Blood Pressure Risk Quiz — 12 Questions, One Clear Answer
High blood pressure affects 1 in 3 adults globally and has no symptoms until it causes serious damage. The American Heart Association identifies 12 key risk factors — from family history and diet to sleep patterns and stress. This quiz scores all 12 and gives you a HealthIQ Blood Pressure Score, a personalised breakdown of where your risk is coming from, and specific steps to address the highest-risk areas first.
Matched to Your Risk Profile
Selected based on your top risk factors.
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Next: Sleep Quality Score Quiz
Poor sleep is one of the top modifiable risk factors for high blood pressure. See where your sleep stands.
Why Blood Pressure Is Called the Silent Killer
High blood pressure produces no symptoms in the vast majority of cases. People feel completely normal at 160/100 mmHg — a reading that, sustained over years, is quietly damaging arterial walls, straining the heart, and increasing the probability of stroke, heart attack, and kidney failure. The World Health Organization estimates that hypertension causes 10.4 million deaths per year globally. Roughly half the people with high blood pressure are unaware they have it.
The 2017 ACC/AHA guidelines redefined hypertension as a sustained reading of 130/80 mmHg or above — lowering the threshold from the previous 140/90. This reclassified approximately 31 million additional Americans as hypertensive. The practical consequence is that readings in the 130-140 range, which were once considered “prehypertension,” are now formally recognised as requiring lifestyle intervention.
AHA Blood Pressure Categories: Normal: below 120/80. Elevated: 120-129/below 80. Stage 1 Hypertension: 130-139/80-89. Stage 2 Hypertension: 140+/90+. Hypertensive Crisis: above 180/120 — seek immediate medical attention.
The 12 Risk Factors This Quiz Covers
Age
Blood pressure tends to rise with age as arterial walls gradually stiffen and lose elasticity. The risk increases significantly after age 55 in men and 65 in women, though younger adults are far from immune — hypertension rates in adults under 40 have been rising steadily since 2000.
Family History
If both your parents had high blood pressure, your lifetime risk is substantially higher than average. The genetic component of hypertension is estimated to account for 30-50% of variance in blood pressure. You cannot change your genetics, but knowing your family history shifts the urgency of monitoring and lifestyle intervention.
Excess Body Weight
Obesity is one of the strongest modifiable risk factors. As body weight increases, the heart must work harder to circulate blood through a larger volume of tissue. Insulin resistance — common in overweight individuals — also contributes to sodium retention and elevated blood pressure. A 10 kg weight loss typically reduces systolic blood pressure by 5-20 mmHg.
High Sodium Diet
Excess sodium causes the kidneys to retain water, which increases blood volume and therefore pressure on arterial walls. The AHA recommends under 2,300 mg of sodium per day for most adults and ideally under 1,500 mg for those with elevated pressure. The average American consumes over 3,400 mg daily — mostly from processed and restaurant food, not table salt.
Physical Inactivity
Regular aerobic exercise strengthens the heart, improves arterial flexibility, and reduces resting heart rate — all of which lower blood pressure. The AHA’s target of 150 minutes of moderate activity per week reduces systolic blood pressure by an estimated 4-9 mmHg in hypertensive individuals.
Smoking and Alcohol
Smoking causes immediate, temporary blood pressure spikes with each cigarette and long-term arterial damage that raises baseline pressure. Alcohol at more than 14 drinks per week is associated with significantly elevated blood pressure and reduces the effectiveness of antihypertensive medication.
| Risk Factor | Approx. BP Impact | Modifiable? |
|---|---|---|
| Obesity (BMI 30+) | +5 to +20 mmHg systolic | Yes |
| High sodium diet | +2 to +8 mmHg | Yes |
| Physical inactivity | +5 to +9 mmHg | Yes |
| Heavy alcohol use | +2 to +4 mmHg | Yes |
| Smoking (current) | +3 to +6 mmHg baseline | Yes |
| Poor sleep / apnea | +2 to +9 mmHg | Partially |
| Chronic stress | +3 to +8 mmHg | Partially |
| Age (over 65) | Progressive increase | No |
| Family history | Significant variance | No |
What You Can Actually Do About It
The DASH diet (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension) — high in fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and low-fat dairy — has been shown in multiple controlled trials to reduce systolic blood pressure by 8-14 mmHg. This is comparable to the effect of a single antihypertensive medication, without the side effects.
The combination of weight loss, sodium reduction, increased exercise, and alcohol moderation can reduce systolic blood pressure by 20-30 mmHg in people with Stage 2 hypertension — enough to eliminate the need for medication in many cases. The key is that all four changes need to happen simultaneously; partial adoption produces partial results.
Home blood pressure monitoring is underused and highly valuable. A single reading at the doctor’s office may be elevated due to white coat hypertension (anxiety-induced). Average readings taken across seven mornings at home — before eating, before medication, after sitting quietly for five minutes — give a far more accurate picture of your true baseline.