Using an ideal weight calculator is the fastest way to stop guessing and get a real, medically grounded answer to the question almost every American has asked at some point: how much should I weigh?
What is an ideal weight calculator? It estimates your healthy weight range using proven medical formulas and the standard BMI range. Instead of giving one number, it shows a realistic range based on your height and gender.
Unlike basic calculators that give only a number , Bellyzero delivers a downloadable PDF report with unique ID and provide with a print report options.
Use this free Ideal Weight Calculator to find your ideal weight instantly. Enter your height and weight to get your ideal weight range, BMI score, and personalised health insights based on 4 proven medical formulas.
| Robinson 1983 | -- |
| Miller 1983 | -- |
| Devine 1974 | -- |
| Hamwi 1964 | -- |
Different formulas may give slightly different results because they were developed using different population data. Showing all results helps you understand a realistic range instead of relying on a single number.
If you are above your ideal range, the next step is creating a calorie deficit. Use our free calculator to find exactly how many calories you should eat daily to lose weight safely.
Check Your Calorie DeficitStandard formulas are calibrated for heights at or above 5 feet (152.4 cm) and become less precise for shorter statures. The adjusted range below uses a BMI midpoint approach for a more realistic estimate.
Originally designed for clinical drug dosing. Sets a base weight at 5 ft and adds per inch above.
Male: 50 kg + 2.3 x (inches above 60)
Female: 45.5 kg + 2.3 x (inches above 60)
A refinement of Devine with a slightly higher base and smaller per-inch increment.
Male: 52 kg + 1.9 x (inches above 60)
Female: 49 kg + 1.7 x (inches above 60)
Uses the highest base weight but the smallest increment per inch.
Male: 56.2 kg + 1.41 x (inches above 60)
Female: 53.1 kg + 1.36 x (inches above 60)
One of the earliest formulas with the steepest per-inch increment.
Male: 48 kg + 2.7 x (inches above 60)
Female: 45.5 kg + 2.2 x (inches above 60)
Body Mass Index = weight in kg divided by height in metres squared.
BMI = weight (kg) / height squared (m)
WHO classifies 18.5 to 24.9 as a healthy BMI range.
Each formula was derived from different populations and research goals. Using the average of all four produces a more balanced and less biased estimate than any single formula.
None of these formulas account for muscle mass, bone density, or body composition. A muscular person may show a high result while being perfectly healthy. These are estimates, not medical targets.
This is an estimate based on population-level formulas. Your ideal weight may vary depending on muscle mass, body composition, and individual health factors.
Important
Results from this tool are estimates, not a medical diagnosis. Always consult a licensed healthcare provider before making significant changes to your health routine.
Use this quick-reference weight chart by height to find your healthy weight range before running the full calculator. All values follow the WHO BMI healthy range of 18.5 to 24.9 and apply to adults aged 20 and older.
| Height | Healthy Weight for Men (lbs) | Healthy Weight for Women (lbs) | Range (kg) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5'0" | 97 – 127 lbs | 95 – 125 lbs | 43.0 – 57.8 kg |
| 5'1" | 100 – 132 lbs | 98 – 130 lbs | 44.4 – 59.8 kg |
| 5'2" | 104 – 136 lbs | 101 – 134 lbs | 45.9 – 61.8 kg |
| 5'3" | 107 – 141 lbs | 104 – 138 lbs | 47.4 – 63.8 kg |
| 5'4" | 111 – 145 lbs | 108 – 143 lbs | 48.9 – 65.8 kg |
| 5'5" | 114 – 150 lbs | 111 – 147 lbs | 50.4 – 67.9 kg |
| 5'6" | 118 – 154 lbs | 115 – 151 lbs | 52.0 – 70.0 kg |
| 5'7" | 121 – 159 lbs | 118 – 156 lbs | 53.6 – 72.1 kg |
| 5'8" | 125 – 164 lbs | 122 – 160 lbs | 55.2 – 74.3 kg |
| 5'9" | 128 – 169 lbs | 125 – 165 lbs | 56.8 – 76.5 kg |
| 5'10" | 132 – 174 lbs | 129 – 170 lbs | 58.5 – 78.7 kg |
| 5'11" | 136 – 179 lbs | 133 – 175 lbs | 60.2 – 81.0 kg |
| 6'0" | 140 – 184 lbs | 136 – 180 lbs | 61.9 – 83.3 kg |
| 6'1" | 144 – 189 lbs | 140 – 185 lbs | 63.6 – 85.6 kg |
| 6'2" | 148 – 194 lbs | 144 – 190 lbs | 65.4 – 88.0 kg |
| 6'3" | 152 – 199 lbs | 148 – 195 lbs | 67.1 – 90.4 kg |
| 6'4" | 156 – 205 lbs | 152 – 200 lbs | 68.9 – 92.8 kg |
| 6'5" | 160 – 210 lbs | 156 – 206 lbs | 70.8 – 95.2 kg |
| Based on WHO/CDC healthy BMI of 18.5 to 24.9. Men's column adds approximately 3–5 lbs to account for higher average bone density and muscle mass. Values are estimates for adults aged 20 and older. Source: CDC Adult BMI Guidelines. | |||
Most people pick a goal weight based on a gut feeling, a memory of how they looked years ago, or a number a doctor mentioned without much explanation. That approach sets people up for frustration from the start.
Here is what most health sites skip: ideal body weight formulas were never meant to define how a person should look. Physicians created these tools to calculate accurate drug dosages based on height and gender. The numbers come from clinical research, not fitness culture.
The second problem is treating ideal weight like a fixed bulls-eye. Either you hit it or you missed. That mindset leads to crash dieting, repeated cycles of weight loss and regain, and a distorted view of what healthy actually means.
Your healthy weight range is a range, not a dot. A quality weight range calculator shows you that range clearly, so you can set a goal that is grounded in reality. If you have ever searched for what should I weigh, the answer is always a span of numbers, not a single figure.
An ideal body weight calculator estimates your personal healthy weight range using your height, gender, and sometimes age. Instead of returning one arbitrary number, it runs your data through multiple medical formulas at the same time and shows you a clinically supported range.
Think of it as getting four expert opinions in seconds, no appointment needed.
The best tools use the Hamwi, Devine, Robinson, and Miller formulas, then cross-reference the results with the WHO and CDC healthy BMI range of 18.5 to 24.9. You get a complete picture instead of a single guess.
Related tool: Use the BellyZero’s Smart BMI calculator to find your current Body Mass Index, or the BellyZero’s advanced body fat calculator for a deeper look at body composition.
All four formulas share the same structure: a base weight at exactly 5 feet tall, plus a set amount added for each inch above 5 feet. What differs is the base weight and per-inch increment, because each reflects a different patient population and clinical purpose.
Hamwi Formula (1964) Created by Dr. G.J. Hamwi for diabetic patient care and nutrition planning. Still widely used in American dietetics today.
Devine Formula (1974) Developed by Dr. B.J. Devine for drug dosage calculations. It became the most widely adopted ideal weight for height standard in US clinical settings.
Robinson Formula (1983) Dr. J.D. Robinson refined the Devine formula with updated research. The Robinson formula tends to fit medium to larger frames more accurately.
Miller Formula (1983) Dr. D.R. Miller’s approach produces the highest estimates of the four, making it the best fit for muscular or athletic builds.
| Formula | Year | Male Base Weight | Female Base Weight | Built For | Estimate Level |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hamwi | 1964 | 48.0 kg / 105.8 lbs | 45.5 kg / 100.3 lbs | Diabetes care, nutrition | Mid-range |
| Devine | 1974 | 50.0 kg / 110.2 lbs | 45.5 kg / 100.3 lbs | Drug dosage calculation | Lower to mid |
| Robinson | 1983 | 52.0 kg / 114.6 lbs | 49.0 kg / 108.0 lbs | Refinement of Devine | Mid to higher |
| Miller | 1983 | 56.2 kg / 123.9 lbs | 53.1 kg / 117.1 lbs | Refinement of Devine | Highest estimates |
| BMI Range | WHO Standard | Applies to both genders | Population screening | BMI 18.5 to 24.9 | |
No single formula covers all the variation across the American population. The Devine formula was built around male clinical patients from the 1970s. The Hamwi formula reflects diabetic care data from the 1960s. Each has blind spots related to body type, ethnicity, and frame size.
When this ideal weight calculator runs all four formulas and averages the results, it smooths out those individual limitations. You get a healthy weight range that reflects more of the clinical evidence rather than the assumptions of one researcher from one era. More data points always produce a more trustworthy answer.
BMI (Body Mass Index) is the most widely used weight screening tool in the United States, endorsed by both the CDC and WHO. It measures your weight relative to your height.
Formula for American users: BMI = (weight in lbs x 703) divided by height in inches squared
A BMI of 18.5 to 24.9 is the recognized healthy weight range for adults 20 and older. This calculator uses that range to display a BMI-based healthy weight window alongside your four formula results. Per the NHLBI guidelines, adults with a BMI above 25 are considered overweight and above 30 are classified as obese.
| BMI Range | Weight Category | Health Risk |
|---|---|---|
| Below 18.5 | Underweight | Nutritional deficiency risk; doctor review advised |
| 18.5 to 24.9 | Normal / Healthy Weight | Lowest risk for weight-related conditions |
| 25.0 to 29.9 | Overweight | Increased risk; lifestyle review recommended |
| 30.0 to 34.9 | Obese Class I | High risk; medical consultation strongly advised |
| 35.0 and above | Obese Class II / III | Very high risk; immediate medical guidance needed |
| Source:WHO BMI Classification and CDC Adult BMI Guidelines. Applies to adults aged 20 and older. | ||
Note: BMI does not separate muscle from fat. A muscular athlete may show an “overweight” BMI while carrying very little body fat. Use it as one data point alongside the four clinical formulas, not as a standalone verdict.
All four formulas use 5 feet (152.4 cm) as their mathematical baseline. They add a fixed amount per inch above that point. For anyone at or above 5 feet, the math works cleanly.
Below 5 feet, the standard formula math breaks down and produces unreliable numbers. Many calculators silently display inaccurate results for shorter users with no warning at all.
This tool solves that by switching to an adjusted BMI midpoint method for users under 5 feet. It calculates the weight that corresponds to a BMI of 21.7 (the midpoint of the healthy range) at that specific height. This directly improves accuracy for users under 5 feet, which includes millions of American women and individuals from certain ethnic backgrounds with shorter average heights.
Getting your ideal weight for height result takes under 60 seconds.
No account needed. No email required. No data stored.
Male, 5 Feet 10 Inches (10 inches over 5 feet)
| Formula | Result (kg) | Result (lbs) |
|---|---|---|
| Hamwi (1964) | 75.0 kg | 165 lbs |
| Devine (1974) | 73.0 kg | 161 lbs |
| Robinson (1983) | 71.0 kg | 157 lbs |
| Miller (1983) | 70.3 kg | 155 lbs |
| BMI Range (18.5 to 24.9) | 58.5 to 78.7 kg | 129 to 174 lbs |
| 4-Formula Average | 72.3 kg | 159 lbs |
| Healthy weight for men at 5'10" sits between approximately 155 to 165 lbs depending on body frame and muscle mass. All values mathematically verified. | ||
Female, 5 Feet 4 Inches (4 inches over 5 feet)
| Formula | Result (kg) | Result (lbs) |
|---|---|---|
| Hamwi (1964) | 54.3 kg | 120 lbs |
| Devine (1974) | 54.7 kg | 121 lbs |
| Robinson (1983) | 55.8 kg | 123 lbs |
| Miller (1983) | 58.5 kg | 129 lbs |
| BMI Range (18.5 to 24.9) | 48.9 to 65.8 kg | 108 to 145 lbs |
| 4-Formula Average | 55.8 kg | 123 lbs |
| Healthy weight for women at 5'4" sits between approximately 120 to 129 lbs depending on body frame and muscle mass. All values mathematically verified. | ||
Once you know your healthy weight range, use the BellyZero’s advanced Calorie Deficit Calculator to build a realistic weight loss plan based on your daily energy needs.
| Height (Women) | Healthy Weight (lbs) | Healthy Weight (kg) |
|---|---|---|
| 5 ft 0 in (152 cm) | 95 to 127 lbs | 43.0 to 57.8 kg |
| 5 ft 2 in (157 cm) | 101 to 136 lbs | 45.9 to 61.8 kg |
| 5 ft 4 in (163 cm) | 108 to 145 lbs | 48.9 to 65.8 kg |
| 5 ft 6 in (168 cm) | 115 to 154 lbs | 52.0 to 70.0 kg |
| 5 ft 8 in (173 cm) | 122 to 164 lbs | 55.2 to 74.3 kg |
| 5 ft 10 in (178 cm) | 129 to 174 lbs | 58.5 to 78.7 kg |
| Based on WHO/CDC healthy BMI of 18.5 to 24.9. For men at the same heights, add 3 to 5 lbs to both ends of the range. All values mathematically verified. Source: BellyZero’s Smart BMI calculator. | ||
Your ideal weight depends on your height, gender, age, and body frame. For most adults, the healthy weight range follows the WHO BMI standard of 18.5 to 24.9. Here are some quick benchmarks:
After age 65, a slightly higher range of BMI 22 to 27 is generally considered appropriate since modest weight reserves offer protection during illness or recovery.
The most accurate way to find your personal target is to use an ideal weight calculator that applies four proven medical formulas: Hamwi, Devine, Robinson, and Miller. Averaging all four gives you a range that accounts for differences in body type rather than relying on just one method.
Ideal weight for women varies by height and body frame. Based on four clinical formulas and the WHO BMI standard, here are the healthy weight ranges for American women:
Women with a small body frame typically fall toward the lower end of that range. Large-framed women naturally sit at the higher end. Both are completely healthy. A single number target is rarely accurate for everyone at the same height, which is exactly why this calculator gives you a range instead.
Ideal weight for men runs about 10 to 20 lbs higher than for women at the same height, mainly due to greater average bone density and muscle mass. Here are healthy weight ranges for men across common heights:
Men with an athletic or muscular build may sit at the top of their range or slightly above it while still being in excellent health. That is why the Miller formula, which produces the highest ideal weight estimates of the four, tends to fit active men best. The calculator averages all four formulas so your result reflects your actual build rather than a one-size-fits-all number.
This calculator is more accurate than most because it does not rely on a single formula. It runs your data through four separate medical formulas - Hamwi, Devine, Robinson, and Miller - and averages the results alongside the WHO BMI healthy range. Since no single formula works perfectly for every body type, combining all four gives you a more balanced and reliable estimate.
That said, all ideal weight tools produce estimates, not exact targets. Factors like muscle mass, bone density, and body fat percentage are not captured by height and gender alone. A competitive athlete may register above the standard range while carrying almost no body fat. Treat your result as a medically grounded starting point and use it in combination with how you feel, how you perform, and what your doctor recommends.
For adults in the USA, the CDC and WHO define a healthy BMI as anything between 18.5 and 24.9. Here is what each range means:
In terms of actual weight, what counts as healthy depends entirely on your height. A 5'6" adult has a healthy weight range of 115 to 154 lbs. A 6'0" adult's healthy range is 140 to 184 lbs. BMI is a useful general guide, but it does not distinguish between muscle and fat, so always use it alongside the formula-based results from this calculator for a fuller, more accurate picture.
MEDICAL DISCLAIMER
Results from this tool are estimates for informational purposes only. They do not constitute medical advice or diagnosis.
Consult a licensed healthcare provider before making significant changes to your diet or exercise plan.