What Are the Stages of Hypertension?

Hypertension has two main stages, Stage 1 and Stage 2. Doctors also use other blood pressure groups, like normal, elevated, and a dangerous level called a hypertensive crisis. This guide breaks down each stage, the numbers behind it, and what it means for your health.
What Are the Stages of Hypertension?
Blood pressure has two numbers, the top (systolic) and the bottom (diastolic). Here is the full chart.
| Category | Top Number | Bottom Number |
| Normal | Below 120 | and below 80 |
| Elevated | 120 to 129 | and below 80 |
| Stage 1 Hypertension | 130 to 139 | or 80 to 89 |
| Stage 2 Hypertension | 140 or higher | or 90 or higher |
| Hypertensive Crisis | Higher than 180 | and/or higher than 120 |
These ranges come from the American Heart Association, reaffirmed in the 2025 ACC/AHA guideline.
Elevated Blood Pressure
This is a warning sign, not high blood pressure yet. The top number sits between 120 and 129. Healthy habits now keep it from climbing.
Stage 1 Hypertension
Stage 1 means a reading of 130 to 139 over 80 to 89. Your doctor may start with lifestyle changes, and sometimes medicine. Small steps add up here.
Stage 2 Hypertension
Stage 2 means 140 over 90 or higher. This often needs healthy habits plus medicine. Steady hypertension management keeps your numbers in a safe zone.
Hypertensive Crisis
A reading above 180 over 120 is an emergency. With chest pain, trouble breathing, or numbness, call 911. Do not wait.
Why The Stages Matter
High blood pressure is sneaky. It often shows no signs, which is why people call it the silent killer. The CDC reports that nearly half of U.S. adults have high blood pressure, and many do not know it. Left alone, it raises the risk of heart disease, stroke, and kidney damage.
How To Lower Your Numbers
Here is the good news. You can take charge with a few simple steps:
- Eat less salt and more fruits and veggies.
- Move your body most days.
- Keep a healthy weight.
- Limit alcohol and quit smoking.
- Sleep well and manage stress.
Regular annual physical visits help you catch changes early.
Final Thoughts
The stages of hypertension move from normal to elevated, then Stage 1, Stage 2, and a hypertensive crisis. Each step is a chance to act early. Check your numbers, build healthy habits, and lean on your care team. If your blood pressure needs a closer look, the team at Yorktown Health in Vernon Hills can help. Book a visit today.

