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You have always had two ages.
The first one is easy: it is the number of years since you were born. It appears on your passport, your driver's license, and every intake form you have ever filled in. It is precise, immutable, and β from a health perspective β increasingly incomplete.
The second one is harder to measure, more variable across people, and far more interesting: your biological age. Specifically, the age your cardiovascular system appears to be operating at, based on how it actually performs.
A 40-year-old with excellent heart rate variability, strong recovery metrics, and efficient sleep architecture may have a cardiovascular system functioning more like a 33-year-old's. A 40-year-old with chronically disrupted sleep, elevated resting heart rate, and poor recovery may have one operating more like a 50-year-old's. Same calendar year. Vastly different physiological states.
This distinction has moved from academic curiosity to clinical relevance. The American Heart Association now tracks "heart age" separately from chronological age in its public health messaging β because the gap between the two is one of the most actionable numbers in preventive medicine.[1]
Cardiovascular age isn't a single biomarker β it is an estimate synthesized from several converging signals.
Heart rate variability (HRV) is the primary input. HRV is the variation in time between successive heartbeats, measured in milliseconds. A higher HRV generally signals that the autonomic nervous system is balanced and responsive β the heart can modulate its rhythm quickly in response to demands. HRV declines with age in most people, but the rate of decline varies enormously and is partially modifiable through sleep, stress management, and aerobic fitness.[2]
Resting heart rate trends over time add a second signal. In fit, well-recovered individuals, resting heart rate tends to be lower and stable. In people under chronic physiological stress β regardless of their perceived subjective stress β it creeps upward.
Sleep architecture rounds out the picture. Deep sleep stages are when the heart rate drops furthest and the cardiovascular system performs most of its nightly repair. The proportion of time spent in restorative sleep predicts cardiovascular outcomes independently of exercise and diet.[3]
When you combine these signals over time, a pattern emerges that correlates meaningfully with cardiovascular risk factors β and it can differ by years, sometimes a decade or more, from a person's chronological age.
Same person. Two different numbers.
Oura integrationChronological
Emma
Age 42
Source
From passport
tap β₯ to learn more
Biological
Emma
Age 36
Source
From Oura Ring
Heart Rate Variability β 12-week trend
Rising HRV trend β estimated cardiovascular age decreasing
Bio age updates daily as new health data arrives β hover over the β₯ to see what drives it
This is the most important point, and the one most often underappreciated.
Chronological age is a one-way street. Biological cardiovascular age is not.
Longitudinal research from multiple cohorts shows that cardiovascular biomarkers are trainable to a meaningful degree across the lifespan. In one frequently cited analysis of middle-aged adults, structured aerobic exercise over two years produced measurable improvements in left ventricular compliance β essentially, the heart became more elastically youthful.[4] The improvements were dose-dependent: more consistent, varied training produced larger effects.
Several factors influence the trajectory:
The implication is direct: the number you see today is not the number you are locked into.
Oura Ring measures cardiovascular age using a proprietary model trained on population-scale health data, but the underlying inputs are the signals described above: HRV, resting heart rate, and sleep quality, tracked continuously over months.
The estimate stabilizes as more data accumulates. Early readings have wider confidence intervals; after several months of consistent wear, the model's estimate becomes more reliable. Readings are averaged across the trailing year (where available) and the past seven days, and the lower of the two values is used β an approach that rewards improvement without penalizing occasional bad weeks.
What this means practically: the bio-age number you see on your profile is a rolling, improving estimate. It updates as your body adapts to new behaviors. It is not a judgment. It is a signal.
New Β· Requires Oura Ring Β· Profile feature
Connect your Oura Ring and display your biological cardiovascular age on your profile β a number that reflects how your heart is actually aging, not just the year you were born.
Requires a paid subscription and an Oura Ring. Your health data is never shared β you control what appears publicly.
The case for displaying biological age on a profile that matters is partly informational and partly relational.
Informational: For people actively tracking health and longevity outcomes, a public-facing cardiovascular age creates a lightweight accountability signal. You are choosing to share not just who you are, but how you are investing in your own health.
Relational: There is emerging evidence that health-conscious social environments reinforce health behaviors. People tend to align their behavior β exercise frequency, sleep habits, dietary patterns β with the visible norms of their immediate social context.[7] A community where biological age is visible is a community where it can be a shared motivation.
The feature is entirely opt-in. If you connect your Oura Ring but prefer to show your chronological age β or no age at all β you can do that. The point is not to gamify wellness or create a leaderboard. The point is to make health a conversation, not a secret.
If you are already wearing an Oura Ring, your cardiovascular age is already being estimated. Connecting it to your Connection Companion profile takes about two minutes and adds a meaningful data layer to how you present yourself to others.
If you are not wearing a wearable yet, the underlying behaviors that move cardiovascular age in the right direction are well-established: consistent aerobic activity (especially social forms), sleep quality investment, and stress management. Those are worth pursuing regardless of whether you ever measure the result. If you are considering an Oura Ring to start measuring, use this link for 10% off.
The number is useful. The habits that move it are the point.