BMI Calculator

Calculate your Body Mass Index with healthy weight range

⚕️ Medical Disclaimer

This BMI calculator is for informational purposes only and should not be used as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. BMI is a screening tool and does not directly measure body fat or health. Always consult with a qualified healthcare provider before making decisions about your health, diet, or exercise program. The calculator does not account for factors like muscle mass, bone density, age, sex, or ethnicity, which can significantly affect interpretation.

What Is BMI and How Is It Calculated?

Body Mass Index (BMI) is a simple calculation using height and weight to estimate body fat and categorise weight status. Developed in the 1830s, it remains the most widely used screening tool in healthcare worldwide.

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The BMI Formula

BMI is calculated as weight in kilograms divided by height in metres squared: BMI = kg ÷ m². In imperial units: BMI = (pounds ÷ inches²) × 703. The resulting number categorises weight status as underweight, normal, overweight, or obese.

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Metric & Imperial Units

Our calculator supports both measurement systems. Enter weight in kilograms or pounds and height in centimetres or inches — the conversion and calculation happen automatically. Switch between systems freely without recalculating.

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Instant Results

Click Calculate BMI and your result appears immediately with category classification, health context, and your healthy weight range for your height. No waiting, no page reload — all calculation happens live in your browser.

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Healthy Weight Range

Along with your BMI number, we show your specific healthy weight range — the weight at which your BMI would fall within the normal category (18.5–24.9) for your exact height. This gives you a clear, personalised target.

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Private & Secure

All calculation happens locally in your browser. Your weight, height, and BMI are never sent to any server, never stored, and never logged. Your health data remains completely private between you and your device.

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Free, No Sign-Up

Completely free with no account required. Calculate as many times as you need. Works on desktop, tablet, and mobile browsers. No app installation, no email address, and no usage limits.

BMI Categories Explained

The World Health Organization defines four main BMI categories for adults. Each category correlates with different health risk profiles, though individual health depends on many factors beyond BMI alone.

Underweight

BMI < 18.5

May indicate insufficient nutrition, potential nutrient deficiencies, weakened immune system, or underlying health conditions. Consult a healthcare provider for assessment.

Normal Weight

BMI 18.5 – 24.9

Associated with the lowest health risk for most adults. Maintain through balanced diet and regular physical activity. Individual optimal weight varies within this range.

Overweight

BMI 25.0 – 29.9

May increase risk of cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, and certain health conditions. Lifestyle modifications — diet and exercise — can help achieve healthier weight.

Obese

BMI ≥ 30.0

Higher risk for serious health conditions including heart disease, stroke, diabetes, and certain cancers. Medical guidance is recommended for safe, sustainable weight management.

How to Calculate Your BMI

Three simple steps to get your Body Mass Index and understand what it means for your health.

1

Choose Your Unit System

Select Metric if you measure weight in kilograms and height in centimetres, or Imperial if you use pounds and inches. Most countries use the metric system, but the United States, United Kingdom, and a few others commonly use imperial measurements. Switch between systems freely — the calculator handles both.

2

Enter Your Weight and Height

Type your current weight and height into the input fields. For metric, enter weight in kilograms (e.g., 70) and height in centimetres (e.g., 175). For imperial, enter weight in pounds (e.g., 154) and height in inches (e.g., 69). Be as accurate as possible — small differences in measurement can change the category.

3

Calculate and Review Your Results

Click Calculate BMI and your result displays immediately. You will see your BMI number, your category classification (Underweight, Normal Weight, Overweight, or Obese), and your healthy weight range for your specific height. Use the Clear button to reset and calculate again.

BMI Reference Chart for Adults

Use this table to quickly identify your BMI category based on your calculated BMI number. These classifications apply to adults aged 18 and older.

BMI Range Category Health Risk Level Recommended Action
< 16.0 Severely Underweight High Seek immediate medical evaluation
16.0 – 18.4 Underweight Increased Consult healthcare provider; assess nutrition
18.5 – 24.9 Normal Weight Minimal Maintain through healthy lifestyle
25.0 – 29.9 Overweight Increased Consider lifestyle modifications; monitor health markers
30.0 – 34.9 Obesity Class I Moderate Medical guidance recommended for weight management
35.0 – 39.9 Obesity Class II High Medical intervention advised; possible referral to specialist
≥ 40.0 Obesity Class III Very High Urgent medical consultation; comprehensive treatment plan

Understanding BMI — What It Measures, What It Misses, and How to Use It Properly

Body Mass Index is one of the most widely used health metrics globally — and one of the most misunderstood. Created nearly 200 years ago by Belgian mathematician Adolphe Quetelet, BMI was originally designed as a statistical tool for studying populations, not assessing individual health. Yet it has become the primary screening method doctors, insurers, and public health organisations use to categorise weight status. Understanding what BMI actually measures, where it falls short, and how it fits into a broader picture of health helps you use it appropriately.

The History and Purpose of BMI

Quetelet developed the formula in 1832 while studying social statistics of Belgian and French populations. He called it the "Quetelet Index" and intended it to describe the average proportions of the human body across large groups, not to assess individual fatness or health. The formula gained little medical attention until the 1970s, when researcher Ancel Keys studied its correlation with body fat percentage and renamed it Body Mass Index. Keys himself noted that BMI works best for population studies and is less reliable for individuals.

Despite these limitations, BMI became standard in clinical practice primarily because it is cheap, fast, and requires no special equipment — just a scale and a measuring tape. More accurate body composition methods like DEXA scans, hydrostatic weighing, or bioelectrical impedance analysis are expensive and not widely available. For public health screening and epidemiological research, BMI remains valuable. For individual health assessment, it should be one data point among many, not the sole determinant.

What BMI Actually Measures (And What It Does Not)

BMI measures your weight relative to your height squared. That is all. It does not measure body fat, muscle mass, bone density, or fat distribution — all factors that significantly affect health. Two people with identical BMIs can have completely different body compositions. An athlete with high muscle mass may have the same BMI as a sedentary person with high body fat, yet their health profiles differ enormously.

This is BMI's fundamental limitation: it treats all weight as equivalent. Muscle tissue weighs more than fat tissue by volume, so individuals with high muscle mass frequently fall into overweight or even obese categories despite having low body fat and excellent health markers. Conversely, someone with low muscle mass and high body fat may show a "normal" BMI while having an unhealthy body composition — a condition called normal weight obesity.

BMI and Athletic Populations

Professional athletes provide the clearest examples of BMI's limitations. Many elite rugby players, American football players, and bodybuilders have BMIs above 30, classifying them as obese, despite body fat percentages in the healthy range. Research on NFL players found an average BMI of 31.7 — technically obese — yet their body fat percentages were often below 15 percent, which is considered lean.

For individuals engaged in strength training, powerlifting, or sports requiring significant muscle mass, BMI categorisation can be misleading. If your BMI places you in the overweight range but you have visible muscle definition, low waist circumference, and healthy metabolic markers (blood pressure, cholesterol, blood glucose), BMI is likely not a useful metric for you. Body composition testing or waist-to-height ratio may be more informative.

BMI Across Different Populations

Research has shown that BMI thresholds for health risk vary significantly across ethnic populations. The standard cutoffs (18.5, 25, 30) were developed primarily using data from European populations. Asian populations tend to have higher body fat percentages at the same BMI compared to European populations, and health risks appear at lower BMI values. The World Health Organization has suggested alternative thresholds for Asian adults: overweight at BMI 23 and obese at BMI 27.5.

Age also affects BMI interpretation. Older adults naturally lose muscle mass (sarcopenia) and bone density while often gaining fat mass. A BMI that was healthy at age 30 may represent inadequate muscle mass at age 70. Some research suggests slightly higher BMIs in older age (25–27) may be protective, though this remains debated. Standard BMI categories are designed for adults aged 18 to 65 and should be interpreted cautiously outside that range.

Alternative and Complementary Measurements

Several measurements can supplement or replace BMI for more accurate health assessment. Waist circumference is a strong predictor of visceral fat — the metabolically active fat surrounding internal organs that poses the greatest health risk. Men with waist circumference above 102 cm (40 inches) and women above 88 cm (35 inches) face elevated health risks regardless of BMI.

Waist-to-height ratio is calculated by dividing waist circumference by height (both in the same units). A ratio above 0.5 indicates increased health risk. This metric accounts for height's effect on healthy weight distribution and has shown good correlation with cardiovascular risk in multiple studies. Body fat percentage, measured through DEXA scans, skinfold calipers, or bioelectrical impedance, directly assesses body composition and is far more informative than BMI for individuals with high muscle mass or those monitoring fitness progress.

When BMI Is Most Useful

BMI remains valuable for population-level health tracking and as an initial screening tool in clinical settings. If your BMI is normal (18.5–24.9) and you have no concerning symptoms, it provides reasonable assurance that weight is not a major health risk factor. If your BMI is significantly outside the normal range and you have other risk factors (family history of diabetes, high blood pressure, sedentary lifestyle), it serves as a prompt for further assessment and possible intervention.

For tracking personal weight changes over time, BMI provides a standardised measure that accounts for height. If you are working toward weight loss or gain for health reasons, monitoring BMI alongside other metrics (waist circumference, body fat percentage, strength improvements, energy levels) gives a fuller picture of progress. The number itself matters less than the trend and how you feel.

BMI in Children and Adolescents

BMI calculation is the same for children as for adults, but interpretation is entirely different. Because body composition changes dramatically during growth and development, paediatric BMI is evaluated against age- and sex-specific percentile charts rather than fixed categories. A BMI at the 85th percentile or above is considered overweight, and at the 95th percentile or above is considered obese, relative to reference populations of the same age and sex.

Our calculator is designed for adults only. If you need to calculate BMI for a child or adolescent, consult paediatric BMI charts from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) or World Health Organization (WHO) and discuss results with a paediatrician. Growth patterns, puberty timing, and developmental stage all significantly affect appropriate interpretation.

Common Misconceptions About BMI

The most common misconception is that BMI directly measures health. It does not. It measures weight relative to height, which correlates with health risks at population level but says nothing definitive about individual health status. A person in the overweight BMI range who exercises regularly, eats well, and has excellent metabolic health markers is healthier than a sedentary person in the normal BMI range with poor diet and unfavourable blood work.

Another misconception is that everyone should aim for the same BMI target. Healthy weight varies by muscle mass, bone structure, genetics, and individual health goals. Two people of the same height may thrive at different weights within the normal BMI range. Rather than fixating on achieving a specific BMI number, focus on sustainable healthy behaviours — regular physical activity, balanced nutrition, adequate sleep, stress management — and let your weight settle where it naturally falls when those behaviours are consistent.

Using BMI Responsibly

If your BMI calculation places you outside the normal range, the appropriate response depends on other factors. Consider your waist circumference, family health history, energy levels, fitness abilities, medical test results (blood pressure, cholesterol, blood glucose), and how you feel day to day. If multiple indicators suggest health concerns, consult a healthcare provider for comprehensive assessment rather than attempting major dietary or lifestyle changes without guidance.

If BMI suggests you are underweight, this warrants medical evaluation to rule out malnutrition, eating disorders, thyroid issues, or other underlying conditions. If you are significantly overweight or obese by BMI and experience symptoms like shortness of breath, joint pain, or fatigue, medical guidance can help you develop a safe, effective weight management plan. The calculator provides information; a healthcare professional provides diagnosis and treatment.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about BMI calculation, interpretation, and limitations.

Is BMI accurate for everyone? +
No. BMI is most accurate for sedentary adults with average muscle mass. It is less accurate for athletes, bodybuilders, very muscular individuals, older adults with muscle loss, pregnant women, and growing children. It also does not account for ethnic differences in body composition. BMI should be one screening tool among several, not the sole determinant of health status. Consult a healthcare provider for comprehensive assessment.
What is a healthy BMI range? +
For adults, the World Health Organization defines normal weight as BMI between 18.5 and 24.9. This range is associated with the lowest statistical risk for weight-related health conditions across large populations. However, individual healthy weight varies within and sometimes outside this range depending on muscle mass, bone density, genetics, and other factors. Focus on sustainable healthy behaviours rather than achieving a specific BMI number.
Can I have a normal BMI but still be unhealthy? +
Yes. This condition is called "metabolically unhealthy normal weight" or "normal weight obesity." An individual can have a BMI in the normal range but high body fat percentage, low muscle mass, poor metabolic markers (high blood sugar, unhealthy cholesterol), or excessive visceral fat around organs. Health is determined by many factors beyond BMI — diet quality, physical activity, sleep, stress, genetics, and metabolic health markers all matter.
Why does my BMI differ from my body fat percentage? +
BMI measures weight relative to height — it cannot distinguish between muscle, fat, bone, and water. Body fat percentage measures the proportion of your weight that is fat tissue specifically. Two people with identical BMIs can have very different body fat percentages. An athlete with high muscle mass may have a high BMI but low body fat. A sedentary person may have normal BMI but high body fat due to low muscle mass. Body fat percentage is a more accurate indicator of body composition.
Should I use BMI if I lift weights or do strength training? +
BMI is less useful for individuals with above-average muscle mass. Muscle weighs more than fat by volume, so strength athletes frequently calculate as overweight or obese despite low body fat and excellent health. If you strength train regularly, consider body fat percentage, waist circumference, or waist-to-height ratio as more informative metrics. If your BMI is elevated but your waist circumference is healthy and you have visible muscle definition, BMI is likely not an accurate indicator for you.
Can I use this calculator for children? +
No. This calculator uses adult BMI categories. Children and adolescents require age- and sex-specific BMI percentile charts because body composition changes dramatically during growth. A BMI that is healthy for a 10-year-old differs from what is healthy for a 16-year-old of the same height. For children under 18, use paediatric BMI calculators from the CDC or WHO and discuss results with a paediatrician.
Is my data saved when I use this calculator? +
No. All calculation happens entirely within your browser. Your weight, height, and calculated BMI are never sent to RankStreak's servers, never stored in any database, and never logged. When you close the tab or click Clear, your data is gone completely. This ensures complete privacy for your health information.
What should I do if my BMI is outside the normal range? +
First, consider other health indicators: waist circumference, energy levels, physical fitness, family health history, and any symptoms you experience. If multiple indicators suggest concerns, consult a healthcare provider for comprehensive assessment. A doctor can order blood tests, assess your overall health, and recommend appropriate interventions if needed. Do not attempt extreme diets or exercise programs without medical guidance, especially if you have underlying health conditions.
Does BMI predict my lifespan? +
BMI is one of many factors that correlate with longevity at population level, but it does not predict individual lifespan. People with BMIs at both extremes (very low or very high) show increased mortality risk in large studies, while those in the normal and slightly overweight ranges show lower risk. However, physical activity level, diet quality, smoking status, alcohol consumption, genetics, and access to healthcare all significantly affect lifespan and may outweigh BMI's influence.
Why are the BMI categories different for Asian populations? +
Research shows that Asian populations tend to have higher body fat percentages at the same BMI compared to European populations, and health risks like type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease appear at lower BMI thresholds. The WHO recommends considering BMI 23 as overweight and BMI 27.5 as obese for Asian adults, though these remain under review. Ethnicity-specific guidelines improve BMI's usefulness as a screening tool across diverse populations.