BMI Calculator
Check your Body Mass Index and find out if you’re a healthy weight
⚕️ BMI is a screening tool, not a diagnostic measure. It may not be accurate for athletes, pregnant women, or certain ethnic groups. Always consult a healthcare professional for personalised advice.
What Is BMI?
BMI stands for Body Mass Index. It is a number we get by using a person’s height and weight. This number helps us understand if someone’s weight is healthy for their height or not.
Doctors and health workers use BMI as a simple check to see if a person may be too thin, at a healthy weight, overweight, or obese. You only need two things to find BMI — your weight and your height — which makes it very easy to use.
How to Calculate BMI
You can find your BMI using kilograms and meters (metric) or using pounds and inches (US units). Both ways give you the same answer in the end.
Metric Formula (kg and meters)
BMI = weight (kg) ÷ height² (m)
First, multiply height by itself: 1.75 × 1.75 = 3.0625
Then divide: 73 ÷ 3.0625 = 23.8
US Standard Formula (pounds and inches)
BMI = (weight in lbs × 703) ÷ height² (inches)
Multiply height by itself: 70 × 70 = 4,900
Multiply weight by 703: 160 × 703 = 112,480
Then divide: 112,480 ÷ 4,900 = 23.0
BMI Categories for Adults
For grown-ups aged 20 and older, BMI is read using a fixed range of numbers. These ranges are the same for both men and women. They help us know which weight group a person falls into. The table below shows the main categories:
Thinness
Thinness
Thinness
weight
Class I
Class II
Class III
| Classification | BMI Range (kg/m²) | General Health Implication |
|---|---|---|
| Severe Thinness | Below 16 | High risk of malnutrition and related complications |
| Moderate Thinness | 16 – 17 | Moderate risk; medical evaluation recommended |
| Mild Thinness | 17 – 18.5 | Slightly below healthy range; monitoring advised |
| Normal Weight | 18.5 – 25 | Generally associated with lower risk of weight-related illness |
| Overweight | 25 – 30 | Elevated risk; lifestyle changes often recommended |
| Obese Class I | 30 – 35 | Significant risk of chronic disease |
| Obese Class II | 35 – 40 | High risk; medical intervention often necessary |
| Obese Class III | Above 40 | Very high risk; often referred to as severe or extreme obesity |
BMI for Children and Teenagers (Ages 2–20)
BMI is worked out the same way for children and teens as it is for adults. But the result means something different for kids. This is because children’s bodies keep changing as they grow, and boys and girls grow differently from each other.
So instead of using fixed numbers like adults, a child’s BMI is compared to other children of the same age and sex. This comparison is shown as a percentile. Here is how to read it:
| Weight Category | Percentile Range |
|---|---|
| Underweight | Below the 5th percentile |
| Healthy Weight | 5th percentile to below the 85th percentile |
| At Risk of Overweight | 85th percentile to below the 95th percentile |
| Overweight | 95th percentile and above |
Health Risks of Being Overweight
When a person’s BMI is in the overweight or obese range, the body is carrying more weight than it should. Over time, this extra weight puts pressure on the heart, bones, and other organs. Some health problems that can happen because of high BMI are:
- High blood pressure — the heart has to work harder than normal
- Bad cholesterol levels — too much bad fat and not enough good fat in the blood
- Type 2 diabetes — the body stops using sugar properly
- Heart disease and risk of heart attack
- Stroke — when blood flow to the brain is blocked
- Gallbladder problems and gallstones
- Joint pain, especially in the knees and hips
- Difficulty breathing during sleep (sleep apnea)
- Higher chance of some cancers
- Feeling tired, low mood, and poor quality of life
- Greater chance of serious illness compared to people with a normal BMI
The good news is that even losing a small amount of weight can help. Blood pressure, blood sugar, and energy levels can all improve. If you are worried about your weight, speak to a doctor.
Health Risks of Being Underweight
Being too thin — a BMI below 18.5 — is also a health concern. When the body does not have enough weight, it may not be getting the food and nutrients it needs. Some problems that can come from being underweight are:
- Not getting enough vitamins and nutrients — this can cause tiredness and weak blood (anemia)
- Weak bones that break more easily
- A weaker immune system — getting sick more often
- Slow growth in children and teenagers
- Hormonal problems in women that can affect their periods
- Higher risk during surgery or illness
- Greater chance of serious illness compared to people with a normal BMI
BMI Prime
BMI Prime is a simple version of BMI that tells you how close your BMI is to the top of the normal range. The top of the normal range is 25. So we just divide your BMI by 25 to get BMI Prime.
If your BMI Prime is below 1.0, you are in the normal or underweight range. If it is above 1.0, you are overweight or obese. It is an easy way to see at a glance how far your BMI is from the healthy limit.
BMI Prime = BMI ÷ 25
BMI Prime = 23 ÷ 25 = 0.92
| Classification | BMI (kg/m²) | BMI Prime |
|---|---|---|
| Severe Thinness | Below 16 | Below 0.64 |
| Moderate Thinness | 16 – 17 | 0.64 – 0.68 |
| Mild Thinness | 17 – 18.5 | 0.68 – 0.74 |
| Normal Weight | 18.5 – 25 | 0.74 – 1.00 |
| Overweight | 25 – 30 | 1.00 – 1.20 |
| Obese Class I | 30 – 35 | 1.20 – 1.40 |
| Obese Class II | 35 – 40 | 1.40 – 1.60 |
| Obese Class III | Above 40 | Above 1.60 |
Ponderal Index
The Ponderal Index (PI) is similar to BMI — it also uses height and weight to check if a person has a healthy body size. The difference is in the formula. BMI uses height squared, but PI uses height cubed (multiplied three times). This makes PI a better tool for people who are very tall or very short, where BMI can sometimes give a misleading result.
PI = height (inches) ÷ ∛weight (lbs)
Cube root of 160 ≈ 5.43
PI = 70 ÷ 5.43 ≈ 12.9 kg/m³
Limitations of BMI
BMI is a helpful tool but it is not perfect. It only uses weight and height — it cannot tell the difference between fat and muscle. So two people with the same BMI can have very different bodies.
Limitations in Adults
Here are some cases where BMI may not give the full picture:
- A sportsperson or bodybuilder may have a high BMI because of muscle, not fat — but they are still very healthy
- Older people often have more body fat than younger people at the same BMI, because muscles get smaller with age
- Women generally carry more body fat than men even at the same BMI
- Fat stored around the belly is more dangerous than fat on the arms or legs — but BMI cannot tell where fat is stored
- BMI may not work as well for people from different ethnic backgrounds, because the link between BMI and body fat can differ
Limitations in Children and Teenagers
The same issues apply to children too. Also, because kids grow at different speeds and go through puberty at different times, their BMI can change a lot in a short time. This is why we use percentiles for children instead of fixed numbers.
Other Measurements Used Alongside BMI
These are some other ways to check body health that can be used together with BMI:
| Measurement | What It Checks | Why It Helps |
|---|---|---|
| Waist Size | Fat around the belly area | Belly fat is linked to heart disease and diabetes |
| Waist-to-Hip Ratio | How fat is spread between waist and hips | Shows body shape and where fat is stored |
| Waist-to-Height Ratio | Belly size compared to height | A good way to spot health risk early |
| Body Fat Percentage | How much of the body is actually fat | More direct than BMI — measures fat, not just weight |
| Ponderal Index | Weight vs height (using cube, not square) | Works better for very tall or very short people |
Worked Examples
A woman weighs 68 kg and is 1.65 m tall. What is her BMI?
A man weighs 185 lbs and is 6 ft 1 in (73 inches) tall. What is his BMI?
What should a person weigh if they are 1.70 m tall to stay in the healthy BMI range (18.5 to 25)?