BMI Calculator

BMI Calculator — Understand Your Body Mass Index:

BMI Calculator – My Health Chart
BMI Calculator
WHO-referenced · My Health Chart
Sex
Please fill in all fields correctly before calculating.
kg/m²
1018.5253040+
Healthy weight range
Weight to lose/gain
Ideal weight (mid)
Underweight — below 18.5
Normal — 18.5 to 24.9
Overweight — 25 to 29.9
Obese — 30 and above

Introduction:

Body Mass Index (BMI) is one of the simplest and most widely used screening tools in medicine. It takes your height and weight and turns them into a single number that places you into one of four categories: Underweight, Normal weight, Overweight, or Obese.

Doctors around the world use BMI as a starting point — not a final verdict — to assess whether your weight is in a generally health range for your height. It’s quick, free, and requires no lab tests or special equipment, which is why it’s often the first metric checked during a routine clinical visit.

The MyHealthChart BMI Calculator uses the same World Health Organization (WHO) reference ranges your doctor relies on, so you get a clinically consistent result in seconds — with no sign-up required.

How to Use the BMI Calculator:

Using the tool takes less than a minute:

  • Choose your unit system — Metric (kg/cm) or Imperial (lb/ft & inches), whichever you’re more comfortable with.
  • Enter your height and weight — type the numbers into the fields provided.
  • Enter your age — BMI interpretation can shift slightly with age, so this helps personalize your result.
  • Select your sex — Male or Female. Body composition differs between sexes at the same BMI, which is factored into how your result should be read.
  • Click “Calculate BMI” — your result appears instantly, along with your category, healthy weight range, and how much weight you may need to gain or lose to reach the normal range.

No data is stored or saved. You can recalculate as many times as you like.

The Method Behind the Calculation:

BMI is calculated using a simple formula:

1: Metric formula:

BMI = weight (kg) ÷ height (m)²

2: Imperial formula:

BMI = [weight (lb) ÷ height (in)²] × 703

For example, a person who weighs 70 kg and is 1.70 m tall would calculate:
70 ÷ (1.70 × 1.70) = 70 ÷ 2.89 = 24.2

This number is then matched against the WHO’s standard adult BMI categories:

BMI RangeCategory
Below 18.5Underweight
18.5 – 24.9Normal weight
25 – 29.9Overweight
30 and aboveObese

Our calculator automates this math instantly and also estimates your ideal weight range by working the formula backward using the 18.5–24.9 normal range boundaries for your exact height.

Tips for Getting an Accurate Result:

  • Weigh yourself in the morning, before eating, for the most consistent reading day to day.
  • Measure your height without shoes, standing straight against a wall.
  • Use Metric units if you know your weight in kilograms — converting from pounds can introduce small rounding errors.
  • Don’t rely on BMI alone. It doesn’t distinguish between muscle and fat, so athletes or highly muscular individuals may show a higher BMI despite having low body fat.
  • South Asian and Middle Eastern populations — including most Pakistani adults — are generally advised by health bodies to use slightly lower BMI thresholds, since health risks like diabetes and heart disease can appear at a lower BMI than the standard WHO cutoffs suggest. If your BMI is borderline (23–25), it’s worth discussing with your doctor even if you’re technically in the “Normal” range.
  • Recalculate periodically, especially if you’re tracking a weight goal — but don’t check daily, as natural weight fluctuation (water, food, hormones) can cause misleading day-to-day swings.

Reading Your Results & Scale Bar Guide:

After calculating, you’ll see a colour-coded scale bar with a pointer showing exactly where your BMI falls:

🔵 Blue zone (below 18.5) — Underweight:
This may indicate insufficient calorie intake, an underlying health condition, or a fast metabolism. Being underweight can weaken immunity and bone density over time.

🟢 Green zone (18.5–24.9) — Normal weight:
This is the range associated with the lowest general health risk for most adults. Staying here through balanced nutrition and regular activity supports long-term heart, joint, and metabolic health.

🟡 Yellow zone (25–29.9) — Overweight
This range carries a moderately increased risk of conditions like high blood pressure, high cholesterol, and type 2 diabetes. Small, sustainable changes in diet and physical activity can help shift the trend back toward the normal range.

🔴 Red zone (30 and above) — Obese
This range is linked to a significantly higher risk of cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, joint problems, and other chronic conditions. A doctor or dietitian can help build a structured, medically guided plan.

Alongside the scale bar, your results panel also shows:

  • Healthy weight range — the kg/lb window considered “Normal” for your exact height.
  • Weight to lose/gain — how far you are from that range.
  • Ideal weight (mid) — the midpoint of the healthy range, often used as a practical target.

Important Limitations to Keep in Mind:

BMI is a useful screening tool, not a diagnosis. It cannot measure body fat percentage, muscle mass, bone density, or where fat is stored in the body (visceral fat around organs carries more risk than fat stored elsewhere). Two people with the same BMI can have very different health profiles depending on age, sex, ethnicity, and muscle composition.

If your result falls outside the Normal range — or even within it, if you have other risk factors — speak with a doctor. They can combine your BMI with other measurements (like waist circumference, blood pressure, and lab work) to give you a complete picture of your health.

Frequently Asked Questions:

BMI Calculator FAQs

Common questions about Body Mass Index, answered in plain language:

What is a good BMI score according to My Health Chart?
According to MyHealthChart‘s BMI Calculator, a BMI between 18.5 and 24.9 is considered “Normal weight” by the World Health Organization and is generally associated with the lowest health risk for most adults. However, “good” can vary slightly depending on your age, muscle mass, and ethnic background.
The My Health Chart BMI Calculator uses WHO-referenced ranges and is a reliable screening tool for most adults, but it has limitations. It doesn’t distinguish between muscle and fat, so very muscular individuals (like athletes or bodybuilders) may show a higher BMI despite having low body fat. It’s best used alongside other health indicators on My Health Chart, not as a standalone diagnosis.

MyHealthChart is built specifically for Pakistani and South Asian patients, and research shows this population tends to develop weight-related health risks like diabetes and heart disease at lower BMI levels than Western populations. Many health bodies recommend treating a BMI of 23+ as “Overweight” for these groups, instead of the standard cutoff of 25

No. The MyHealthChart BMI Calculator is designed for adults aged 20 and above. Children and teens (ages 2–19) require a different method called BMI-for-age percentiles, since growth patterns vary significantly with age. Speak with a pediatrician for an accurate assessment for children.

There’s no need to check daily — your weight naturally fluctuates due to water retention, food intake, and hormones. Using the MyHealthChart BMI Calculator every 2–4 weeks is usually enough to track a meaningful trend, especially if you’re working toward a weight goal.

The BMI Calculator on My Health Chart estimates whether your weight is appropriate for your height, but it doesn’t measure fat directly. Body fat percentage tells you exactly how much of your body weight is fat versus muscle, bone, and water. Two people can have the same BMI but very different body fat levels.

Yes. The MyHealthchart BMI Calculator supports both Metric (kilograms/centimeters) and Imperial (pounds/feet & inches) units. Just toggle to your preferred unit system before entering your details.

Treat your MyHealthChart result as a starting point, not a final verdict. Speak with a doctor who can assess your weight alongside other factors like blood pressure, cholesterol, and waist circumference, and help you build a realistic, medically guided plan if needed.

A low BMI can sometimes indicate inadequate nutrition or an underlying health condition. If your My Health Chart BMI result consistently falls below 18.5, it’s worth speaking with a doctor to rule out any concerns and discuss healthy ways to reach a higher weight.

No. My HealthChart calculates your BMI instantly in your browser and does not store, save, or share any of your information. You can use the tool as many times as you like with no sign-up required.

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