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How to Interpret Your BMI: A Complete, Balanced Guide

BMI is a useful screening tool, but it has real limitations. Learn what your number actually means, what it misses, and what health professionals look at instead.

BoxTool Editorial Última actualización: May 27

How to Interpret Your BMI: A Complete, Balanced Guide

BMI — Body Mass Index — is a number you've probably seen on health reports, fitness apps, and doctor's notes. It's one of the most widely used health metrics in the world, yet it's also one of the most frequently misunderstood. This guide explains what BMI actually measures, how to calculate it, what the categories mean, and — just as importantly — what BMI cannot tell you.

What Is BMI?

BMI is a ratio of weight to height, defined as:

BMI = weight (kg) ÷ height² (m²)

In imperial units: BMI = (weight in lbs × 703) ÷ height² (inches²)

It was developed by Belgian mathematician Adolphe Quetelet in the 1830s as a way to study population-level weight distributions. It was never intended as an individual diagnostic tool — a fact that matters when interpreting your own number.

BMI Categories (WHO Standard)

BMI Range Category
Below 18.5 Underweight
18.5 – 24.9 Normal weight
25.0 – 29.9 Overweight
30.0 and above Obese

For adults aged 20 and over, these thresholds are the same regardless of age or sex (though separate charts exist for children and teenagers, who are still growing).

How to Calculate Your BMI

Example (metric): - Weight: 70 kg - Height: 1.75 m - BMI = 70 ÷ (1.75 × 1.75) = 70 ÷ 3.0625 = 22.9 → Normal weight

Example (imperial): - Weight: 154 lbs - Height: 69 inches (5'9") - BMI = (154 × 703) ÷ (69 × 69) = 108,262 ÷ 4,761 = 22.7 → Normal weight

Our BMI Calculator handles both unit systems instantly — no arithmetic required.

What BMI Does Well

BMI is useful precisely because it's simple and consistent. Its strengths:

  • Population screening: Correlates reasonably well with body fat percentage at the population level
  • Trend tracking: Useful for tracking your own weight trajectory over time
  • Low barrier: Requires only a scale and a tape measure — no special equipment
  • Universal standard: The same formula is used by clinicians worldwide, making data comparable across studies

For most adults in the middle of the BMI range, a higher BMI does correlate with higher health risks — particularly for type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and joint problems.

What BMI Gets Wrong

Here is where the nuance becomes important.

It ignores body composition

BMI measures mass relative to height — it has no idea whether that mass is muscle, fat, bone, or water. A professional athlete with 8% body fat and 90 kg of muscle can have a BMI of 27 (overweight). A sedentary person at the same BMI might carry 35% body fat.

Muscle weighs more than fat per unit volume. BMI cannot distinguish between the two.

It varies by ethnicity

Research has shown that people of Asian descent tend to develop metabolic health risks at lower BMI values than the WHO thresholds suggest. Several countries in Asia have adopted lower cutoffs:

  • "Overweight" starts at BMI 23 (instead of 25)
  • "Obese" starts at BMI 27.5 (instead of 30)

Conversely, some studies suggest that people of certain Pacific Islander and Black African backgrounds carry more lean mass and may be healthier at BMIs above the standard thresholds.

It ignores fat distribution

Where you carry fat matters more than how much you carry. Visceral fat — fat stored around the abdominal organs — is far more metabolically harmful than subcutaneous fat (fat under the skin on the hips, thighs, and buttocks).

Two people can have identical BMIs but very different health profiles depending on whether their fat is concentrated in the abdomen (high risk) or distributed peripherally (lower risk).

It doesn't account for age

Older adults naturally lose muscle mass (sarcopenia) and gain fat mass, sometimes without a significant change in BMI. An older adult at BMI 24 may carry considerably more body fat than a younger adult at the same BMI.

Better Metrics to Use Alongside BMI

Clinicians increasingly use BMI as just one data point alongside others:

Waist circumference

Measures abdominal fat directly. Risk thresholds: - Men: > 94 cm (37 in) — increased risk; > 102 cm (40 in) — high risk - Women: > 80 cm (31.5 in) — increased risk; > 88 cm (34.5 in) — high risk

Waist-to-height ratio (WHtR)

A waist circumference greater than half your height is associated with increased cardiovascular risk regardless of BMI. Target: waist ÷ height < 0.5.

Body fat percentage

Measured by DEXA scan (highly accurate), bioelectrical impedance (moderate accuracy), or skinfold calipers. Healthy ranges by age and sex vary significantly.

Resting metabolic rate and blood markers

Blood pressure, fasting glucose, lipid panel, and VO₂ max provide direct evidence of metabolic health that BMI cannot.

BMI for Children and Teens

The adult BMI categories do not apply to anyone under 20. Children and teens are assessed using BMI-for-age percentiles, which compare BMI to others of the same age and sex:

  • Below 5th percentile: Underweight
  • 5th to 85th percentile: Healthy weight
  • 85th to 95th percentile: Overweight
  • 95th percentile and above: Obese

If you're calculating BMI for a child, use a pediatric BMI calculator and consult a pediatrician for interpretation.

The Bottom Line

BMI is a useful, quick screening tool that works reasonably well at the population level. For individuals, it's best understood as a starting point for a conversation, not a verdict on your health.

If your BMI falls in a concerning range, the appropriate next step is to speak with a healthcare provider who can assess the full picture — body composition, waist circumference, blood markers, fitness level, and family history — rather than make health decisions based on a single number.

If your BMI is in the normal range but you feel unwell, it's equally important not to dismiss symptoms simply because the number looks fine.


Calculate your BMI now: BMI Calculator →

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