Use this Growth Chart Tracker to log your child’s height measurements over time and plot them against age-matched percentile curves from the WHO Child Growth Standards or the CDC 2000 Growth Charts. A single percentile is a snapshot; the real value of growth tracking is the trend — whether your child is following their own healthy curve, drifting upward, or drifting downward. All entries are saved privately in your browser, so you can come back any time to add the next measurement.
Growth Chart Tracker
Log height measurements and watch the curve
📐 How Growth Tracking Works
A single height-for-age percentile tells you where your child stands compared to other children of the same age and sex right now. But pediatricians care less about the absolute number and more about the trajectory — whether your child is steadily following their own curve over time. This tracker is built around that idea.
Enter details and height
Choose sex, date of birth, measurement date, and height in one simple form.
Watch the curve
Each new entry is plotted automatically so you can follow the growth trend over time.
📊 Understanding Percentile Curves
Each percentile curve on the chart shows where children of a given rank would fall at each age. The 50th percentile is the median, and roughly 94% of healthy children fall between the 3rd and 97th percentile curves. Your child’s natural “band” is wherever their measurements consistently sit.
| Percentile Band | Range | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|
| Below 3rd | < 3% | Significantly shorter than peers; pediatric review recommended |
| 3rd – 25th | 3% – 25% | Shorter than average, still within typical variation |
| 25th – 75th | 25% – 75% | Middle of the range — where half of all children sit |
| 75th – 97th | 75% – 97% | Taller than average, still within typical variation |
| Above 97th | > 97% | Significantly taller than peers; usually genetic but worth mentioning at a check-up |
🌐 WHO vs. CDC: Which Reference to Use
The tracker offers both growth references because 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.
⚠️ What the Tracker Doesn’t Tell You
The chart shows where your child stands relative to a population average. It can’t see family genetics, hormonal timing, or measurement quirks — so treat the trend as guidance, not a verdict.
Family Genetics
Children of shorter or taller parents naturally follow lower or higher percentile bands. The chart compares to the average, not to your child’s genetic potential.
Pubertal Timing
Early developers may shoot up before peers and slow down later; late developers do the opposite. A short-term band shift around puberty is often normal catch-up or catch-down.
Measurement Consistency
Height varies by up to 1 cm between morning and evening, with shoes vs. without, or with different posture. Inconsistent measuring can create fake trends.
One Reading Isn’t a Trend
Two points make a line but not a trend. Three or more measurements over 6–12 months give a much clearer picture than any single visit.
💡 How to Use Your Growth Chart
A good tracking habit makes the chart far more useful. Here’s how to get measurements you can trust:
🔗 Related Growth Calculators
Get more from your measurements with these companion tools:

