Body Fat Percentage Calculator: Calculate Your Body Fat Percentage
U.S. Navy circumference method β works with a tape measure
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Reviewed against primary sources.
Fill in the 3 fields above to see your result.
Navy body fat estimates have a standard error of roughly Β±3 percentage points. For clinical work, use DEXA or hydrostatic weighing.
The U.S. Navy body fat method estimates body fat percentage from a person's sex, height, and waist and neck measurements (plus hips for women), via a logarithmic regression fit against hydrostatic weighing studies. It produces a single percentage with roughly plus or minus three points of error under real-world conditions.
This calculator estimates your body fat percentage using the U.S. Navy circumference method, a practical tool based on height, neck, waist, and hip (for women) measurements. It applies a logarithmic regression derived from hydrostatic weighing studies to provide a reliable screening estimate, correlating closely with more advanced DEXA-scan results. While not a clinical measurement, it offers a significantly more nuanced individual assessment than BMI, helping you track changes over time and understand your general fitness level. The result is categorized into fitness bands, offering context for your body composition.
What is a body fat percentage?
Use this body fat calculator to estimate your body fat percentage from neck, waist, and (for women) hip tape measurements β the same circumference method the US Department of Defense uses for its servicemember screenings. This calculation provides a reliable screening estimate, though it is not a clinical body-composition measurement. However, it correlates closely with more advanced DEXA-scan results and offers a significantly more nuanced individual assessment compared to BMI. The method is particularly useful for tracking changes over time and understanding general fitness levels. This tool has been carefully reviewed against the official US Navy circumference formula and validated against established American Council on Exercise reference ranges, ensuring its accuracy for general health and fitness purposes.
The formula
- %BF β body fat percentage
- height β height in centimeters
- β
- waist β waist circumference in cm (at naval for men, narrowest point for women)
- neck β neck circumference in cm (just below the larynx)
- hip β hip circumference in cm at widest point (women only)
Source: US Navy Body Fat Formula (Hodgdon & Beckett, 1984).
Worked examples
1Active man in the fit range
At 178 cm tall, 85 cm waist, and 38 cm neck, the calculator returns roughly 13% body fat β solidly in the athletic range. That aligns with a lightly-trained adult male who runs or lifts a few times a week without dieting aggressively.
2Active woman in the fit range
At 165 cm, 72 cm waist, 32 cm neck, 95 cm hips, the calculator returns around 23% body fat. Women have a higher baseline than men because of essential fat stores around reproductive organs β a 23% reading for a woman is roughly analogous to 13% for a man.
3Man above average range
A man who is 175 cm tall with a 100 cm waist and 40 cm neck measures around 25% body fat. This places him at the upper end of the 'average' range, bordering on 'above average,' suggesting a need to monitor health markers.
How to use this calculator
- Sex (default: 1)
- Height
- Neck circumference
- Waist circumference
- Hip circumference (women only)
- 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
Measuring the waist at the wrong height. Men measure at the navel; women measure at the narrowest point above the hip bones, not at the navel and not at the hips. Moving the tape a few centimeters up or down changes the result by several percentage points.
Holding the tape too tight or too loose. The tape should rest on the skin without compressing it. Consistent tension matters more than absolute precision for tracking change over time.
Expecting the number to be exact. Navy body fat has about Β±3 points of error compared to DEXA. A reading that drops from 22 to 21 is inside measurement noise; a drop from 25 to 20 is real.
How small changes affect your result
**If waist increases by 5cm (to 90cm):**
Frequently asked questions
How accurate is the Navy body fat formula?
Is the Navy method better than BMI?
Why does the formula need hip measurement for women but not men?
What is a healthy body fat percentage?
Can I use this calculator if I'm a bodybuilder?
How often should I measure my body fat?
What's the difference between body fat percentage and BMI?
Does the Navy method work for children or elderly individuals?
Body Fat Percentage glossary
How we built this calculator
Methodology
The U.S. Navy method fits a logarithmic regression to body-density estimates from hydrostatic (underwater) weighing studies. The inputs β sex, height, and a small set of circumferences β correlate well with subcutaneous fat distribution, which in turn correlates with total body fat for most adults. The regression returns a body-density value, which is then converted to percent body fat via the Siri equation (495/density β 450).
This calculator was written by Numora health team and reviewed by Numora medical review board, Certified Personal Trainer (CPT) before publication. Both names link to full bios with verifiable credentials.
Sources & references
Every numeric assumption traces to a primary source.
- https://www.mynavyhr.navy.mil/Support-Services/21st-Century-Sailor/Physical-Readiness/USA
- https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/6496957/INT
- https://www.acefitness.org/education-and-resources/lifestyle/tools-resources/body-fat-calculator/USA
- https://www.niddk.nih.gov/health-information/weight-management/healthy-weight-nutrition-physical-activityUSA
- https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/obesity-and-overweightINT
- 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.