Child & Teen BMI Percentile Calculator

Use this Child & Teen BMI Percentile Calculator to see where your child’s body mass index falls compared to other children the same age and sex. Because kids’ bodies change dramatically as they grow, pediatricians use percentiles — based on the CDC 2000 growth charts — instead of fixed BMI cutoffs. The result gives you a quick, evidence-based snapshot of weight status for ages 2 through 19.

Child & Teen BMI Percentile Calculator

For children and teenagers ages 2–19 · Based on CDC 2000 growth charts

yr
mo
ft
in
lb
BMI
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kg/m²
Percentile
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vs. peers same age & sex
Weight Status Category --
Under
Healthy
Over
Obese
058595100
Important: This calculator is for educational purposes only and is not a medical diagnosis. BMI is a screening tool, not a direct measure of body fat or overall health. Please consult a qualified pediatrician or healthcare provider for any concerns about your child’s growth, weight, or development.

📐 How Children’s BMI Percentile Is Calculated

A child’s BMI alone doesn’t tell you much — a BMI of 17 is overweight for a 4-year-old but underweight for a 16-year-old. That’s why pediatricians work in two steps:

1
Calculate the BMI number
BMI = weight (kg) ÷ height² (m²)
Same formula as adults. Imperial equivalent: (weight in lb × 703) ÷ height² (in²).
2
Compare to age- and sex-matched peers
The BMI is plotted against CDC reference data for the child’s exact age and sex, then expressed as a percentile. A 70th percentile, for example, means your child’s BMI is higher than 70% of children the same age and sex in the reference population.

The math behind step 2 uses the CDC’s LMS method, which converts BMI to a Z-score using three reference values (L, M, and S) that vary by age and sex, then translates that Z-score into a percentile.

📊 BMI Percentile Categories

The CDC defines four weight status categories for children and teens ages 2 through 19. Notice how the “healthy weight” range covers a much wider span than the others — most kids should fall here.

Category Percentile Range What It Means
Underweight Below 5th BMI lower than about 95% of peers the same age and sex
Healthy Weight 5th – <85th Where most children fall; lowest weight-related health risk
Overweight 85th – <95th BMI higher than about 85% of peers; an early signal to review habits
Obese 95th and above BMI higher than about 95% of peers; recommend a pediatrician check-in

⚠️ What BMI Percentile Doesn’t Measure

BMI percentile is a useful screening tool, but a single number can’t capture everything that affects a child’s health and development.

Muscle vs. Fat

BMI counts all body mass equally. Highly active kids and teen athletes can land in the overweight range despite low body fat.

Growth Spurts

Children grow in bursts, not smoothly. BMI naturally rises before a height spurt and falls after — a temporary shift isn’t a problem.

Pubertal Timing

Early and late developers can land in different percentiles for a year or two. Pediatricians look at the trend, not a single reading.

Body Type & Genetics

Frame size and family history shape what’s healthy for an individual child — the chart shows the average, not the “ideal.”

💡 How to Use Your Child’s Result

Treat the percentile as one data point in a bigger picture, not a verdict. Here’s how to keep the number in healthy context:

  • Track trends over time, not snapshots. A percentile that holds steady — even in a higher range — is usually less concerning than one that jumps several bands between visits.
  • Make it a household conversation, not a child’s burden. Healthy habits stick when the whole family eats, moves, and sleeps the same way. Avoid putting kids on solo “diets.”
  • Factor in puberty. Bodies change quickly between ages 9 and 15. A reading during a growth spurt may look different from one six months later.
  • Watch for crossing percentile bands. Moving from the 50th to the 85th percentile (or 50th to 15th) over a short period deserves a pediatrician’s attention, even within the “healthy” range.
  • Focus on what bodies can do. Talk about energy, strength, sleep, and focus — not how kids look or weigh. This protects body image while still supporting healthy choices.

Frequently Asked Questions

Children's bodies change rapidly with age, and what counts as a healthy BMI for a 6-year-old is very different from a healthy BMI for a 16-year-old. Percentiles compare a child's BMI to thousands of other children the same age and sex, giving a much more meaningful result than the raw number alone.

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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