Free BMI Calculator for Adults

Find your Body Mass Index, weight category, and healthy weight range — plus what BMI doesn't tell you.

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BMI categories explained

BMI (Body Mass Index) is calculated as weight in kilograms divided by height in metres squared. The World Health Organization defines four main categories for adults:

CategoryBMI rangeWhat it means
UnderweightBelow 18.5May indicate insufficient nutrition; consult a doctor if unintentional
Normal weight18.5 – 24.9Associated with lowest average health risk at population level
Overweight25.0 – 29.9Increased risk of certain conditions at population level
Obese30.0 and aboveSignificantly increased risk of cardiovascular and metabolic conditions

BMI by age

Standard BMI categories (18.5–24.9 for "normal") were developed primarily from adult population data aged 18–65. For adults over 65, research suggests a slightly higher BMI (23–29) may actually be associated with better health outcomes — a phenomenon sometimes called the "obesity paradox," likely because higher BMI in seniors often reflects more muscle mass and better nutritional reserves during illness. BMI categories for children and teens use age- and sex-specific percentile charts, not covered by this calculator which is for adults 18+.

A brief history of BMI

BMI was developed by Belgian mathematician Adolphe Quetelet in the 1830s as a population statistics tool — not a clinical diagnostic measure. It was adopted for individual health screening in the 1970s precisely because it was cheap and easy to calculate, not because it was the most accurate measure of body composition. This history explains many of its limitations for individual assessment.

BMI limitations — what it doesn't tell you

BMI is a useful screening tool at a population level, but it has well-documented limitations for assessing individual health:

  • Doesn't distinguish muscle from fat. BMI uses only height and weight — a kg of muscle and a kg of fat weigh the same but have very different health implications.
  • Doesn't account for fat distribution. Visceral fat (around organs) carries higher health risk than subcutaneous fat (under skin), regardless of total weight. Two people with identical BMI can have very different health risk profiles based on where fat is stored.
  • Ethnic and population differences. Research shows some populations (e.g. South Asian) face increased metabolic risk at lower BMI thresholds than the standard cutoffs, while others may have different risk profiles at the same BMI.
  • Doesn't account for age-related changes. Body composition shifts with age even at constant weight — older adults typically carry more fat and less muscle at the same BMI as younger adults.
  • Single snapshot, no trend. A BMI reading tells you nothing about whether body composition is improving or worsening over time.

BMI vs body fat % — why athletes get misleading results

The clearest illustration of BMI's limitations is comparing it to actual body fat percentage. The following examples show real-world cases where BMI category and actual health/fitness status diverge significantly:

ProfileBMIBMI categoryActual body fat %Reality
Competitive bodybuilder, 90 kg, 178 cm 28.4 Overweight 8–10% Extremely lean, high muscle mass
NFL lineman, 130 kg, 193 cm 34.9 Obese 15–18% Athletic, high muscle mass
Sedentary adult, 70 kg, 170 cm 24.2 Normal 28–32% "Normal weight obesity" — high fat %, low muscle
Marathon runner, 62 kg, 175 cm 20.2 Normal 8–12% BMI accurately reflects lean physique

Example: Male, 85 kg, 178 cm — step by step

BMI calculation85 ÷ (1.78²) = 26.8
BMI categoryOverweight
Healthy weight range (BMI 18.5–24.9)58.6 – 79.0 kg
If body fat % = 12%Athletic — BMI category misleading
If body fat % = 28%BMI category likely accurate

The takeaway: if you exercise regularly and have visible muscle definition, treat an "overweight" BMI result with skepticism and consider body fat % measurement (calipers, DEXA scan, or bioelectrical impedance scale) for a more meaningful assessment.

Frequently asked questions about BMI

What is a healthy BMI?
The WHO defines a healthy adult BMI as 18.5–24.9. Below 18.5 is classified as underweight, 25–29.9 as overweight, and 30+ as obese. These are population-level statistical thresholds — many individuals outside the "normal" range are perfectly healthy, particularly athletes and very muscular individuals.
Is BMI accurate for athletes?
No. BMI significantly overestimates health risk for muscular individuals because it cannot distinguish muscle mass from fat mass. Athletes frequently show "overweight" or "obese" BMI despite very low body fat percentages. For athletes, body fat percentage or DEXA scanning provides a far more meaningful measure of health and fitness.
What is the difference between BMI and body fat percentage?
BMI is calculated from height and weight only — it provides no information about body composition. Body fat percentage directly measures the proportion of total body weight that is fat versus muscle, bone, and organs. Body fat % is more precise for assessing individual health but requires measurement tools (calipers, scales with bioelectrical impedance, or DEXA scans) that BMI does not.
How much weight do I need to lose to reach a healthy BMI?
A healthy BMI range is 18.5–24.9. This calculator shows your healthy weight range in kg/lbs based on your height. To reach it, use the TDEE calculator to set up a sustainable calorie deficit (typically 500 kcal/day below TDEE for ~1 lb/week loss) and recalculate every 4–8 weeks as your weight changes.
Does BMI work the same for men and women?
The BMI formula and category thresholds are identical for adult men and women. However, women naturally carry a higher percentage of body fat than men at the same BMI due to physiological differences — typical healthy ranges are approximately 21–33% body fat for women vs 8–19% for men. This means the same BMI can correspond to different body fat percentages between sexes.