacity, not overall health—fatigue, caffeine, or even hot weather can temporarily lower it. It’s not a medical diagnosis.
- Fix
- Use the number as a conversation starter with your doctor if you see a persistent downward trend, but don't panic over a single dip. Look at the longer view.
Frequently asked questions
From the Dorsi blog
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Training With Low HRV: When to Push, When to Hold Back
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Just show up. Dorsi handles the rest.
- HRV-driven readiness — today's plan adapts to how recovered you actually are.
- Adapts every session — no decision fatigue, no second-guessing your numbers.
- Apple Watch native — log a set with your wrist, not your phone.