BackMarch 01, 20265 min readhrvapple watchrecoveryresting heart rateCentury

HRV dropped: what to do today (a simple checklist using Apple Watch + Apple Health)

A low HRV day can mean fatigue, illness, poor sleep, or just noise. Use this simple checklist to decide whether to train, adjust intensity, or rest. Works with Apple Watch and Apple Health trends.

HRV dropped: what to do today (a simple checklist using Apple Watch + Apple Health)

HRV dropped: what to do today (a simple checklist using Apple Watch + Apple Health)

You wake up, check your metrics, and see it.

Your HRV is down.

Now the annoying question appears:

  • should I train today
  • should I rest
  • or should I ignore it

HRV is useful, but only if you treat it like a signal, not a verdict.

This guide gives you a simple checklist you can run in two minutes using Apple Watch and Apple Health.

TL;DR

  • Do not change your training plan based on one low HRV reading.
  • The most useful pattern is HRV down plus resting heart rate up compared to your normal.
  • Check context first: sleep, alcohol, late meals, dehydration, stress, illness.
  • If multiple red flags stack, do an easy session or rest.
  • If you feel good and only HRV moved, train but avoid a max effort day.

Step 0: make sure your HRV is even comparable

Apple Watch HRV is often measured during short moments of stillness.

That makes it sensitive to:

  • timing
  • movement
  • breathing
  • measurement window

If your HRV reading comes from a different time than usual, treat it as lower confidence.

If you want the detailed setup, read:

  • /blog/apple-watch-hrv-how-to-measure

Step 1: zoom out to the trend

HRV is noisy.

Before you react, look at a trend window:

  • 7 days minimum
  • 14 days is better

Questions to ask:

  • is this a one day dip
  • or has the trend been drifting down for several days

A one day dip is often life, not fitness.

Step 2: compare HRV with resting heart rate

HRV alone is ambiguous.

Resting heart rate adds context.

The high signal combo

Pay attention when you see:

  • HRV is down compared to your 7 to 14 day baseline
  • resting heart rate is up compared to baseline

If this holds for two or more days, your body is usually under real stress.

Common causes:

  • under recovery from training
  • poor sleep
  • alcohol
  • dehydration
  • illness
  • long travel

Step 3: check the obvious context stack

Run this checklist. If you answer yes to multiple items, do not force intensity.

Sleep

  • did you sleep less than your normal
  • did you have many wakeups
  • did you go to bed much later than usual

Food timing

  • did you eat a large meal within 3 hours of bed

Late heavy meals often push resting heart rate up and HRV down.

Alcohol

  • did you drink last night

Even small amounts can impact sleep quality and recovery metrics.

Hydration

  • did you wake up thirsty
  • did you have a hard session yesterday without replacing fluids

Stress

  • are you in a high stress week
  • did you have a stressful evening

Illness

  • sore throat, unusual fatigue, elevated temperature, body aches

If you suspect illness, treat it as the priority.

Step 4: decide what to do today

Use this decision tree.

Option A: proceed as planned

Do your normal training if:

  • you feel good
  • resting heart rate is normal
  • sleep was normal
  • HRV is only slightly down and the trend is stable

If you are unsure, keep intensity moderate.

Option B: train, but lower the ceiling

Do an easier session if:

  • you feel okay but not great
  • HRV is down and you have one context red flag

Examples:

  • keep the session Zone 2
  • cut volume by 20 to 30%
  • swap intervals for an easy run plus strides

Option C: rest or do active recovery

Rest or do active recovery if:

  • HRV is down and resting heart rate is up
  • sleep was bad
  • you feel heavy, sore, or unusually tired

Active recovery options:

  • 30 to 45 minutes easy walk
  • easy spin
  • mobility and light strength

The goal is to recover, not to win a workout.

Step 5: check if your training is the real cause

Sometimes HRV drops for lifestyle reasons. Sometimes it is training load.

Signs it might be load related:

  • several days of low HRV
  • elevated resting heart rate
  • pace feels harder at the same heart rate
  • motivation and mood are lower

If this is you, consider a deload week.

Two good explainers (watch after you train)

Sleep and recovery basics:

A practical clip on stress and breathing (useful when stress is the driver):

Where Century fits

Century AI is building a recovery and training guidance experience using Apple Health.

Instead of staring at raw metrics, we want to help you answer:

  • should I push today
  • should I keep it easy
  • should I take a recovery day

Using trends across:

  • HRV
  • resting heart rate
  • sleep
  • training load

If you want the product to turn your Apple Watch data into simple daily decisions, join the Century waitlist.

Disclaimer

This article is for general educational purposes and is not medical advice. If you have symptoms, a heart condition, or you are unsure what training intensity is safe, talk to a qualified clinician.

Century is building a calm daily health score + plan - using the watch you already wear.