why is my vo2 max below average — Wearable Metrics Explained
Seeing a below-average VO2 max on your Apple Watch can be unsettling. That number—a measure of how efficiently your body uses oxygen during exercise—drops with age, inactivity, or even subtle changes in sleep and diet. But it’s not a fixed score. A low reading may simply mean your watch needs a better calibration run, or that your training hasn’t pushed your cardiovascular system lately. The three Apple Watch numbers that actually matter—including VO2 max—are covered in detail elsewhere on this site. Here, I’ll explain why your VO2 max might sit below average and how to interpret that trend. Dorsi uses these same metrics to adapt your workouts in real time, no guesswork required. Next, we’ll walk through the most common reasons for a low VO2 max, from plain math errors in the watch’s algorithm to genuine fitness plateaus.
Practical Playbook
Check your measurement consistency
VO2 max readings vary with warm-up length, running surface, and even time of day. A single low number might just be a sloppy run—not your true fitness. Your Apple Watch estimates it during outdoor runs; make sure you’re getting a steady GPS signal and a proper warm-up before judging the result.
Evaluate your training intensity
Low VO2 max often means you’re not pushing hard enough. Most people spend too much time in Zone 2 and skip the red-line work. Add two interval sessions per week—like 4x4-minute repeats at 85-95% max heart rate. That direct stimulus lifts oxygen utilization noticeably within 6 weeks.
Look at non-workout factors
Sleep, hydration, and altitude mess with readings. A single bad night can drop your VO2 max estimate 5%. Even your morning coffee or a recent meal inflates heart rate, skewing the calculation. Don’t panic over one outlier—check if you were tired, dehydrated, or had alcohol the night before.
Reassess over several weeks
VO2 max trends matter, not single points. If your 30-day average stays below your age/sex norm despite consistent training, talk to a doctor—could be low hemoglobin or a heart rhythm issue. Otherwise, a dedicated 3-month block of progressive intervals can shift that number 3-5 ml/kg/min.
Common Mistakes
- Mistake
- Assuming a single low VO2 max reading means your fitness is poor.
- Why
- VO2 max fluctuates daily based on sleep, hydration, stress, and measurement error. One data point isn't a trend and can mislead you into thinking you're losing fitness when you're just tired.
- Fix
- Ignore single readings. Look at a 30-day average in your wearable app to see the real direction your fitness is heading.
- Mistake
- Thinking VO2 max is fixed and can't improve after a certain age.
- Why
- Genetics and age do play a role, but consistent training can boost VO2 max by 10-20% even in older adults. Letting age become an excuse stops people from making real gains.
- Fix
- Run 2-3 interval sessions per week at 85-95% of max heart rate. That's the sweet spot for pushing your cardiovascular ceiling, no matter how old you are.
- Mistake
- Blaming the smartwatch for inaccurate readings without checking how the test was done.
- Why
- Wearables estimate VO2 max from outdoor walks or runs with stable heart rate and GPS data. A loose band, poor pace control, or indoor workouts give junk numbers, so the problem is often user error, not the device.
- Fix
- Wear the watch snugly above the wrist bone, keep a steady hard pace for 20+ minutes, and do the required workout outdoors with clear GPS. That'll get you reliable estimates.
- Mistake
- Expecting a high VO2 max without specific cardio training.
- Why
- VO2 max improves when you push your heart and lungs near their limit. Casual walking or lifting weights won't cut it—they lack the sustained high-intensity demand needed to trigger adaptation.
- Fix
- Add dedicated cardio sessions like running, cycling, or rowing with intervals at 90%+ of max heart rate. Three times a week for 8 weeks will shift that number.
Frequently asked questions
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.