Healthy Weight Calculator

Find your ideal weight range based on your height.

Your Measurements

ft
in
lb

Healthy Weight Range

128.9lb - 174.2lb

(BMI 18.5 - 25)

Healthy weight for your height

This range is based on World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines for a healthy Body Mass Index (BMI). Staying within this range may help reduce the risk of chronic diseases.

Healthy Weight Calculator

Everything you need to know

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About the Healthy Weight Calculator

There is no single "perfect" weight for everyone, but medical science has established healthy weight ranges that minimize health risks. Our healthy weight calculator uses multiple validated methods to estimate your ideal range based on your height, gender, age, and frame size.

Methods used:

  • BMI-based ranges: 18.5-24.9 (standard healthy range)
  • Robinson formula: Updated Devine formula
  • Miller formula: Based on modern body sizes
  • Hamwi formula: Classic clinical formula
  • Frame size adjustment: Small, medium, or large frame adjustments

BMI-Based Healthy Weight Range

The most widely used standard defines healthy weight as a BMI between 18.5 and 24.9.

Healthy Weight by Height

Height Women (lbs) Men (lbs) Women (kg) Men (kg)
5'0" (152 cm) 95-128 95-128 43-58 43-58
5'2" (157 cm) 101-136 101-136 46-62 46-62
5'4" (163 cm) 108-145 110-145 49-66 50-66
5'6" (168 cm) 118-155 128-165 54-70 58-75
5'8" (173 cm) 125-162 136-175 57-74 62-79
5'10" (178 cm) 132-170 144-185 60-77 65-84
6'0" (183 cm) 140-178 152-195 64-81 69-88
6'2" (188 cm) 148-186 160-205 67-84 73-93
6'4" (193 cm) 156-195 168-215 71-88 76-98

Alternative Formulas

Robinson Formula (1983)

  • Men: 52 kg + 1.9 kg per inch over 5 feet
  • Women: 49 kg + 1.7 kg per inch over 5 feet

Example: 5'8" woman (8 inches over 5 feet) 49 + (1.7 × 8) = 49 + 13.6 = 62.6 kg (138 lbs)

Miller Formula (1983)

  • Men: 56.2 kg + 1.41 kg per inch over 5 feet
  • Women: 53.1 kg + 1.36 kg per inch over 5 feet

Example: 5'10" man (10 inches over 5 feet) 56.2 + (1.41 × 10) = 56.2 + 14.1 = 70.3 kg (155 lbs)

Hamwi Formula (1964)

  • Men: 48.0 kg + 2.7 kg per inch over 5 feet
  • Women: 45.5 kg + 2.2 kg per inch over 5 feet

Example: 5'6" woman (6 inches over 5 feet) 45.5 + (2.2 × 6) = 45.5 + 13.2 = 58.7 kg (129 lbs)

Adjusting for Frame Size

Your skeletal structure affects your healthy weight range:

Measuring Frame Size

Wrist circumference method:

  • Wrap your thumb and middle finger around your wrist
  • Small frame: Fingers overlap
  • Medium frame: Fingers just touch
  • Large frame: Fingers don't touch

Frame Size Adjustments

Height Small Frame Wrist (Women) Large Frame Wrist (Women) Small Frame Wrist (Men) Large Frame Wrist (Men)
5'2" < 5.5" > 5.75" < 6" > 6.25"
5'5" < 5.75" > 6" < 6.25" > 6.5"
5'8" < 6" > 6.25" < 6.5" > 6.75"
5'11" < 6.25" > 6.5" < 6.75" > 7"

Adjustment: Add or subtract 10% from ideal weight for large or small frames.

Example: Ideal weight 150 lbs, large frame 150 + 15 = 165 lbs healthy range upper end

Age Considerations

Research suggests slightly higher weights may be healthier for older adults:

Age Group Recommended BMI Range
18-24 19-24
25-34 20-25
35-44 21-26
45-54 22-27
55-64 23-28
65+ 24-29

This "J-shaped curve" suggests being slightly overweight in older age may be protective.

Beyond the Scale: Body Composition

Weight alone doesn't tell the full story. Two people at the same weight can have very different health profiles:

Factor Impact on Healthy Weight
Muscle mass Muscle is denser than fat; athletes may weigh more but be healthier
Body fat % Essential fat: women 10-13%, men 2-5%
Waist circumference Women < 35", men < 40" reduces metabolic risk
Waist-to-hip ratio Women < 0.85, men < 0.90 indicates lower health risk
Bone density Higher bone density increases weight without increasing health risk

When Weight Isn't the Best Metric

BMI and weight charts have limitations:

  • Athletes: May be "overweight" by BMI but have low body fat
  • Pregnant women: Weight gain is expected and necessary
  • Children: Use pediatric growth charts, not adult BMI
  • Elderly: Slightly higher BMI may be protective
  • Different ethnicities: Some populations have different healthy BMI ranges

Frequently Asked Questions

Is there really an "ideal" weight?

No single ideal weight exists. The calculators provide ranges. Where you fall within the range depends on body composition, genetics, and personal health markers.

Should I aim for the lowest weight in my healthy range?

Not necessarily. The healthiest weight is one you can maintain comfortably while feeling energetic and keeping health markers (blood pressure, cholesterol, blood sugar) in healthy ranges.

How often should I weigh myself?

Once a week, at the same time of day, wearing similar clothing. Daily weighing can be misleading due to water weight fluctuations.

Can I be healthy above my calculated healthy weight range?

Yes. Health is multifactorial. Some people are healthy at weights slightly above standard ranges, especially if they have higher muscle mass.

What's more important: weight or waist size?

For metabolic health, waist circumference is often more predictive than weight alone. Abdominal fat (visceral fat) is more dangerous than subcutaneous fat.