Meta Title: Normal Blood Sugar Levels by Age: 2026 Chart & Guide Meta Description: See normal blood sugar levels by age for kids, adults, seniors & pregnancy — with fasting, post-meal, and A1C charts based on 2026 ADA guidelines.
You just checked your blood sugar and got 118 mg/dL. Is that fine? Should you worry? Does it even matter that you’re 52, not 25?
Here’s the truth most charts leave out: there’s no single “normal” blood sugar number for everyone. What’s healthy for a toddler isn’t the same as what’s healthy for a pregnant woman, a 70-year-old, or someone who ran 5 miles an hour ago. Age, meal timing, and health history all move the target.
This guide breaks down exactly what “normal” means at every life stage — with the specific numbers doctors actually use, not vague ranges. You’ll get fasting levels, post-meal levels, A1C targets, and clear guidance on when a reading means “relax” versus “call your doctor.”
Everything below reflects the American Diabetes Association’s (ADA) Standards of Care in Diabetes—2026 and current CDC and NIDDK guidance.
Key Takeaways
- Blood sugar targets are based on testing method and health status — not really age — for most healthy people, normal ranges are similar from the teen years through the early 60s.
- Fasting blood sugar under 100 mg/dL, and A1C under 5.7%, is considered normal for the general adult and child population without diabetes.
- Older adults (65+) with diabetes often get slightly relaxed targets to reduce the risk of dangerous low blood sugar (hypoglycemia).
- Pregnancy has its own stricter targets — a fasting level that’s fine for a 35-year-old could signal gestational diabetes in a pregnant patient.
- One high reading isn’t a diagnosis. Diabetes and prediabetes are confirmed with repeat testing, not a single number.
What “Normal Blood Sugar” Actually Means
Blood sugar (glucose) is your body’s primary fuel. It naturally rises after you eat and falls between meals and overnight. “Normal” simply describes the range your body keeps glucose in without needing outside help — no insulin resistance, no medication, no organ dysfunction.
Three tests define that range:
| Test | What It Measures |
|---|---|
| Fasting blood sugar (FBS) | Glucose after at least 8 hours without food |
| Postprandial (post-meal) glucose | Glucose 1–2 hours after eating |
| A1C (HbA1c) | Your average blood sugar over the past 2–3 months |
Doctors rarely rely on one test alone. A single fasting reading tells you about right now. A1C tells you about the bigger picture.
Normal Blood Sugar Levels by Age: The Complete Chart
For most people without diagnosed diabetes, normal ranges stay fairly consistent from childhood through late adulthood. What changes with age is less the “normal” cutoff and more your risk of drifting out of it, and how aggressively a doctor treats borderline numbers.
Quick Reference Chart
| Age Group | Fasting Blood Sugar | Post-Meal (2-hr) | A1C |
|---|---|---|---|
| Children (6–12) | 70–100 mg/dL | Under 140 mg/dL | Below 5.7% |
| Teens (13–19) | 70–100 mg/dL | Under 140 mg/dL | Below 5.7% |
| Adults (20–40) | 70–99 mg/dL | Under 140 mg/dL | Below 5.7% |
| Adults (41–59) | 70–99 mg/dL | Under 140 mg/dL | Below 5.7% |
| Adults 60+ (healthy) | 70–100 mg/dL | Under 140 mg/dL | Below 5.7% |
| Older adults 65+ (with diabetes, complex health) | Up to 150 mg/dL may be accepted | Individualized | Below 7.5%–8.0% |
| Pregnant (no diabetes) | Under 95 mg/dL | Under 120 mg/dL (2-hr) | N/A |
Ranges reflect people without a diabetes diagnosis unless noted. Individual targets should always be confirmed with your own doctor, especially if you take glucose-lowering medication.
Children (Ages 6–12)
Kids without diabetes follow the same diagnostic thresholds as adults: fasting glucose under 100 mg/dL is normal, 100–125 mg/dL suggests prediabetes, and 126 mg/dL or higher (confirmed on repeat testing) indicates diabetes.
What’s different is the why you’d test at all. Children rarely get routine glucose screening unless there’s:
- A family history of type 1 or type 2 diabetes
- Symptoms like excessive thirst, frequent urination, or unexplained weight loss
- Overweight or obesity plus another risk factor (per NIDDK, testing is recommended for kids ages 10–18 with these combined risk factors)
Type 1 diabetes in children often appears suddenly, so parents shouldn’t wait for a scheduled check-up if warning signs appear.
Teenagers (Ages 13–19)
Teen ranges match adults: fasting under 100 mg/dL, post-meal under 140 mg/dL. Puberty hormones can cause temporary insulin resistance, which is one reason teens with type 1 diabetes sometimes see their insulin needs spike during growth years — that’s expected physiology, not poor management.
For teens already diagnosed with diabetes, <cite index=”2-1″>the ADA’s Standards of Care for Children and Adolescents suggests an A1C below 7% is appropriate for most, with adjustments made individually.</cite>
Adults (Ages 20–40)
This is the baseline most charts are built around:
- Fasting: 70–99 mg/dL
- 2 hours after eating: under 140 mg/dL
- A1C: below 5.7%
Prediabetes is diagnosed at a fasting glucose of 100–125 mg/dL or an A1C between 5.7–6.4%. Diabetes is diagnosed at a fasting glucose of 126 mg/dL or higher (on two separate tests), an A1C of 6.5% or higher, or a random glucose reading of 200 mg/dL or higher with symptoms.
<cite index=”6-1″>The ADA now recommends diabetes and prediabetes screening begin at age 35 for the general population</cite>, so a baseline test in your mid-30s is worth having even if you feel completely healthy.
Adults (Ages 41–59)
Numbers don’t officially shift here, but risk does. Insulin sensitivity gradually declines with age, meaning the same meal can raise glucose more than it did a decade earlier. <cite index=”6-1″>Screening is recommended sooner — and at a younger age — for anyone with overweight, obesity, or risk factors like family history of diabetes, high blood pressure, or a sedentary lifestyle.</cite>
This is also the decade where prediabetes most commonly gets caught — and reversed with lifestyle changes, before it becomes type 2 diabetes.
Adults 60 and Older
For healthy, active older adults without diabetes, targets stay the same as younger adults. The nuance appears once diabetes is already diagnosed.
<cite index=”4-1″>Your body becomes less responsive to insulin with each decade past 40, meaning the same meal raises your blood sugar more than it used to.</cite> At the same time, tight glucose control carries more risk in this group because low blood sugar (hypoglycemia) is more dangerous for older adults — it raises fall risk, and can worsen cognitive symptoms.
That’s why <cite index=”2-1″>the ADA’s Standards of Care for Older Adults notes that healthy older adults with diabetes may target an A1C below about 7.0–7.5%, while those with more complex health conditions may be given less aggressive targets, since avoiding hypoglycemia is a major priority in this age group.</cite>
The ADA generally splits older adults with diabetes into three health tiers, each with a different, individualized A1C goal — healthy with few coexisting conditions, complex/intermediate health, and poor health/end-of-life care. Your doctor determines which tier fits you.
Pregnancy: A Different Rulebook Entirely
Pregnancy glucose targets are stricter than standard adult targets, because even mild elevations affect fetal growth and delivery risk.
<cite index=”11-1″>Both ACOG and the ADA recommend a fasting target under 95 mg/dL, and postprandial values under 140 mg/dL at 1 hour or under 120 mg/dL at 2 hours</cite> for women managing gestational diabetes.
Gestational diabetes screening, done between 24–28 weeks:
- 1-hour glucose challenge test: A reading of 140 mg/dL or higher usually triggers further testing.
- 3-hour oral glucose tolerance test (if needed): Diagnosis is confirmed if two or more of the four blood draws come back elevated.
<cite index=”6-1″>The ADA’s 2026 guidelines also recommend screening pregnant individuals before 15 weeks using a lower A1C threshold of 5.9–6.4%, to catch abnormal glucose metabolism earlier</cite> — since even modestly elevated early-pregnancy glucose carries real risk for pregnancy outcomes.
Expert takeaway: A fasting glucose of 95 mg/dL might be unremarkable for a non-pregnant adult, but during pregnancy it can flag a real problem. Context — not just the number — determines what “normal” means.
Blood Sugar Chart by Test Type (mg/dL and mmol/L)
| Category | Fasting | 2-Hr Post-Meal | A1C |
|---|---|---|---|
| Normal | 70–99 mg/dL (3.9–5.5 mmol/L) | Under 140 mg/dL (7.8 mmol/L) | Below 5.7% |
| Prediabetes | 100–125 mg/dL (5.6–6.9 mmol/L) | 140–199 mg/dL (7.8–11.0 mmol/L) | 5.7%–6.4% |
| Diabetes | 126 mg/dL or higher (7.0 mmol/L+) | 200 mg/dL or higher (11.1 mmol/L+) | 6.5% or higher |
Diagnosis of diabetes or prediabetes always requires confirmation through repeat testing — never a single reading.
Why Blood Sugar Changes as You Age
Several physiological shifts explain why glucose management gets harder over time, even for people who haven’t changed their diet or activity level:
- Declining insulin sensitivity. Muscle and fat cells respond less efficiently to insulin with age, so the pancreas has to work harder to move glucose out of the bloodstream.
- Loss of muscle mass (sarcopenia). Muscle is one of the body’s biggest glucose “sinks.” Less muscle means less capacity to absorb glucose after meals.
- Slower metabolism. A gradually lower resting metabolic rate can contribute to weight gain, which itself worsens insulin resistance.
- More medications. Steroids, certain blood pressure drugs, and other common prescriptions in older adults can raise blood sugar as a side effect.
- Reduced pancreatic function. Beta cells (which produce insulin) can become less responsive over decades of use.
None of this means rising blood sugar is inevitable — but it explains why regular screening matters more, not less, as you get older.
Symptoms: High vs. Low Blood Sugar
Signs of High Blood Sugar (Hyperglycemia)
High blood sugar tends to build gradually, so it’s easy to miss early on:
- Increased thirst and dry mouth
- Frequent urination
- Fatigue or brain fog
- Blurred vision
- Slow-healing cuts or sores
- Unexplained weight loss (more common in undiagnosed type 1 diabetes)
Signs of Low Blood Sugar (Hypoglycemia)
Low blood sugar (generally under 70 mg/dL) often comes on fast:
- Shakiness or sweating
- Irritability or sudden mood change
- Rapid heartbeat
- Dizziness or lightheadedness
- Confusion or difficulty concentrating
- In severe cases: seizures or loss of consciousness
Severe hypoglycemia is a medical emergency. If someone is confused, unresponsive, or unable to safely swallow, call emergency services rather than trying to treat it at home.
How Often Should You Get Tested?
| Group | Recommended Frequency |
|---|---|
| Adults 35+, no risk factors, normal results | Every 3 years |
| Adults with overweight/obesity + 1 risk factor | Test now, then per doctor’s guidance |
| Adults with prediabetes | At least annually |
| Pregnant individuals | Screened at 24–28 weeks (earlier if high-risk) |
| People with diagnosed diabetes | As directed — often daily to several times daily |
| History of gestational diabetes | Every 1–3 years, for life |
<cite index=”16-1″>The ADA recommends individuals with a history of gestational diabetes receive lifelong screening for prediabetes or diabetes every 1–3 years.</cite> <cite index=”1-1″>The USPSTF recommends screening adults ages 35 to 70 who have overweight or obesity, with rescreening every 3 years if results are normal.</cite>
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a normal blood sugar level by age chart used for?
It gives a quick reference point for fasting, post-meal, and A1C results so you can see where your number falls relative to normal, prediabetes, and diabetes ranges — though your doctor should always confirm what’s appropriate for your specific health situation.
Does blood sugar naturally rise with age?
It can. Declining insulin sensitivity, reduced muscle mass, and a slower metabolism all make it somewhat more common for glucose to trend upward after age 40 — but this isn’t guaranteed, and healthy lifestyle habits can largely offset it.
What is a normal blood sugar level for a 70-year-old?
For a healthy 70-year-old without diabetes, the target is the same as any adult: fasting under 100 mg/dL and A1C under 5.7%. If diabetes is already diagnosed, targets are often relaxed slightly (A1C under 7.0–7.5% or higher, depending on overall health) to reduce the risk of dangerous low blood sugar.
What blood sugar level is considered an emergency?
A reading below 54 mg/dL or above 300 mg/dL, especially with symptoms like confusion, difficulty breathing, or loss of consciousness, warrants immediate medical attention.
Can normal blood sugar levels differ between men and women?
Diagnostic thresholds are the same for men and women. However, hormonal shifts — including pregnancy, menstrual cycles, and menopause — can cause temporary fluctuations in women that don’t reflect diabetes risk.
What should blood sugar be 2 hours after eating?
Under 140 mg/dL is considered normal for most people without diabetes. Between 140–199 mg/dL suggests impaired glucose tolerance; 200 mg/dL or higher may indicate diabetes.
Is 100 mg/dL fasting blood sugar bad?
A fasting reading of exactly 100 mg/dL sits right at the edge of the prediabetes range (100–125 mg/dL). One reading isn’t a diagnosis, but it’s a reasonable prompt to repeat the test and discuss it with your doctor.
What is a normal A1C level by age?
A1C targets don’t change dramatically with age for healthy people — below 5.7% is normal at any age without diabetes. For older adults already living with diabetes and other health conditions, doctors often allow a higher target (up to 7.5–8.0%) to prioritize safety over tight control.
How can I lower my blood sugar naturally?
Regular physical activity, a diet emphasizing fiber and lean protein over refined carbohydrates, adequate sleep, and maintaining a healthy weight are the most evidence-backed ways to improve glucose control. These help regardless of age, but talk to your doctor before making major changes if you’re on glucose-lowering medication.
The Bottom Line
Normal blood sugar isn’t a single magic number — it’s a range that depends on how you’re tested, your overall health, and, to a lesser extent, your age. For most people without diabetes, a fasting level under 100 mg/dL and an A1C under 5.7% is the goal from the teen years through the early 60s. Pregnancy and advanced age each come with their own adjusted targets, built around minimizing real risks — birth complications on one end, dangerous lows on the other.
The single best thing you can do with this information isn’t to panic over one reading — it’s to track your trend over time and get a baseline test if you haven’t had one in the last three years.
If your last blood sugar test was more than three years ago, or you don’t know your numbers at all, schedule a screening with your doctor this month. Catching prediabetes early is one of the few genuinely reversible windows in preventive health.
Here’s the truth most charts leave out: there’s no single “normal” blood sugar number for everyone. What’s healthy for a toddler isn’t the same as what’s healthy for a pregnant woman, a 70-year-old, or someone who ran 5 miles an hour ago. Age, meal timing, and health history all move the target.
This guide breaks down exactly what “normal” means at every life stage — with the specific numbers doctors actually use, not vague ranges. You’ll get fasting levels, post-meal levels, A1C targets, and clear guidance on when a reading means “relax” versus “call your doctor.”
Everything below reflects the American Diabetes Association’s (ADA) Standards of Care in Diabetes—2026 and current CDC and NIDDK guidance.
Key Takeaways
- Blood sugar targets are based on testing method and health status — not really age — for most healthy people, normal ranges are similar from the teen years through the early 60s.
- Fasting blood sugar under 100 mg/dL, and A1C under 5.7%, is considered normal for the general adult and child population without diabetes.
- Older adults (65+) with diabetes often get slightly relaxed targets to reduce the risk of dangerous low blood sugar (hypoglycemia).
- Pregnancy has its own stricter targets — a fasting level that’s fine for a 35-year-old could signal gestational diabetes in a pregnant patient.
- One high reading isn’t a diagnosis. Diabetes and prediabetes are confirmed with repeat testing, not a single number.
What “Normal Blood Sugar” Actually Means
Blood sugar (glucose) is your body’s primary fuel. It naturally rises after you eat and falls between meals and overnight. “Normal” simply describes the range your body keeps glucose in without needing outside help — no insulin resistance, no medication, no organ dysfunction.
Three tests define that range:
| Test | What It Measures |
|---|---|
| Fasting blood sugar (FBS) | Glucose after at least 8 hours without food |
| Postprandial (post-meal) glucose | Glucose 1–2 hours after eating |
| A1C (HbA1c) | Your average blood sugar over the past 2–3 months |
Doctors rarely rely on one test alone. A single fasting reading tells you about right now. A1C tells you about the bigger picture.
Normal Blood Sugar Levels by Age: The Complete Chart
For most people without diagnosed diabetes, normal ranges stay fairly consistent from childhood through late adulthood. What changes with age is less the “normal” cutoff and more your risk of drifting out of it, and how aggressively a doctor treats borderline numbers.
Quick Reference Chart
| Age Group | Fasting Blood Sugar | Post-Meal (2-hr) | A1C |
|---|---|---|---|
| Children (6–12) | 70–100 mg/dL | Under 140 mg/dL | Below 5.7% |
| Teens (13–19) | 70–100 mg/dL | Under 140 mg/dL | Below 5.7% |
| Adults (20–40) | 70–99 mg/dL | Under 140 mg/dL | Below 5.7% |
| Adults (41–59) | 70–99 mg/dL | Under 140 mg/dL | Below 5.7% |
| Adults 60+ (healthy) | 70–100 mg/dL | Under 140 mg/dL | Below 5.7% |
| Older adults 65+ (with diabetes, complex health) | Up to 150 mg/dL may be accepted | Individualized | Below 7.5%–8.0% |
| Pregnant (no diabetes) | Under 95 mg/dL | Under 120 mg/dL (2-hr) | N/A |
Ranges reflect people without a diabetes diagnosis unless noted. Individual targets should always be confirmed with your own doctor, especially if you take glucose-lowering medication.
Children (Ages 6–12)
Kids without diabetes follow the same diagnostic thresholds as adults: fasting glucose under 100 mg/dL is normal, 100–125 mg/dL suggests prediabetes, and 126 mg/dL or higher (confirmed on repeat testing) indicates diabetes.
What’s different is the why you’d test at all. Children rarely get routine glucose screening unless there’s:
- A family history of type 1 or type 2 diabetes
- Symptoms like excessive thirst, frequent urination, or unexplained weight loss
- Overweight or obesity plus another risk factor (per NIDDK, testing is recommended for kids ages 10–18 with these combined risk factors)
Type 1 diabetes in children often appears suddenly, so parents shouldn’t wait for a scheduled check-up if warning signs appear.
Teenagers (Ages 13–19)
Teen ranges match adults: fasting under 100 mg/dL, post-meal under 140 mg/dL. Puberty hormones can cause temporary insulin resistance, which is one reason teens with type 1 diabetes sometimes see their insulin needs spike during growth years — that’s expected physiology, not poor management.
For teens already diagnosed with diabetes, <cite index=”2-1″>the ADA’s Standards of Care for Children and Adolescents suggests an A1C below 7% is appropriate for most, with adjustments made individually.</cite>
Adults (Ages 20–40)
This is the baseline most charts are built around:
- Fasting: 70–99 mg/dL
- 2 hours after eating: under 140 mg/dL
- A1C: below 5.7%
Prediabetes is diagnosed at a fasting glucose of 100–125 mg/dL or an A1C between 5.7–6.4%. Diabetes is diagnosed at a fasting glucose of 126 mg/dL or higher (on two separate tests), an A1C of 6.5% or higher, or a random glucose reading of 200 mg/dL or higher with symptoms.
<cite index=”6-1″>The ADA now recommends diabetes and prediabetes screening begin at age 35 for the general population</cite>, so a baseline test in your mid-30s is worth having even if you feel completely healthy.
Adults (Ages 41–59)
Numbers don’t officially shift here, but risk does. Insulin sensitivity gradually declines with age, meaning the same meal can raise glucose more than it did a decade earlier. <cite index=”6-1″>Screening is recommended sooner — and at a younger age — for anyone with overweight, obesity, or risk factors like family history of diabetes, high blood pressure, or a sedentary lifestyle.</cite>
This is also the decade where prediabetes most commonly gets caught — and reversed with lifestyle changes, before it becomes type 2 diabetes.
Adults 60 and Older
For healthy, active older adults without diabetes, targets stay the same as younger adults. The nuance appears once diabetes is already diagnosed.
<cite index=”4-1″>Your body becomes less responsive to insulin with each decade past 40, meaning the same meal raises your blood sugar more than it used to.</cite> At the same time, tight glucose control carries more risk in this group because low blood sugar (hypoglycemia) is more dangerous for older adults — it raises fall risk, and can worsen cognitive symptoms.
That’s why <cite index=”2-1″>the ADA’s Standards of Care for Older Adults notes that healthy older adults with diabetes may target an A1C below about 7.0–7.5%, while those with more complex health conditions may be given less aggressive targets, since avoiding hypoglycemia is a major priority in this age group.</cite>
The ADA generally splits older adults with diabetes into three health tiers, each with a different, individualized A1C goal — healthy with few coexisting conditions, complex/intermediate health, and poor health/end-of-life care. Your doctor determines which tier fits you.
Pregnancy: A Different Rulebook Entirely
Pregnancy glucose targets are stricter than standard adult targets, because even mild elevations affect fetal growth and delivery risk.
<cite index=”11-1″>Both ACOG and the ADA recommend a fasting target under 95 mg/dL, and postprandial values under 140 mg/dL at 1 hour or under 120 mg/dL at 2 hours</cite> for women managing gestational diabetes.
Gestational diabetes screening, done between 24–28 weeks:
- 1-hour glucose challenge test: A reading of 140 mg/dL or higher usually triggers further testing.
- 3-hour oral glucose tolerance test (if needed): Diagnosis is confirmed if two or more of the four blood draws come back elevated.
<cite index=”6-1″>The ADA’s 2026 guidelines also recommend screening pregnant individuals before 15 weeks using a lower A1C threshold of 5.9–6.4%, to catch abnormal glucose metabolism earlier</cite> — since even modestly elevated early-pregnancy glucose carries real risk for pregnancy outcomes.
Expert takeaway: A fasting glucose of 95 mg/dL might be unremarkable for a non-pregnant adult, but during pregnancy it can flag a real problem. Context — not just the number — determines what “normal” means.
Blood Sugar Chart by Test Type (mg/dL and mmol/L)
| Category | Fasting | 2-Hr Post-Meal | A1C |
|---|---|---|---|
| Normal | 70–99 mg/dL (3.9–5.5 mmol/L) | Under 140 mg/dL (7.8 mmol/L) | Below 5.7% |
| Prediabetes | 100–125 mg/dL (5.6–6.9 mmol/L) | 140–199 mg/dL (7.8–11.0 mmol/L) | 5.7%–6.4% |
| Diabetes | 126 mg/dL or higher (7.0 mmol/L+) | 200 mg/dL or higher (11.1 mmol/L+) | 6.5% or higher |
Diagnosis of diabetes or prediabetes always requires confirmation through repeat testing — never a single reading.
Why Blood Sugar Changes as You Age
Several physiological shifts explain why glucose management gets harder over time, even for people who haven’t changed their diet or activity level:
- Declining insulin sensitivity. Muscle and fat cells respond less efficiently to insulin with age, so the pancreas has to work harder to move glucose out of the bloodstream.
- Loss of muscle mass (sarcopenia). Muscle is one of the body’s biggest glucose “sinks.” Less muscle means less capacity to absorb glucose after meals.
- Slower metabolism. A gradually lower resting metabolic rate can contribute to weight gain, which itself worsens insulin resistance.
- More medications. Steroids, certain blood pressure drugs, and other common prescriptions in older adults can raise blood sugar as a side effect.
- Reduced pancreatic function. Beta cells (which produce insulin) can become less responsive over decades of use.
None of this means rising blood sugar is inevitable — but it explains why regular screening matters more, not less, as you get older.
Symptoms: High vs. Low Blood Sugar
Signs of High Blood Sugar (Hyperglycemia)
High blood sugar tends to build gradually, so it’s easy to miss early on:
- Increased thirst and dry mouth
- Frequent urination
- Fatigue or brain fog
- Blurred vision
- Slow-healing cuts or sores
- Unexplained weight loss (more common in undiagnosed type 1 diabetes)
Signs of Low Blood Sugar (Hypoglycemia)
Low blood sugar (generally under 70 mg/dL) often comes on fast:
- Shakiness or sweating
- Irritability or sudden mood change
- Rapid heartbeat
- Dizziness or lightheadedness
- Confusion or difficulty concentrating
- In severe cases: seizures or loss of consciousness
Severe hypoglycemia is a medical emergency. If someone is confused, unresponsive, or unable to safely swallow, call emergency services rather than trying to treat it at home.
How Often Should You Get Tested?
| Group | Recommended Frequency |
|---|---|
| Adults 35+, no risk factors, normal results | Every 3 years |
| Adults with overweight/obesity + 1 risk factor | Test now, then per doctor’s guidance |
| Adults with prediabetes | At least annually |
| Pregnant individuals | Screened at 24–28 weeks (earlier if high-risk) |
| People with diagnosed diabetes | As directed — often daily to several times daily |
| History of gestational diabetes | Every 1–3 years, for life |
<cite index=”16-1″>The ADA recommends individuals with a history of gestational diabetes receive lifelong screening for prediabetes or diabetes every 1–3 years.</cite> <cite index=”1-1″>The USPSTF recommends screening adults ages 35 to 70 who have overweight or obesity, with rescreening every 3 years if results are normal.</cite>
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a normal blood sugar level by age chart used for?
It gives a quick reference point for fasting, post-meal, and A1C results so you can see where your number falls relative to normal, prediabetes, and diabetes ranges — though your doctor should always confirm what’s appropriate for your specific health situation.
Does blood sugar naturally rise with age?
It can. Declining insulin sensitivity, reduced muscle mass, and a slower metabolism all make it somewhat more common for glucose to trend upward after age 40 — but this isn’t guaranteed, and healthy lifestyle habits can largely offset it.
What is a normal blood sugar level for a 70-year-old?
For a healthy 70-year-old without diabetes, the target is the same as any adult: fasting under 100 mg/dL and A1C under 5.7%. If diabetes is already diagnosed, targets are often relaxed slightly (A1C under 7.0–7.5% or higher, depending on overall health) to reduce the risk of dangerous low blood sugar.
What blood sugar level is considered an emergency?
A reading below 54 mg/dL or above 300 mg/dL, especially with symptoms like confusion, difficulty breathing, or loss of consciousness, warrants immediate medical attention.
Can normal blood sugar levels differ between men and women?
Diagnostic thresholds are the same for men and women. However, hormonal shifts — including pregnancy, menstrual cycles, and menopause — can cause temporary fluctuations in women that don’t reflect diabetes risk.
What should blood sugar be 2 hours after eating?
Under 140 mg/dL is considered normal for most people without diabetes. Between 140–199 mg/dL suggests impaired glucose tolerance; 200 mg/dL or higher may indicate diabetes.
Is 100 mg/dL fasting blood sugar bad?
A fasting reading of exactly 100 mg/dL sits right at the edge of the prediabetes range (100–125 mg/dL). One reading isn’t a diagnosis, but it’s a reasonable prompt to repeat the test and discuss it with your doctor.
What is a normal A1C level by age?
A1C targets don’t change dramatically with age for healthy people — below 5.7% is normal at any age without diabetes. For older adults already living with diabetes and other health conditions, doctors often allow a higher target (up to 7.5–8.0%) to prioritize safety over tight control.
How can I lower my blood sugar naturally?
Regular physical activity, a diet emphasizing fiber and lean protein over refined carbohydrates, adequate sleep, and maintaining a healthy weight are the most evidence-backed ways to improve glucose control. These help regardless of age, but talk to your doctor before making major changes if you’re on glucose-lowering medication.
The Bottom Line
Normal blood sugar isn’t a single magic number — it’s a range that depends on how you’re tested, your overall health, and, to a lesser extent, your age. For most people without diabetes, a fasting level under 100 mg/dL and an A1C under 5.7% is the goal from the teen years through the early 60s. Pregnancy and advanced age each come with their own adjusted targets, built around minimizing real risks — birth complications on one end, dangerous lows on the other.
The single best thing you can do with this information isn’t to panic over one reading — it’s to track your trend over time and get a baseline test if you haven’t had one in the last three years.
If your last blood sugar test was more than three years ago, or you don’t know your numbers at all, schedule a screening with your doctor this month. Catching prediabetes early is one of the few genuinely reversible windows in preventive health.
