BMI Calculator

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Find out your Body Mass Index in seconds. Enter your height and weight, and get your BMI score, weight category, and healthy weight range instantly. No sign-up. No cost. Ever.

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BMI Calculator

Calculate your Body Mass Index instantly — no sign-up required

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BMI is a screening tool, not a medical diagnosis. Results may vary based on age, sex, muscle mass, and ethnicity. Always consult a healthcare provider for personalized guidance.

How to Use This BMI Calculator

  1. Choose your unit system: US/Imperial (feet, inches, pounds) or Metric (cm, kg).
  2. Enter your age: BMI interpretation can vary slightly by age group.
  3. Select your gender: biological sex affects healthy BMI context.
  4. Enter your height and weight: use your most recent measurements.
  5. Click “Calculate My BMI” your score, category, healthy weight range, and BMI Prime appear instantly.

Note: BMI is a screening tool based on CDC and WHO guidelines. It does not directly measure body fat or account for muscle mass. Always consult a healthcare provider for a full health assessment.

BMI Categories at a Glance

BMI RangeCategory
Below 18.5Underweight
18.5 – 24.9Normal Weight
25.0 – 29.9Overweight
30.0 – 34.9Obese — Class I
35.0 – 39.9Obese — Class II
40.0 and aboveObese — Class III

Source: CDC / WHO adult BMI guidelines

What Is BMI and What Does Your Number Actually Mean?

Body Mass Index (BMI) is a numerical value calculated from a person’s height and weight. It was developed in the 1830s by Belgian mathematician Adolphe Quetelet and has been adopted by the CDC, WHO, and NIH as a standard population-level screening tool for weight status.
The formula is simple:
BMI = weight (kg) ÷ height (m)²
In US units: BMI = [weight (lbs) ÷ height (in)²] × 703

The resulting number places you into one of four main categories  Underweight, Normal Weight, Overweight, or Obese which are used by healthcare providers as a starting point for evaluating potential weight-related health risks.

What BMI is good at: It is quick, free, noninvasive, and strongly correlated with body fat levels for roughly 90–95% of the general population. It is the same tool used in large-scale public health research, including the CDC’s Adult Obesity Maps.

What BMI doesn’t capture: It does not distinguish between fat, muscle, and bone mass. A muscular athlete and a sedentary person of the same height and weight will have the same BMI, but very different body compositions and health profiles. BMI also does not indicate where in the body fat is stored abdominal fat carries greater health risk than fat stored in other areas.
For a more complete picture, BMI should be considered alongside waist circumference, body fat percentage, medical history, and lifestyle factors.

BMI Stats

Max Healthy BMI (CDC)
U.S. Adults With Obesity (CDC, 2024)
0 %
Overweight BMI threshold used by WHO globally
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The US unit multiplier in the BMI formula
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Understanding Your BMI Results

Underweight (BMI below 18.5)
Being underweight can indicate nutritional deficiencies, an underlying health condition, or an eating disorder. Health risks associated with being underweight include weakened immune function, bone density loss (osteoporosis), anemia, and fertility issues. If you fall into this category, a healthcare provider or registered dietitian can help identify the cause and create a plan to reach a healthy weight safely.

A BMI in the normal range is associated with the lowest risk of weight-related chronic diseases. However, BMI is not the only measure of health  a person in this range can still have poor cardiovascular fitness, high blood pressure, or unhealthy body composition. Maintaining this range through a balanced diet and regular physical activity is one of the best things you can do for long-term health.

Being overweight increases the risk of type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, sleep apnea, and certain cancers. However, the health impact varies significantly based on where body fat is distributed, activity level, and other metabolic factors. Many people in the overweight category are metabolically healthy and can reduce risk substantially through lifestyle changes even modest weight loss of 5–10% of body weight produces meaningful health benefits.

Class I obesity significantly elevates the risk of cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, joint problems, and sleep disorders. At this level, structured lifestyle interventions including medical nutrition therapy, increased physical activity, and behavioral support are typically recommended. A healthcare provider can help assess whether medication or other clinical support may be appropriate.
Obesity Classes II and III (sometimes called severe or morbid obesity) carry the highest risk of obesity-related complications. At these levels, medical or surgical weight management options may be considered alongside lifestyle changes. If you fall into this range, a conversation with a physician or obesity medicine specialist is strongly encouraged. You are not alone — approximately 9% of U.S. adults fall into this category.
BMI Prime is the ratio of your actual BMI to the upper limit of the Normal Weight range (25.0). A BMI Prime of 1.0 means your BMI is exactly 25. Values below 1.0 indicate Normal or Underweight; values above 1.0 indicate Overweight or Obese. It allows for easy comparison regardless of the BMI scale. For example, a BMI of 30 has a BMI Prime of 1.20, indicating 20% above the normal upper limit.

Does BMI Differ for Men, Women, and Older Adults?

The standard BMI formula and categories (set by the CDC and WHO) are the same for adult men and women. However, research consistently shows that women naturally carry a higher percentage of body fat than men at the same BMI, due to differences in hormones, muscle mass distribution, and reproductive biology. This means that at the same BMI, a man may have more lean muscle mass while a woman has more fat tissue  yet both fall in the “normal” category.

For older adults, BMI can underestimate health risks. As people age, muscle mass naturally decreases (a process called sarcopenia) and body fat tends to increase even without any change in weight. An older adult at a BMI of 24.0 may have significantly more body fat than a younger adult at the same BMI.

For athletes and bodybuilders, BMI frequently misclassifies very muscular individuals as overweight or obese, since muscle weighs more than fat. In these cases, body fat percentage measurement (via DEXA scan, hydrostatic weighing, or skinfold calipers) is a more meaningful metric.

For children and teens (ages 2–19), BMI is calculated the same way but interpreted differently  using age and sex-specific percentile charts, not fixed category cutoffs. Our calculator is designed for adults 20 and older.

BMI vs. Other Body Composition Measures

MeasureWhat It MeasuresProsCons
BMIWeight-to-height ratioFree, fast, universalDoesn’t measure fat directly
Waist CircumferenceAbdominal fatPredicts heart disease riskDoesn’t account for height
Waist-to-Hip RatioFat distributionGood cardiovascular predictorLess standardized
Body Fat %Actual fat tissueMost direct measureRequires equipment or testing
DEXA ScanFull body compositionGold standard accuracyExpensive, not widely available

 

For most people, BMI combined with waist circumference provides a solid, accessible picture of weight-related health risk without requiring expensive testing. A waist measurement above 40 inches (men) or 35 inches (women) signals elevated cardiovascular risk, regardless of BMI category.

BMI Calculator: Frequently Asked Questions

What is a normal BMI?

According to the CDC and WHO, a normal (healthy) BMI for adults is between 18.5 and 24.9. A BMI below 18.5 is considered underweight, 25.0–29.9 is overweight, and 30.0 or above is classified as obese. These ranges apply to adults aged 20 and older, regardless of age or sex.

The healthy BMI range for adult women is the same as for men  18.5 to 24.9 according to CDC guidelines. However, because women naturally carry more body fat than men at the same BMI, some researchers suggest that a BMI of 21–23 may be optimal for women. Always consider BMI alongside other health markers and consult your healthcare provider for personalized guidance.

The healthy BMI range for adult men is 18.5 to 24.9. Because men typically have higher muscle mass than women, they may be able to maintain a BMI toward the upper end of the normal range (23–24.9) without excess body fat. Athletes and very muscular men may have a BMI above 25 while still having a healthy body composition.

In metric units: divide your weight in kilograms by your height in meters squared (BMI = kg ÷ m²). In US units: divide your weight in pounds by your height in inches squared, then multiply by 703 (BMI = [lbs ÷ in²] × 703). For example, a person who is 5’9″ (69 inches) and weighs 160 lbs has a BMI of: [160 ÷ (69 × 69)] × 703 = 23.6 — which falls in the Normal Weight range. Or simply use the free calculator above.

A BMI of 30.0 or above is classified as obese by the CDC and WHO. Obesity is further subdivided into three classes: Class I (BMI 30–34.9), Class II (BMI 35–39.9), and Class III, also called severe or morbid obesity (BMI 40 and above). Each class carries progressively higher risk of weight-related health conditions.

Yes, technically a BMI of 25.0 marks the beginning of the overweight category according to CDC guidelines. However, a BMI of exactly 25 is right at the boundary, and for many people  particularly those with higher muscle mass  this number does not indicate health risk. BMI should be interpreted in the context of your overall health, body composition, and lifestyle.

A BMI of 25.0 to 29.9 is classified as overweight. Being overweight increases the risk of type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure, heart disease, and certain cancers. However, the health impact varies by individual — factors like physical fitness, diet, waist circumference, and family medical history all matter.

A healthy weight corresponds to a BMI of 18.5–24.9 for your height. For example: at 5’4″ (163 cm), healthy weight is 108–145 lbs. At 5’9″ (175 cm), it is 125–168 lbs. At 6’0″ (183 cm), it is 140–188 lbs. Our calculator shows your personal healthy weight range immediately after calculating your BMI.

BMI Prime is a simple ratio of your BMI to 25 (the upper limit of normal weight). A BMI Prime of less than 1.0 means you are at or below healthy weight. A BMI Prime of exactly 1.0 equals a BMI of 25. A BMI Prime of 1.20 means your BMI is 20% above the healthy upper limit (equivalent to a BMI of 30). It makes it easy to understand how far above or below the healthy range you are.

Yes, BMI is a population screening tool, not a definitive health diagnosis. Some people with a BMI above 25 or even 30 are metabolically healthy, with normal blood pressure, cholesterol, and blood sugar. Conversely, some people with a normal BMI can be metabolically unhealthy. This is sometimes called the “obesity paradox” or “normal weight obesity.” BMI is best used as one piece of information alongside blood work, physical activity, diet quality, and medical history.

The BMI formula and category cutoffs do not change with age for adults. However, body composition naturally shifts with age older adults tend to have less muscle mass and more body fat at the same BMI than younger adults. Some health organizations suggest that slightly higher BMIs (up to 27) may be acceptable for adults over 65, though this varies by clinical guideline.

Some research and clinical guidelines suggest that a BMI of 23–27 may be appropriate for older adults (65+), slightly higher than the standard 18.5–24.9 range. This is because being underweight in older age carries significant health risks  including increased fracture risk and mortality  and some extra body weight can provide a buffer during illness. However, recommendations vary, and older adults should discuss their individual target weight with a physician.

Private Mortgage Insurance (PMI) is required by most lenders when your down payment is less than 20% of the home’s purchase price. It protects the lender not you if you default. PMI typically costs 0.3%–1.9% of the loan amount annually. You can avoid PMI by putting 20% or more down, by using a piggyback loan (80/10/10), or by waiting until your loan-to-value ratio drops to 80% and requesting its removal.

BMI is calculated the same way for children as for adults, but it is interpreted using age- and sex-specific percentile charts rather than fixed category cutoffs. This is because body fatness changes as children grow and differs between boys and girls. A BMI at or above the 95th percentile for age and sex is classified as obese; between the 85th and 95th percentile is overweight. The CDC provides separate BMI calculators and growth charts for children ages 2–19. Our calculator is designed for adults 20 and older.

BMI has several well-documented limitations: (1) It does not directly measure body fat, it measures weight relative to height. (2) It cannot distinguish between fat and muscle, leading to misclassification of athletes. (3) It does not indicate where fat is stored in the body, abdominal fat is more dangerous than fat elsewhere. (4) It does not account for racial and ethnic differences in body composition. For example, Asian populations have higher health risk at lower BMI thresholds, and the WHO has proposed lower cutoffs (23 for overweight, 27.5 for obese) for Asian adults. (5) It underestimates health risk in older adults who have lost muscle mass.

Quick Answers: BMI at a Glance

What is the BMI formula?

BMI = weight (kg) ÷ height (m)². In US units: BMI = [weight (lbs) ÷ height (in)²] × 703. Example: a person weighing 160 lbs at 5’9″ (69 in) has a BMI of [160 ÷ 4761] × 703 = 23.6 (Normal Weight).

What BMI is overweight for a man at 5'10"?

At 5’10” (178 cm), a BMI of 25.0 corresponds to approximately 174 lbs. Weights above 174 lbs at 5’10” are classified as overweight. A BMI of 30 at this height equals approximately 209 lbs.

What is a healthy BMI range?

18.5 to 24.9 is considered the healthy (normal) BMI range for adults according to the CDC and WHO. Below 18.5 is underweight; 25.0–29.9 is overweight; 30.0 and above is obese.

What is the BMI for a 200-pound person at 5'10"?

BMI = [200 ÷ (70 × 70)] × 703 = [200 ÷ 4900] × 703 = 28.7 — classified as Overweight.

What BMI is overweight for a woman at 5'4"?

At 5’4″ (163 cm), a BMI of 25.0 corresponds to approximately 145 lbs. Any weight above 145 lbs at this height enters the overweight range (BMI 25–29.9). A BMI of 30 at 5’4″ equals approximately 174 lbs, which begins the obese range.

What BMI is considered overweight?

A BMI of 25.0 to 29.9 is classified as overweight. Being overweight increases the risk of type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure, heart disease, and certain cancers. However, the health impact varies by individual — factors like physical fitness, diet, waist circumference, and family medical history all matter.

The History of BMI. From 19th Century Statistics to Global Health Standard

The Body Mass Index was not invented by doctors — it was created by a mathematician. Belgian statistician Adolphe Quetelet developed the formula in the 1830s as part of his effort to define the “average man” across a population. Originally called the Quetelet Index, it was never intended as a clinical tool for individual health assessment.

For over a century, it remained an obscure statistical concept. That changed in the 1970s, when physiologist Ancel Keys famous for his research linking diet to heart disease published a landmark study comparing different weight-to-height indices across populations. Keys concluded that Quetelet’s formula was the most reliable simple measure of adiposity and coined the term “Body Mass Index” in 1972.

The medical community quickly adopted it. By the 1980s, major health organizations including the NIH and WHO had incorporated BMI into clinical guidelines. In 1998, the NIH lowered the U.S. overweight threshold from BMI 27 to BMI 25, overnight reclassifying approximately 29 million Americans as overweight without any change in their actual weight.

Today, BMI is used in virtually every country as a population health metric, insurance classification tool, and clinical screening instrument. It is the foundation of the CDC’s Adult Obesity Maps and dozens of major epidemiological studies. Despite its limitations particularly its inability to distinguish fat from muscle it remains the most accessible, inexpensive, and widely validated weight screening tool available.

Research continues to refine how BMI should be interpreted across different populations. In 2023, the American Medical Association updated its policy to recognize that BMI is an imperfect measure, recommending it be used alongside additional measures like waist circumference, body composition, and cardiometabolic risk factors for a more complete clinical picture.

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