Compare waist measurement with height to screen for central weight-related risk. This page is designed to give you the calculator first, then the context needed to use the number wisely. Results are educational and should be discussed with a qualified professional when they affect medical decisions, pregnancy, child growth, chronic disease, or symptoms.
Central weight
Waist-to-Height Ratio Calculator
Compare waist measurement with height to screen for central weight-related risk.
Enter your measurements to calculate and interpret your result.
Result interpretation
A calculator result is most useful when it is interpreted as a range, not a verdict. BMI and related body measurements can highlight whether weight-for-height, waist size, or energy needs deserve attention. They cannot measure every part of health. Muscle mass, medications, hydration, pregnancy, age, ethnicity, disability, and recent illness can all change what a number means for one person.
For adults, BMI below 18.5 is commonly called underweight, 18.5 to 24.9 is the healthy weight range, 25.0 to 29.9 is the overweight range, and 30.0 or above is the obesity range. Waist-based tools add useful context because central weight can matter even when BMI looks ordinary.
BMI categories table
| Result | Category | What to consider |
|---|---|---|
| Below 18.5 | Underweight | Review nutrition, appetite, recent weight change, and medical symptoms. |
| 18.5 – 24.9 | Healthy weight | Maintain habits that support energy, strength, sleep, and cardiometabolic health. |
| 25.0 – 29.9 | Overweight | Check waist measurement, blood pressure, glucose, lipids, activity, and family history. |
| 30.0+ | Obesity range | Consider a clinician-guided plan, especially with symptoms or chronic conditions. |
How to use this calculator
- Measure height without shoes and use a recent, reliable weight.
- Choose the calculator that matches your unit system or health question.
- Enter numbers carefully; small height errors can noticeably change BMI.
- Read the interpretation beside the result before deciding what to do next.
- Track changes over time instead of reacting to a single day.
Formula used
Waist-to-height ratio = waist / height. The formula is shown because health calculators should be transparent. When a page uses an estimate such as body fat, BMR, calorie needs, or pregnancy gain range, the result should be treated as a planning guide rather than a clinical measurement.
Example
For a person who is 170 cm tall and weighs 70 kg, height is 1.70 m. BMI is 70 divided by 1.70 squared, which is approximately 24.2. That falls inside the adult healthy weight category. If the same person has a high waist measurement, poor sleep, high blood pressure, or rapid weight change, those details still matter.
Frequently asked questions
Is this calculator a medical diagnosis?
No. It is an educational screening tool. A qualified clinician can interpret results with medical history, exam findings, lab results, and personal goals.
How often should I calculate it?
For most adults, occasional checks are enough. Weekly or monthly trends are more meaningful than daily fluctuations.
Why can BMI be misleading?
BMI does not distinguish fat mass from lean mass and does not show where body fat is carried. It can misclassify muscular athletes, older adults with low muscle mass, and people during pregnancy.
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Medical disclaimer
BMI.hitpdf.com provides general educational information. It does not provide medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Seek professional guidance for health concerns, eating disorder risk, pregnancy, child growth, unexplained weight change, or chronic disease management.
Author box
Prepared by the BMI.hitpdf Editorial Team, with an editorial process focused on plain-language explanations, transparent formulas, source review, and regular updates.
Last updated: June 19, 2026
Sources
- World Health Organization BMI classification guidance.
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention BMI and growth chart resources.
- National Institutes of Health healthy weight and waist measurement education.
- Mifflin-St Jeor energy expenditure equation references for BMR estimates.