BMI — Metric
Your BMI
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BMI Calculator FAQ
Common questions about Body Mass Index.
BMI = weight (kg) ÷ height (m)². In imperial: BMI = 703 × weight (lbs) ÷ height (inches)².
Example: 5'9" tall (175 cm), 160 lbs (72.6 kg):
BMI = 72.6 ÷ (1.75)² = 72.6 ÷ 3.0625 ≈ 23.7 (Normal weight)
Example: 5'9" tall (175 cm), 160 lbs (72.6 kg):
BMI = 72.6 ÷ (1.75)² = 72.6 ÷ 3.0625 ≈ 23.7 (Normal weight)
According to the CDC and WHO:
- Below 18.5 — Underweight
- 18.5–24.9 — Normal weight (healthy)
- 25–29.9 — Overweight
- 30 and above — Obese
BMI can overestimate body fat in athletes because muscle is denser than fat. A muscular person may have a BMI in the "overweight" range while having a very low body fat percentage. BMI is a screening tool, not a diagnostic one — body composition tests (DEXA scan, skinfold) are more accurate for athletes.
Calculate using: min weight = 18.5 × height(m)², max weight = 24.9 × height(m)².
For 5'9" (1.75 m): Min = 18.5 × 3.0625 = 56.7 kg (125 lbs), Max = 24.9 × 3.0625 = 76.3 kg (168 lbs).
The calculator above shows this range automatically after calculating.
For 5'9" (1.75 m): Min = 18.5 × 3.0625 = 56.7 kg (125 lbs), Max = 24.9 × 3.0625 = 76.3 kg (168 lbs).
The calculator above shows this range automatically after calculating.
Clinically, the same BMI categories apply to both sexes. However, women naturally carry about 5–10% more body fat than men at the same BMI. Some health researchers suggest gender-specific thresholds, but the standard CDC/WHO scale (18.5–24.9 = normal) is used universally in clinical settings.