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what is the normal oxygen level

Normal blood oxygen level is usually 95–100% when measured with a fingertip pulse oximeter in a healthy adult at sea level.

Quick Scoop: Normal Oxygen Levels

  • For most healthy adults and children, SpO2 (oxygen saturation) of 95–100% is considered normal.
  • Levels below about 90% are generally considered low (hypoxemia) and can be serious.
  • On an arterial blood gas (ABG) test, a normal oxygen level (PaO2) is roughly 75–100 mm Hg.

Age and health conditions

  • Adults & children: 95–100% on a pulse oximeter.
  • Newborns: can be 90–95% in the first minutes of life, then should rise toward 95–100%.
  • People with certain lung or heart diseases: their “acceptable” range may be a bit lower (around 92–94%), but this is very individual and decided by their doctor.

When to worry and what to do

  • If your reading is consistently under 95% and you feel unwell (short of breath, chest pain, confusion, blue lips/face), you should seek medical help urgently.
  • A one‑off slightly low reading can be affected by cold fingers, dark nail polish, poor circulation, or sensor issues , so it’s worth rechecking after warming your hands and sitting still.

A quick example

If a healthy person at rest checks a fingertip pulse oximeter and it shows 97% , that’s a normal oxygen level. If it repeatedly shows 88–89% along with trouble breathing, that’s a red-flag situation that needs prompt medical evaluation.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.