Head Circumference Percentile Calculator (WHO Standards, Ages 0–5)

Use this Head Circumference Percentile Calculator to check your baby or young child head size against WHO Child Growth Standards. Head circumference is a key marker of healthy brain growth in the first 5 years — this tool tells you exactly where your child falls on the growth curve.

Head Circumference Percentile Calculator

Based on WHO Child Growth Standards (ages 0–60 months)

Your Child Details
Sex-specific WHO standards are used
Use months for under-2s for best accuracy
Measure widest point, above eyebrows & ears
WHO HC standards cover 0–60 months. For children over 5, ask your pediatrician.
Percentile
on WHO chart
Age Group
Measurement:

Reference Range for This Age
3rd percentile
50th percentile (median)
97th percentile
Z-score
Tip: A single measurement is one data point. Pediatricians look at the trajectory over multiple visits — whether the head is growing along its own curve — more than any single percentile.

Why Head Circumference Matters

Between birth and age 5, a child head circumference (HC) is one of the most useful single measurements a pediatrician can take. The skull grows in direct response to brain growth — so HC tracking is, in effect, a low-tech way to monitor whether the brain is developing on a healthy trajectory.

The most rapid growth happens in the first 12 months. A typical newborn measures about 34–35 cm at birth and gains roughly 10–12 cm in the first year alone. By age 2, the head has reached about 80% of its adult size. After that, growth slows dramatically — only a few more centimeters are added between ages 3 and 18.

Because growth is so fast early on, even small deviations from the expected curve are easier to spot in infants than in older children. That is why well-baby visits include an HC measurement at every check-up through age 2, and most pediatricians continue tracking through age 5.

How This Calculator Works

The tool uses four inputs to produce a personalized percentile result:

1

Match Age & Sex

Your child age and sex are matched to WHO sex-specific HC-for-age growth standards.

2

Apply LMS Method

The calculator uses WHO L, M, S statistical parameters to compute a z-score from the measurement.

3

Convert to Percentile

The z-score is converted to a percentile (1st–99th) using the standard normal distribution.

4

Get Personalized Feedback

The result includes a status (Below, Within, or Above normal range) and guidance tailored to your child age.

Head Circumference Reference Ranges

WHO Child Growth Standards define the 3rd, 50th, and 97th percentiles for head circumference across ages 0–60 months. Values between the 3rd and 97th percentile are considered statistically normal.

AgeBoys (3rd–97th)Girls (3rd–97th)
Birth32.4 – 36.6 cm31.7 – 36.1 cm
1 month35.1 – 39.5 cm34.3 – 38.8 cm
3 months38.3 – 42.7 cm37.2 – 41.7 cm
6 months41.0 – 45.5 cm39.8 – 44.5 cm
12 months43.5 – 48.1 cm42.2 – 47.0 cm
24 months45.9 – 50.7 cm44.7 – 49.6 cm
36 months47.0 – 52.0 cm45.7 – 50.9 cm
48 months47.7 – 52.9 cm46.5 – 51.9 cm
60 months48.3 – 53.6 cm47.1 – 52.7 cm

What the Numbers Actually Mean

A percentile compares your child to other children of the same age and sex. If your 6-month-old son is at the 50th percentile for head circumference, his head is exactly average — half of boys his age have larger heads, half have smaller.

The trajectory matters more than the number. A child who has tracked at the 25th percentile from birth is growing perfectly normally on their own curve. A child who was at the 50th percentile at 3 months but has dropped to the 10th by 9 months — that is the pattern that draws clinical attention, because it suggests something has shifted. Pediatricians plot HC at every visit precisely so the curve, not the single dot, becomes visible.

Genetics plays a big role. Children of parents with larger heads tend to have larger heads themselves, and vice versa. Family head-size patterns are part of what pediatricians consider when evaluating any single percentile.

When to Talk to Your Pediatrician

Any of the following patterns are worth raising at the next well-child visit — not as alarms, but as conversations:

Below the 3rd percentile: A consistently very small head can be familial, but in some cases warrants further assessment for microcephaly.
Above the 97th percentile: A very large head can also be familial (look at parents) but occasionally signals hydrocephalus or other conditions that need evaluation.
Dropping 2+ percentile bands: Crossing from the 50th to the 10th between visits, for example, is a trajectory shift worth investigating.
Rising 2+ percentile bands: An unexpected upward jump can sometimes indicate accelerating intracranial growth.
Bulging or sunken fontanelle: The soft spot should be flat. Either bulging or markedly sunken is worth a same-day call.
Delayed motor or cognitive milestones: When an unusual HC trend appears alongside developmental delays, that combination changes the clinical picture.

Most kids who fall outside the typical range are completely healthy — usually following a family pattern. But pediatricians track HC precisely because it can be an early window into conditions that benefit from being caught early.

Tips for Measuring at Home

Use a flexible tape measure. A soft cloth or vinyl tape — the kind tailors use — not a stiff metal one. Hardware tapes do not conform to the head shape.
Wrap above eyebrows and ears. The tape should sit just above the eyebrows in front, above the ears on the sides, and across the largest bump at the back of the head.
Pull snug, not tight. The tape should sit flush against the skin, hair compressed, but not indenting the scalp.
Measure 3 times, take the average. Tape position shifts slightly each pass. Three measurements give you a reliable number to plot.
Measure at the same time of day. Ideally before a meal and when the child is calm. Crying babies are nearly impossible to measure accurately.
Do not replace the pediatrician. Home measurements are useful for context between visits — not for clinical decisions. Always bring measurements to your provider for tracking.

Frequently Asked Questions

For infants under 2, all three matter — but head circumference is uniquely informative because it tracks brain growth directly. Height and weight reflect overall body growth, while HC is the closest practical proxy for healthy neurological development. Pediatricians measure all three at every well-baby visit precisely because each tells a different story.

Ethan builds the interactive health calculators on Height Growth Blog. Based in Denver, Colorado, he combines a software engineering background with a focus on evidence-based health tech, turning dense clinical guidelines — from CDC growth charts to NIH/IOM dietary references — into tools parents and teens can use in under a minute. Every calculator on the site, from BMI Percentile to Body Fat and Calcium Intake, is built directly from primary sources (NIH, AAP, CDC, Mayo Clinic) and cross-checked against peer-reviewed studies before launch.

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