Body mass index and daily calorie needs.
Body mass index and daily calorie needs.
Enter your height and weight to calculate your Body Mass Index (BMI). Select your unit system (imperial or metric). The result shows your BMI value and which standard category it falls into. You can also enter your age and sex for a more context-aware reading, since BMI interpretation varies by these factors.
BMI is a quick screening tool used by healthcare providers to identify potential weight-related health risks. It is not a diagnostic measure โ many factors affect health that BMI does not capture. Always discuss your results with a healthcare professional.
BMI doesn't distinguish between fat mass and muscle mass. A muscular athlete with very low body fat may register as "overweight" or even "obese" by BMI. Conversely, someone with a "normal" BMI may have high visceral fat (fat around the organs), which carries significant health risks despite the normal BMI reading โ this is sometimes called "normal weight obesity" or "skinny fat."
BMI also doesn't account for fat distribution. Abdominal fat (apple shape) is more metabolically harmful than fat stored in the hips and thighs (pear shape), even at the same BMI. Waist circumference is often a better predictor of metabolic disease risk: above 35 inches for women and 40 inches for men indicates elevated risk regardless of BMI.
Healthcare providers increasingly use BMI alongside other measurements for a fuller picture: waist-to-height ratio (waist circumference should be less than half your height), body fat percentage (measured by DEXA scan, hydrostatic weighing, or bioelectrical impedance), blood pressure, cholesterol levels, blood glucose, and cardiovascular fitness tests.
A caloric deficit of 500โ1,000 calories per day produces weight loss of approximately 1โ2 pounds per week โ generally considered the sustainable, healthy range. Faster loss often involves muscle loss and metabolic adaptation that makes keeping the weight off harder. Physical activity combined with modest caloric reduction consistently outperforms either approach alone.
The BMI formula is the same for both, but healthy body fat percentages differ significantly. Women naturally carry more body fat than men at the same BMI. Some researchers advocate for gender-specific BMI cutoffs, but the standard WHO categories remain the most widely used in clinical settings.
Older adults tend to lose muscle mass while gaining fat โ meaning their body composition worsens even as BMI stays stable. For adults over 65, a slightly higher BMI (23โ27) is associated with better outcomes in some studies, possibly because higher weight provides a buffer against illness-related weight loss.
Consult your doctor for a full assessment rather than acting on BMI alone. Small, sustainable changes โ 30 minutes of walking most days and modest caloric reduction โ produce meaningful health improvements regardless of the number on the scale or the BMI chart.