Symptoms

Racing Heart: Causes and Patterns Explained

Almost everyone has felt their heart race at some point. Most of the time it is benign and self-limiting. Sometimes it is the sign of an arrhythmia worth identifying. Here is what the different patterns mean and how they are usually approached.

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racing heart
Key Points

  • A fast heart rate, known clinically as tachycardia, is defined as a resting rate above 100 beats per minute. Like a slow heart rate, it exists on a wide spectrum from entirely normal to clinically significant.
  • A racing heart felt suddenly and without obvious cause, particularly if it is regular, rapid, and accompanied by dizziness or breathlessness, is a common reason people seek cardiac assessment. An ECG recorded during the episode is one of the most useful pieces of information a clinician can have.
  • The most common causes of a persistently fast resting heart rate are dehydration, anaemia, thyroid overactivity, stimulant intake, anxiety, and fever. All are reversible once identified.
  • The main rhythm disturbances that produce a fast heart rate include atrial fibrillation, SVT, and atrial flutter. Each has a distinct pattern, and each is something a doctor can identify and discuss with you.
  • A very fast, regular, sudden-onset racing heart that does not settle with rest or simple measures is generally treated as urgent in standard clinical practice.

Almost everyone has experienced their heart racing at some point. After sprinting for a bus. During a frightening moment. After too much coffee. In those contexts it is entirely expected, entirely normal, and entirely self-limiting.

A racing heart that comes on unexpectedly, without obvious cause, and does not settle quickly, or one that is accompanied by dizziness, breathlessness, or chest discomfort, is worth understanding more carefully. The question is not just “is my heart beating fast?” but “why is it beating fast, and is this something that needs attention?”

The answer depends on several things: how fast, how regular, how sudden the onset, how long it lasts, and what else is happening at the same time.

What Is a Fast Heart Rate?

The numbers

A resting heart rate above 100 beats per minute is technically classified as tachycardia. Like most medical definitions, the threshold matters less than the context. A resting rate of 105 in someone who has just run upstairs is completely normal. A resting rate of 105 in someone sitting quietly who felt their heart suddenly accelerate is a different conversation entirely.

What your doctor will ask

When you describe a racing heart to a doctor, a few simple observations help guide the conversation more than almost anything else. Was the heartbeat regular or irregular, like a chaotic flutter? Did it come on suddenly, or build up gradually? Did it stop suddenly, or settle slowly? Were there any other symptoms at the same time, such as dizziness or breathlessness? How long did it last?

If you have a smartwatch that took an ECG or flagged an unusual rhythm at the time, that recording is genuinely useful, more useful than any description, and worth showing your doctor. A growing number of arrhythmias are now first picked up by smartwatch alerts, and clinicians take these seriously.

The most likely explanations for a fast heart rate fall into a few broad groups, all of which we cover in more detail elsewhere on Heart Matters. The non-cardiac causes listed below are by far the most common. The arrhythmia explainers cover the main rhythm disturbances in plain language, with links to dedicated guides on each.

Non-Cardiac Causes of a Fast Heart Rate

The majority of people with a persistently elevated resting heart rate have a reversible non-cardiac cause. These are important to identify because the underlying issue is usually straightforward to address once it is found.

Common Non-Cardiac Causes

Dehydration

Reduced blood volume causes the heart to beat faster to maintain output. One of the most common and easily corrected causes.

Anaemia

Reduced oxygen-carrying capacity in the blood prompts the heart to beat faster. Identified by a simple blood count.

Thyroid Overactivity

Hyperthyroidism raises the heart rate and increases arrhythmia risk. Identified by a thyroid function blood test.

Anxiety and Stress

Activation of the body’s stress response raises heart rate. Anxiety-related tachycardia is real, though cardiac causes are usually considered first.

Caffeine and Stimulants

Coffee, energy drinks, and some medications raise heart rate directly. Often underestimated as a contributor.

Fever and Infection

Every degree of temperature rise increases heart rate by around 10 beats per minute. Settles once the infection is treated.

Cardiac Arrhythmias: When the Racing Heart Is the Diagnosis

Three rhythm disturbances account for the great majority of arrhythmia-related racing heart episodes. Each has a distinctive pattern, and each is identifiable on an ECG.

SVT

Sudden onset, very regular, very fast. Starts and stops abruptly without warning. More frightening than dangerous in structurally normal hearts, and very treatable once identified.

Atrial Fibrillation

Irregular and often fast. Frequently described as a chaotic flutter rather than a steady racing. The most common sustained arrhythmia, and one of the most important to identify.

Atrial Flutter

Regular and fast, typically around 150 beats per minute. Feels like a steady rapid pounding. Similar to SVT in sensation but driven by a different mechanism in the upper chambers.

Supraventricular tachycardia (SVT)

SVT produces a sudden-onset, very regular, very fast racing heart, typically 150 to 220 beats per minute, that starts and stops abruptly without warning. It is more frightening than it is dangerous in people with structurally normal hearts, and it is one of the more treatable arrhythmias once identified. We have a dedicated article on SVT on Heart Matters.

Atrial fibrillation

AF produces an irregular, often fast racing sensation. The irregularity is one of its distinguishing features. It may feel like a chaotic fluttering rather than a regular racing. AF is the most common sustained cardiac arrhythmia and one of the most important to identify, partly because it carries an elevated stroke risk that is usually addressed with anticoagulation. Symptom management uses one of two strategies: rate control, which slows the heart down to a comfortable pace while the irregular rhythm continues, or rhythm control, which aims to restore a normal heart rhythm altogether. Which approach is chosen depends on the individual, and is a conversation with a cardiologist.

Atrial flutter

Atrial flutter typically produces a fast, regular racing heart at around 150 beats per minute, often described as a rapid but steady pounding. It can feel similar to SVT but has a different underlying mechanism. An ECG recorded during the episode is the key to telling the two apart, and the management approach is slightly different for each.

An ECG recorded during an episode of racing heart tells us more than any description afterwards. Even a smartwatch trace, shown to a doctor later, can be genuinely useful.

Prof. Peter Barlis, Interventional Cardiologist

Patterns of Presentation and How They Are Usually Approached

Most episodes of racing heart are self-limiting and not dangerous. The table below describes how different patterns are typically approached in clinical practice. It is not personalised advice. Decisions about seeking care for your own situation are best made in discussion with your doctor, or with the local emergency service if symptoms are severe.

Pattern Typical clinical approach
Racing heart with loss of consciousness or near-fainting Treated as a medical emergency, with people generally advised to call emergency services
Racing heart with chest pain or severe breathlessness Treated as a medical emergency, with people generally advised to call emergency services
Sustained fast racing heart not settling after 30 minutes Generally prompts urgent assessment. Driving oneself to hospital is usually advised against in this situation
First-ever episode of rapid irregular heart rate Same-day medical review is typical, to allow an ECG to be performed
Recurrent episodes previously investigated and confirmed benign Planned cardiology review, sometimes with a Holter monitor
Persistently fast resting rate above 100 without obvious cause Medical review within days is typical, including blood tests and an ECG
Questions Worth Raising at Your Next Appointment

  • If I have another episode, what is the best way to try to capture an ECG at the time?
  • Is my resting heart rate elevated, and has a reversible cause been considered?
  • Could my racing heart episodes be SVT, AF, or another arrhythmia?
  • Would a Holter monitor be useful in my case to try to capture the rhythm during symptoms?
  • Are there triggers I should be aware of in my own pattern, such as caffeine, alcohol, or poor sleep?

Heart Matters Resource

When in Doubt, Get Checked Out

A racing heart that is new, prolonged, irregular, or accompanied by dizziness or breathlessness is a common reason people seek assessment. An ECG recorded during the episode answers questions that no description can.

Read: When in Doubt, Get Checked Out →

Conclusion

A racing heart has many causes, most of them benign, and many of them correctable without any cardiac treatment at all. Dehydration, thyroid disease, anaemia, and anxiety all produce a fast heart rate that resolves once the underlying cause is addressed.

The pattern that more often leads to cardiac assessment is a racing heart that comes on suddenly without warning, feels rapid and regular, or is accompanied by dizziness or breathlessness, particularly if it has happened before. An ECG recorded during an episode is one of the most useful pieces of information available in working out what is going on. Most people who have their racing heart investigated come away with answers, often reassuring ones, and sometimes a diagnosis that is very treatable.

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Prof. Peter Barlis
About the author

Prof. Peter Barlis

Professor Peter Barlis (MBBS, MPH, PhD, FESC, FACC, FSCAI, FRACP) is an Interventional Cardiologist and the founding editor of Heart Matters. With expertise in coronary artery disease, advanced cardiac imaging,... Read Full Bio
Medical disclaimer: This article is for general educational purposes only. Please speak with your own doctor or healthcare professional for advice specific to your situation.

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