AI & Health 7 Min. Lesezeit February 16, 2026

Erholungs-Score erklärt: Wie WHOOP und Oura die Bereitschaft Ihres Körpers verfolgen (2026)

WHOOP nennt es Recovery. Oura nennt es Readiness. Beide behaupten zu wissen, wie bereit Ihr Körper für Belastung ist. Wir erklären die Algorithmen hinter beiden Scores und wie Sie sie nutzen.

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HeartPulse Team

HeartPulse.ai

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You wake up, glance at your wrist or finger, and a single number tells you whether your body is ready for the day. WHOOP shows a green 84% Recovery. Oura shows a 76 Bereitschafts-Score. Both claim to answer the same question -- but the way they arrive at that answer is grundlegend different.

These scores have become the most influential metric in consumer health tech. Pro athletes plan training weeks around them. Wellness-minded folks use them as early warning systems for illness and burnout.

So what are these algorithms actually measuring? How do they differ? And when should you trust them?

Recovery & Bereitschafts-Scores at a Glance

55–60%

HRV contribution

Primary driver of both Recovery and Readiness

30–90

Days to baseline

Time needed to calibrate your personal normal

83%

Correlation with performance

Recovery vs. next-day athletic output (2025 meta-analysis)

2.4x

Illness prediction rate

Elevated detection vs. self-reported symptoms

How Both Scores Work

Your autonomic nervous system runs in two modes. Sympathetic (fight-or-flight) mobilizes energy. Parasympathetic (rest-and-digest) enables repair. The ratio between them reveals how much stress capacity your body has left.

When your parasympathetic system dominates overnight -- high HRV, low resting Herzfrequenz, stable temperature -- you wake up recovered. When sympathetic activity stays elevated, you wake up depleted. Both scores try to quantify this using overnight sensor data.

Why Overnight Data?

Your resting state while asleep is the cleanest window into true autonomic balance. Daytime readings are contaminated by movement, caffeine, posture, and psychological state. That is why both scores are calculated from sleep data, not waking measurements.

WHOOP Recovery: The Athlete's Algorithm

WHOOP's Erholungs-Score (0--100%) was built for athletic periodization -- telling you when to push hard and when to back off.

WHOOP Erholungs-Score — Input Weights
InputGewichtWhat It Measures
Herzfrequenz Variability (HRV)~55%Parasympathetic tone via rMSSD during Tiefschlaf
Sleep Performance~25%Time asleep vs. Sleep Coach target
Resting Herzfrequenz~15%Lowest HR during sleep window
Atemfrequenz~5%Breathing rate variability overnight

The key insight: WHOOP uses your HRV relative to a 30-day personal baseline, not a raw number. An HRV of 45 ms could be green for a 55-year-old and red for a 22-year-old athlete. The algorithm adapts to you.

Green (67--100%): Full capacity. Go hard. Yellow (34--66%): Partially recovered. Moderate effort. Red (0--33%): Depleted. Rest or light movement only.

Red Days Are Information, Not Failure

Red days are natural in any training cycle. Athletes who rest on red days and push on green days outperform those who ignore the signal -- regardless of total training volume.

Oura Readiness: The Holistic Approach

Oura asks a broader question: "How ready is your body for whatever today demands?" -- Workout, high-stakes meeting, or just getting through the day.

Oura Bereitschafts-Score — Input Contributors
InputGewichtTemporal Window
HRV Balance~30%Rolling 14-day baseline
Schlaf-Score~20%Previous night
Body Temperature~15%Previous night vs. 90-day norm
Resting Herzfrequenz~15%Compared to 30-day baseline
Previous Day Activity~10%Past 24–48 hours
Recovery Index~10%Full sleep window

Two inputs make Oura unique. Body temperature deviation catches immune activation 24--48 hours before symptoms appear. Recovery Index misst how quickly your resting Herzfrequenz drops after falling asleep -- slow stabilization signals residual stress.

The Temperature Signal Most People Miss

During the TemPredict study at UCSF, Oura detected elevated temperature consistent with COVID infection 2.75 days before PCR confirmation. If your Readiness drops and temperature shows +0.3C or higher -- take it seriously.

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Direktvergleich

FeatureWHOOP RecoveryOura Readiness
Primary DriverHRV (rMSSD during SWS)HRV Balance (14-day trend)
Temperature InputNot used in scoreCore contributor (~15%)
Temporal WindowPrevious night + yesterday's strainMulti-day trend (up to 14 days)
Illness DetectionIndirect (via HRV/RHR dips)Direct (temperature deviation)
Designed ForAthletic periodizationHolistic daily readiness
Menstrual AwarenessJournal-based (manual)Temperature-based (automatic)
Pricing$239/yr Abonnement$349 device + $5.99/mo optional

WHOOP wins for training periodization and Echtzeit- strain tracking. The Strain-Recovery loop is unmatched for athletes training 5--7 days/week.

Oura wins for health monitoring and illness detection. The temperature signal gives Oura a direct channel WHOOP lacks. Oura also catches multi-day fatigue accumulation better because it considers a 14-day HRV trend rather than primarily last night.

Pros

  • Both use baseline-relative algorithms that adapt to your individual physiology
  • HRV-driven scores correlate 83% with next-day athletic performance
  • Oura's temperature signal bietet early illness warning
  • WHOOP's Echtzeit- strain tracking enables precise Trainingsbelastung management

Cons

  • 30–90 day calibration period before scores are reliable
  • Scores diverge 10–20 points between devices for the same person
  • Neither is a diagnostic tool — persistent lows require a doctor
  • Alcohol and caffeine dramatisch skew readings for 24–72 hours

How to Actually Use Your Score

The Golden Rule

Respect the trend, not a single day. A 3-day downward trend you cannot explain warrants attention. A single unexplained dip does not.

Action Framework by Score Zone
ZoneTrainingLifestyleCognitive Work
Green (67–100)High intensity, PRs, competitionNormal scheduleTackle complex, demanding tasks
Yellow (34–66)Moderate; reduce volume 20–30%Protect sleep; limit alcoholRoutine tasks over creative work
Red (0–33)Rest or light movement onlyCancel optional plans; 8+ hrs sleepMinimize decisions; defer big calls

Investigate 3+ consecutive red days. Check sleep hygiene, alcohol intake, overtraining, illness onset, psychological stress, and medication changes. If scores stay red for 7+ days with no obvious cause, see a physician.

The Real Goal

Nach 6--12 months of consistent wear, most users can predict their score within 5--10 points before looking. The device teaches you to read your own body. That self-awareness is the ultimate outcome.

Ready to take control of your health with AI?

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Frequently Asked Questions

No. Despite both being 0–100 scales, they use different inputs, weights, and time windows. A WHOOP 70% and an Oura 70 are not equivalent. Expect 10–20 point divergence if wearing both.

WHOOP needs ~30 days of continuous wear. Oura needs ~14 days for HRV baseline and up to 90 days for temperature. Wear konsistent during calibration -- skipping nights delays Genauigkeit.

Caffeine within 6 hours of bedtime suppresses HRV and delays sleep onset, lowering both scores. Morning caffeine (before noon) has minimal impact für die meisten Menschen.

Alcohol suppresses parasympathetic activity, disrupts Tiefschlaf, elevates resting Herzfrequenz by 3–7 bpm, and raises Hauttemperatur. Even 2 drinks within 3 hours of bed suppress HRV by 15–25%. Effects persist 24–48 hours.

No. Use scores to modulate intensity of planned activities, not to cancel obligations. A red score means 'reduce discretionary load where possible,' not 'call in sick.' Sustained lows (7+ days) warrant medical evaluation.

#recovery#WHOOP#Oura#readiness#HRV#educational

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