VO2 Max Calculator

Is 60 a Good VO2 Max?

A VO2 max of 60 ml/kg/min is "Superior" for a 35-year-old man (95th percentile) and "Superior" for a 35-year-old woman (99th percentile). The table below shows how 60 ranks in every age bracket.

Want your exact percentile? Enter your age and sex in the percentile calculator.

Where 60 ml/kg/min ranks by age and sex
Age bracketMenWomen
PercentileCategoryPercentileCategory
20–2986Excellent97Superior
30–3995Superior99Superior
40–4997Superior99Superior
50–5999Superior99Superior
60–6999Superior99Superior
70–7999Superior99Superior

What 60 ml/kg/min means physiologically

VO2 max of 60 ml/kg/min is equivalent to 17.1 METs (one MET = 3.5 ml/kg/min, resting oxygen consumption). Practically, someone at this level can sustain steady-state exercise at roughly 60–70% of 60 — that is, 39.0 ml/kg/min, or about 11 METs — for an hour or more. For context, brisk walking is ~4 METs, jogging ~7 METs, and competitive running ~12–16 METs.

Each MET above the population median is associated with an ~10–15% reduction in all-cause mortality risk in long-term cohort studies, even after adjusting for traditional cardiovascular risk factors.

Next steps

Whether 60 is good for you depends on where you want to go. Three common paths:

  • If you're below average for your bracket: start with zone-2 training — the highest-return intervention for beginners.
  • If you're average-to-good: add Norwegian 4x4 intervals once a week. Consistent use produces 5–10% gains in 8 weeks.
  • If you're excellent-or-better: polarized training (80% easy / 20% hard) is the dominant approach in elite endurance programs.

Nearby values

Frequently asked questions

Is 60 a good VO2 max?
It depends on age and sex. For a 35-year-old man, 60 ml/kg/min is "Superior" (95th percentile). For a 35-year-old woman, 60 is "Superior" (99th percentile). See the full table below for every age bracket.
What does a VO2 max of 60 ml/kg/min mean physiologically?
A VO2 max of 60 means your body can use 60 ml of oxygen per kilogram of body weight per minute at maximum effort. For a 175-lb (79 kg) adult that's 4.7 liters of oxygen per minute — enough to sustain roughly 17 METs of activity.
How can I improve from a VO2 max of 60?
Consistent aerobic training — zone 2 workouts 2–3 times per week plus one HIIT session — typically produces 5–15% gains in 8–12 weeks. See /improve/ for specific programs.