BMI Calculator: Check Your Body Mass Index
Check your Body Mass Index
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Reviewed against primary sources.
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BMI is a screening tool only. Consult a healthcare professional for individual advice.
BMI (body mass index) is weight divided by height squared, in kilograms per square metre. It's a rough population-level indicator of whether an adult's weight is in a healthy range β useful for tracking trends, not for diagnosing individuals, since it doesn't distinguish muscle from fat.
BMI (Body Mass Index) is a widely used screening tool for adults, calculated by dividing weight in kilograms by the square of height in meters. It quickly categorizes individuals into underweight, healthy weight, overweight, or obese ranges, providing a general indicator of potential health risks. However, BMI has limitations; it does not directly measure body fat or differentiate between muscle and fat mass, meaning highly muscular individuals might have a high BMI without excess body fat. Therefore, it should be interpreted as a preliminary assessment, not a definitive health diagnosis. Always consult a healthcare professional for a comprehensive evaluation and personalized health advice.
What is a bmi?
Use this BMI calculator to quickly determine your Body Mass Index (BMI) based on your height and weight, and identify which adult healthy-weight band you fall into. BMI serves as a valuable initial screening tool, widely adopted for population-level health assessments and trend tracking. While it offers a convenient snapshot, it's crucial to remember that BMI does not directly measure body fat or distinguish between muscle and fat mass. Therefore, it should be interpreted as a preliminary indicator rather than a definitive health diagnosis. This calculator aligns with the World Health Organization's adult BMI classifications and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Healthy Weight clinical guidance, providing a reliable starting point for understanding your weight status.
The formula
Source: World Health Organization (WHO) Adult BMI Classification.
Worked examples
1Office worker, healthy weight range
A 70 kg person who is 175 cm tall has a BMI of 22.9, which sits comfortably in the Healthy weight band (18.5β25). This is close to the statistical midpoint of the healthy range, so there is meaningful buffer before either threshold. That said, BMI alone doesn't rule out elevated waist circumference or poor metabolic markers β a routine check-up remains worthwhile even at a 'good' number.
2Heavier build near the Obese threshold
At 100 kg and 170 cm the BMI is 34.6, placing this person in the Obese category (β₯30). At this level, clinical guidelines typically recommend discussing weight management with a GP, as risk of type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease rises noticeably above a BMI of 30. However, if this person is a strength athlete with substantial muscle mass, a body-composition scan would give a more accurate picture than BMI alone. The number flags a conversation worth having β it doesn't close it.
3Older adult, normal BMI but potential for sarcopenia/normal-weight obesity
An older adult at 65 kg and 165 cm has a BMI of 23.9, placing them in the 'Healthy weight' category. While this number seems ideal, BMI alone doesn't reveal body composition changes common with aging, such as muscle loss (sarcopenia) and increased visceral fat. It's possible for an older individual to have a 'healthy' BMI but still carry health risks associated with normal-weight obesity. Regular physical activity, a protein-rich diet, and a discussion with a doctor about body composition are important for this demographic, even with a seemingly optimal BMI.
How to use this calculator
- Weight
- Height
- Read the result. Use the worked examples below to sanity-check against a known scenario.
What your result means and what to do next
Common mistakes and edge cases
Reading the category as a health diagnosis. A BMI of 25.3 is labelled 'Overweight', but that single data point says nothing about blood pressure, cholesterol, fitness level, or metabolic age. Studies show that 30β40% of people classified as overweight by BMI are metabolically healthy, while a similar proportion in the 'Healthy weight' band carry elevated risk factors.
Using kg/cm inputs directly without converting height to metres. The formula requires height in metres. If you feed 175 instead of 1.75 into the denominator, you get 70 Γ· (175 Γ 175) = 0.002 β a nonsensical result. The calculator handles the conversion automatically, but if you replicate the formula in a spreadsheet, remember to divide centimetres by 100 first.
Applying adult cut-points to children or teenagers. WHO and CDC use age- and sex-specific percentile charts for anyone under 20. A 14-year-old with a BMI of 24 might fall at the 85th percentile for their age and sex, placing them in the 'Overweight' category for children β even though 24 is squarely 'Healthy weight' on the adult scale. Never use this calculator to interpret a child's weight status.
How small changes affect your result
**Starting point (Healthy weight):** A 70 kg individual at 175 cm has a BMI of 22.9, placing them in the healthy weight range.
WHO adult BMI categories with health-risk associations (ages 20+)
| BMI band | Range (kg/mΒ²) | Category | Cardiometabolic risk |
|---|---|---|---|
| Underweight | < 18.5 | Below healthy | Increased β nutritional deficiency, low immunity |
| Healthy weight | 18.5 β 24.9 | Normal | Lowest baseline |
| Overweight | 25.0 β 29.9 | Above healthy | Increased β type 2 diabetes, hypertension |
| Obese class I | 30.0 β 34.9 | Obese (mild) | Moderate β metabolic + cardiovascular risk |
| Obese class II | 35.0 β 39.9 | Obese (severe) | High β surgery considered for comorbidities |
| Obese class III | β₯ 40.0 | Obese (extreme) | Very high β bariatric surgery often indicated |
Bands and risk associations from WHO Adult BMI Classification (2000, updated 2004). For Asian populations the WHO recommends an overweight cutoff of 23.0 kg/mΒ² and an obese cutoff of 27.5 kg/mΒ² to better reflect regional cardiovascular risk profiles.
Frequently asked questions
What is a healthy BMI for adults?
Is BMI accurate for muscular people?
How do I convert pounds and inches to use this calculator?
Can I use this BMI calculator for children?
Does BMI change with age?
What should I do if my BMI is in the Obese range?
How is BMI calculated?
What is the normal BMI range?
BMI glossary
How we built this calculator
Methodology
BMI is calculated by dividing body weight (kg) by height in metres squared. A person who is 70 kg and 1.75 m tall has a BMI of 70 Γ· (1.75 Γ 1.75) = 22.9. The WHO and CDC use four cut-points β 18.5, 25.0, and 30.0 β to define the four standard categories. These thresholds were derived from large population studies linking BMI ranges to disease risk and mortality, not from individual physiology.
This calculator was written by Numora health team and reviewed by Numora editorial review board, Registered Dietitian (RD) before publication. Both names link to full bios with verifiable credentials.
Sources & references
Every numeric assumption traces to a primary source.
- https://www.cdc.gov/healthyweight/assessing/bmi/adult_bmi/index.htmlUSA
- https://www.who.int/data/gho/data/themes/theme-details/GHO/body-mass-indexINT
- https://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/health/educational/lose_wt/BMI/bmicalc.htmUSA
- https://www.nhs.uk/common-health-questions/lifestyle/what-is-the-body-mass-index-bmi/UK
- https://www.heart.org/en/healthy-living/healthy-eating/losing-weight/about-weightUSA
- https://www.diabetes.org.uk/guide-to-diabetes/managing-your-diabetes/bmi-and-ethnicityUK
- https://easo.org/education-portal/easo-guidelines/EU
- https://www.canada.ca/en/public-health/services/health-promotion/healthy-living/weight-management/body-mass-index-adults.htmlCAN
- Numora Editorial Policy. numora.net/editorial-policy
This calculator is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Numbers shown are estimates based on the inputs you provide. Conventions and regulations vary by country. Consult a qualified healthcare provider in your country before making decisions based on these results.