How to Calculate BMI: Formula, Categories, and Limitations
Body Mass Index (BMI) is the most widely used screening tool for assessing whether a person has a healthy body weight relative to their height. It appears in doctor's offices, insurance applications, public health research, and fitness apps worldwide. But what exactly is it, how is it calculated, and what are its limitations? This guide covers everything you need to know.
The BMI Formula
BMI uses a simple formula relating weight to height:
Imperial: BMI = 703 × weight (lbs) ÷ height² (inches²)
For example, a person 175cm tall weighing 75kg: BMI = 75 ÷ (1.75)² = 75 ÷ 3.0625 = 24.5. In imperial: a person 5'9" (69 inches) weighing 165 lbs: BMI = 703 × 165 ÷ (69)² = 703 × 165 ÷ 4,761 = 24.3.
BMI Categories (WHO Standard)
- Below 18.5: Underweight
- 18.5 – 24.9: Normal weight (healthy range)
- 25.0 – 29.9: Overweight
- 30.0 – 34.9: Obese (Class I)
- 35.0 – 39.9: Obese (Class II)
- 40.0 and above: Severely obese (Class III)
These thresholds are used consistently by the World Health Organization, the CDC, and most national health agencies. They're based on statistical associations between BMI ranges and health outcomes across large populations.
How BMI Is Used in Healthcare
Healthcare providers use BMI as an initial screening tool, not a diagnostic one. A BMI outside the normal range triggers further evaluation — it doesn't by itself diagnose any condition. It might prompt blood pressure checks, blood glucose testing, cholesterol panels, or discussions about diet and exercise.
For large-scale public health work, BMI is invaluable because it requires only two measurements (height and weight) and can be collected for entire populations. Tracking population BMI trends over decades has helped researchers understand and respond to the obesity epidemic.
The Limitations of BMI
BMI is a useful screening tool, but it has well-documented limitations that every person should understand before placing too much weight on the number:
- Doesn't distinguish muscle from fat: A 200-pound person who is 6'0" has the same BMI whether they're an elite athlete with 10% body fat or a sedentary person with 35% body fat. Both calculate to BMI 27.1 (overweight). Many professional athletes have "overweight" BMIs by this measure.
- Doesn't account for fat distribution: Where fat is stored matters more than how much there is. Visceral fat (around the organs) is far more metabolically harmful than subcutaneous fat (under the skin). BMI captures neither location nor type.
- Ethnic differences: The BMI thresholds were developed primarily from data on European populations. Research has shown that Asian populations develop metabolic complications at lower BMI thresholds, while some African and African-American populations have better metabolic health at higher BMIs. Some health organizations now use modified thresholds for Asian populations.
- Age effects: Older adults naturally lose muscle mass and gain fat. An older person can have a "normal" BMI while having high body fat and low muscle mass — a condition called sarcopenic obesity.
- Sex differences: Women naturally carry more body fat than men at the same BMI. A woman and a man with identical BMIs may have significantly different body fat percentages.
Better Alternatives and Complements to BMI
Healthcare researchers have identified several measurements that predict health risk more accurately than BMI alone:
- Waist circumference: A waist measurement above 40 inches (102cm) for men or 35 inches (88cm) for women is associated with elevated cardiovascular and metabolic risk, regardless of BMI.
- Waist-to-height ratio: Your waist circumference divided by your height. A ratio above 0.5 (waist larger than half your height) is a strong predictor of cardiovascular risk. This measure works across ethnic groups better than BMI.
- Body fat percentage: Measured by DEXA scan, hydrostatic weighing, or estimated by the Navy tape measure method. Directly measures what BMI tries to approximate. Healthy ranges: men 10–20%, women 18–28%.
- Metabolic health markers: Blood glucose, HbA1c, blood pressure, triglycerides, and HDL cholesterol are direct indicators of metabolic health that BMI only indirectly approximates.
⚖️ Calculate your BMI instantly with our free BMI Calculator — includes all four categories and context.
Try the BMI Calculator →Summary
- BMI = weight (kg) ÷ height² (m²). Normal range: 18.5–24.9
- It's a population screening tool, not a personal health diagnosis
- BMI doesn't distinguish muscle from fat, or measure fat distribution
- Waist-to-height ratio and body fat percentage are more informative individual measures
- Use BMI as one data point among many, not as a verdict on your health