BMI Calculator for Men
Calculate your BMI and estimated body fat percentage as a man, and see the exact weight range for each WHO category.
⚖️ What is BMI for Men?
Body Mass Index (BMI) for men is a ratio of weight to height squared that serves as a standardized screening measure for weight-related health risk. The formula is the same for men and women (weight in kg divided by height in metres squared), but the health implications differ between sexes due to systematic differences in body composition. Men typically carry proportionally more lean muscle mass and less body fat than women at the same BMI value, which means the health risk at a given BMI level is not identical for men and women.
At a BMI of 25, the average adult man has an estimated body fat percentage of around 16 to 20% (healthy range for men), while the average adult woman at the same BMI may have 23 to 28% body fat (borderline for women). This composition difference means that a muscular man with a BMI of 27 may be in excellent health, while an older sedentary man at the same BMI may have elevated metabolic risk. This is why the WHO classification (underweight below 18.5, normal 18.5 to 24.9, overweight 25 to 29.9, obese 30 and above) is best understood as a population-level risk stratification tool rather than a precise individual health verdict.
For men specifically, waist circumference is a valuable complement to BMI. The WHO identifies waist circumference above 94 cm (37 inches) as increased risk and above 102 cm (40 inches) as substantially increased risk for metabolic and cardiovascular disease in men. This is because abdominal (visceral) fat, which accumulates disproportionately in men compared to women, is more metabolically active and harmful than subcutaneous fat. A man with a normal BMI but large waist circumference may have elevated health risk not captured by BMI alone.
This calculator provides two practical tools for men: a BMI and estimated body fat percentage calculator (using the Deurenberg formula), and a Weight Ranges table that shows exactly what weight corresponds to each BMI category for a specific height. The body fat estimate uses the equation %BF = 1.2 x BMI + 0.23 x age - 16.2, which was validated for adults and has a standard error of approximately 3 to 4 percentage points for most men.
📐 Formula
Estimated body fat percentage for men (Deurenberg formula, 1991):