WHR Calculator: Check Your Waist-to-Hip Ratio & Risk

Use this Waist-to-Hip Ratio (WHR) Calculator to assess your body fat distribution and screen for abdominal-obesity-related health risk. WHR is a simple, low-tech measure that often predicts cardiovascular and metabolic risk better than BMI alone.

WHR Calculator

Waist-to-Hip Ratio with WHO 2008 risk classification

Your Measurements
Cutoffs differ between men and women
Narrowest point of waist, above belly button
Widest part of hips/buttocks
Your WHR
0.00
waist ÷ hip
Body Shape
Health Risk:

WHO Cutoffs for Your Group
Low risk
Moderate risk
High risk
Your value
Note: WHR cutoffs are validated for adults aged 18+. They are screening guides, not diagnostic. Ethnicity, muscle mass, and individual body composition affect interpretation. Consult a healthcare professional for a full assessment.

Why Waist-to-Hip Ratio Matters

Body fat is not all created equal. Fat stored around the hips and thighs (subcutaneous fat) is metabolically quieter, while fat stored deep in the abdomen around the organs (visceral fat) actively releases inflammatory signals and free fatty acids that drive insulin resistance, high blood pressure, and arterial disease. WHR captures this distribution in one simple number — a high ratio means more fat sits in the high-risk abdominal region relative to the protective hip region.

Multiple large studies have shown WHR predicts cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, and all-cause mortality better than BMI in many populations. A landmark Mayo Clinic study found people with a normal BMI but high WHR ("normal-weight central obesity") had a 2.75-times higher cardiovascular death risk than those with a normal BMI and normal WHR. That makes WHR especially useful for catching risk that BMI alone would miss.

How This Calculator Works

1

Enter Measurements

Provide your waist and hip circumferences in cm or in. Units do not need to match — the calculator converts as needed.

2

Calculate Ratio

WHR = waist ÷ hip. Because it is a ratio, the unit cancels out — the same number results from cm or inches.

3

Match Sex-Specific Cutoff

Your ratio is compared against the WHO 2008 cutoffs — different for men and women — to assign a low, moderate, or high risk category.

4

Identify Body Shape

A higher ratio reflects an apple-shaped pattern (more abdominal fat); a lower ratio reflects a pear shape (more gluteal-femoral fat).

Formula: WHR = waist circumference ÷ hip circumference. Example: a 32 in waist with 40 in hips gives WHR = 32 ÷ 40 = 0.80.

WHR Risk Classification (WHO 2008)

The World Health Organization 2008 Expert Consultation set internationally used cutoffs for screening abdominal-obesity-related health risk. The three-tier classification below is widely used by Mayo Clinic, Cleveland Clinic, and the NHS.

Risk LevelMenWomen
Low≤ 0.90≤ 0.80
Moderate0.91 – 0.990.81 – 0.84
High≥ 1.00≥ 0.85

These cutoffs apply to adults 18 and older. For Asian populations, some researchers recommend slightly lower thresholds (around 0.90 for men and 0.80 for women as high-risk) because abdominal fat accumulates at lower overall body sizes in many Asian groups.

How to Measure Correctly

Measurement technique matters — a difference of 1–2 cm can shift your WHR by 0.02 or more. Use a flexible, non-stretch tape measure, stand upright with feet together, breathe out normally, and do not pull the tape so tight that it compresses the skin.

W

Waist

Measure at the midpoint between the lowest rib and the top of the hip bone — usually just above the belly button. Tape should be horizontal and snug, not tight.

H

Hip

Measure at the widest part of the buttocks with feet together. Tape should be parallel to the floor all the way around.

Take each measurement twice and average the result. Measure in the morning before eating for the most consistent reading day to day.

WHR vs Other Body Composition Metrics

WHR is one of several tools used to screen body composition and metabolic risk. Each captures something different and each has limitations:

MetricMeasuresBest For
BMIOverall body sizeGeneral weight category
WHRFat distributionVisceral fat risk
Waist CircumferenceAbdominal sizeStandalone obesity screen
WHtRWaist vs heightCross-population comparison
Body Fat %Total fat massBody composition tracking

Many clinicians now use waist circumference alongside BMI rather than WHR alone, because hip size can be confounded by gluteal muscle mass in athletic individuals. For a complete picture, combine WHR with BMI and waist measurement.

Health Risks Linked to High WHR

Elevated WHR — meaning excess visceral fat — is independently associated with the following conditions:

Cardiovascular disease: Higher rates of heart attack, stroke, and hypertension driven by visceral fat's effect on lipids and blood pressure.
Type 2 diabetes: Visceral fat releases free fatty acids that promote insulin resistance, often years before blood sugar rises.
Metabolic syndrome: Cluster of high blood pressure, high triglycerides, low HDL, high glucose, and abdominal obesity.
Certain cancers: Higher risk of colon, breast (post-menopause), and pancreatic cancers linked to chronic inflammation from visceral fat.
Fatty liver disease: Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is strongly correlated with central adiposity.
Sleep apnea: Central adiposity contributes to airway narrowing and obstructive sleep apnea, which in turn worsens metabolic risk.

Tips to Improve Your WHR

Prioritize whole foods. Vegetables, fruits, lean protein, legumes, and whole grains support fat loss without strict calorie counting. Cut ultra-processed foods and added sugars first.
Strength train 2–3× weekly. Resistance training preserves and builds muscle, which raises metabolic rate and shifts body composition toward lower visceral fat.
Add daily aerobic activity. 150–300 minutes per week of moderate cardio (brisk walking, cycling, swimming) preferentially burns visceral fat over time.
Sleep 7–9 hours nightly. Short sleep raises cortisol and ghrelin, both of which promote abdominal fat storage. Sleep is a body-composition lever, not a luxury.
Manage chronic stress. Persistent stress drives cortisol, which preferentially deposits fat in the abdomen. Use breathing, walking, or other recovery practices daily.
Limit alcohol. Alcohol calories are stored efficiently as abdominal fat ("beer belly") and disrupt deep sleep. Keep intake low and consistent.

References

2
Mayo Clinic. Belly fat in men: Why weight loss matters.Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research. Reviewed clinical guidance.
3
Mayo Clinic. Belly fat in women: Taking — and keeping — it off.Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research. Reviewed clinical guidance.
4
Sahakyan KR, Lopez-Jimenez F, et al. People of Normal Weight With Belly Fat at Highest Death Risk.Mayo Clinic study presented at the European Society of Cardiology Congress, 2012.
5
Cleveland Clinic. BMI for Women: How It Works and What It Reveals About Your Health.Cleveland Clinic Health Essentials. Includes WHR measurement and interpretation guidance.

Frequently Asked Questions

WHR is your waist circumference divided by your hip circumference — a simple number that reflects how your body fat is distributed. Fat stored around the hips and thighs is metabolically quieter, while fat stored deep in the abdomen (visceral fat) actively raises the risk of heart disease, type 2 diabetes, and several cancers. A high WHR means more of your fat sits in the high-risk abdominal region, which is why WHR often predicts long-term health risk better than weight or BMI 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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