Use this Height-for-Age Z-Score Calculator to see how your child’s standing height compares to other children the same age and sex. The Z-score tells you exactly how many standard deviations your child is above or below the reference median — the same metric pediatricians use to track growth. Choose between the WHO Child Growth Standards (international) or the CDC 2000 Growth Charts (United States) for children ages 2 to 19.
Height-for-Age Z-Score Calculator
Standing height percentile & Z-score for ages 2–19
📐 How the Height Z-Score Is Calculated
The Z-score (also called a standard deviation score) measures exactly how far your child’s height is from the average for their age and sex, in units of one standard deviation. Both WHO and CDC use the same underlying LMS method:
The L, M, and S values come from age- and sex-specific reference tables published by the WHO or CDC. Once the Z-score is calculated, it’s converted to a percentile using the standard normal distribution — for example, a Z-score of 0 corresponds to the 50th percentile (the median).
📊 What Your Z-Score Means
Roughly 68% of children fall within one standard deviation of the median (Z between −1 and +1). The further the Z-score is from zero, the further your child’s height sits from the average for their age and sex.
| Z-Score | Percentile | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|
| Below −2 | Below 2nd | Significantly below average; pediatric review recommended |
| −2 to −1 | 2nd – 16th | Below average, still within typical variation |
| −1 to +1 | 16th – 84th | Average range — where roughly 68% of children fall |
| +1 to +2 | 84th – 98th | Above average, still within typical variation |
| Above +2 | Above 98th | Significantly above average; usually genetic, but worth mentioning at a check-up |
🌐 WHO vs. CDC: Which Reference to Use
Both references are based on real measurements from large populations of children, but they answer slightly different questions. The choice depends on where you live and what you want to compare against.
WHO Growth Standards
How children can grow under optimal conditions, anywhere in the world.
CDC 2000 Growth Charts
How U.S. children do grow, based on national survey data.
Quick guide: If your pediatrician uses U.S. growth charts, choose CDC. If you want the international standard or live outside the U.S., choose WHO. The two often produce close results, but they may disagree by a few percentile points — that’s normal and expected.
⚠️ What the Z-Score Doesn’t Tell You
A single Z-score is a snapshot — useful as a screening number, but limited in what it can reveal on its own.
Genetics
Children of tall parents tend to be tall; children of short parents tend to be shorter. The Z-score compares to the average, not to family genetics.
Pubertal Timing
Early and late developers can sit in different percentile bands for a year or two before catching up. Timing matters as much as the number.
One Reading Isn’t a Trend
Pediatricians look at the direction of growth over multiple visits, not a single Z-score. A stable Z-score is usually reassuring.
Body Composition
Height alone doesn’t reflect weight, muscle, bone density, or overall health. It’s one piece of the picture, not the whole story.
💡 How to Use Your Child’s Result
Treat the Z-score as a starting point, not a verdict. Here’s how to put the number in healthy context:
🔗 Related Growth Calculators
The Z-score is one piece of the picture. Combine it with these tools for a fuller view of your child’s growth:

