What your blood pressure numbers actually mean
Blood pressure is the most-measured number in medicine and one of the least-explained. Two numbers, a cuff, thirty seconds — and a reading that quietly predicts more about long-term health than almost anything else that cheap.
The two numbers
Systolic (the top number) is the pressure in your arteries at the moment the heart contracts. Diastolic (the bottom) is the pressure between beats, while the heart refills. Both matter; sustained elevation in either counts.
The current US categories (in mmHg):
| Category | Systolic | Diastolic | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Normal | Below 120 | and | below 80 |
| Elevated | 120–129 | and | below 80 |
| Stage 1 hypertension | 130–139 | or | 80–89 |
| Stage 2 hypertension | 140 or higher | or | 90 or higher |
| Crisis — seek care now | Above 180 | and/or | above 120 |
Two honest footnotes. First, these cutoffs describe sustained pressure — a diagnosis is made from repeated readings over time, never one measurement. Second, the "crisis" row has an important split: numbers that high with symptoms (chest pain, shortness of breath, vision changes, confusion, severe headache) are an emergency; the same numbers with no symptoms warrant a prompt call to your clinician, not necessarily an ambulance.
Why single readings mislead
Blood pressure moves constantly — with stress, caffeine, pain, a full bladder, the walk from the waiting room. Plenty of people run high only in clinics ("white coat hypertension") and plenty run high only outside them ("masked hypertension"), which is exactly why home measurement, done properly, is now standard practice for confirming what's real.
The measurement ritual matters more than people think: sit quietly for five minutes first; feet flat on the floor, back supported; arm resting at heart level; cuff on the bare upper arm (upper-arm cuffs beat wrist cuffs); no caffeine, exercise, or smoking in the prior half hour; don't talk during the reading. Take two readings a minute apart, morning and evening, for a week — then look at the average, not the scariest number.
Trends are the whole game
A single 142/88 after a stressful commute is noise. An average drifting from 118 to 126 to 133 across two years is signal — the kind that's invisible unless the readings live somewhere that can show you the line. This is the same principle as reading lab results: your own history is the reference range that matters most.
If your average is high
Bring the log, not an anecdote — "my 7-day home average is 136/86" starts a completely different conversation than "it was high once." And know that the first prescriptions are usually behavioral: sodium down, activity up, alcohol down, sleep fixed, weight if applicable. Medication decisions get made on top of confirmed averages and your overall risk, which is precisely why the measurement habit comes first.