BMI-for-Age Percentile Calculator
Enter your child's age, weight, and height to calculate their BMI percentile on CDC growth charts. For children and teens ages 2 to 20.
What is a BMI-for-age percentile? BMI-for-age percentile measures body mass index relative to children of the same age and sex. Unlike adult BMI, child BMI must be compared against age-specific reference data from the CDC Growth Charts (2000) because body composition changes during growth. Learn more about how growth percentiles work or read our guide on what BMI z-scores mean.
How BMI-for-Age Percentiles Work
Body Mass Index (BMI) is calculated by dividing weight in kilograms by the square of height in meters (kg/m²). For adults, fixed BMI cutoffs define weight categories — but for children and teens, BMI changes dramatically with age and differs between boys and girls, making raw BMI numbers meaningless without age context.
That's why pediatric BMI uses BMI-for-age percentiles: your child's BMI is compared to a reference population of children the same age and sex. The CDC growth charts provide the reference data for US children ages 2 to 20.
CDC BMI Weight Categories
- Underweight — below the 5th percentile
- Healthy weight — 5th to less than the 85th percentile
- Overweight — 85th to less than the 95th percentile
- Obese — 95th percentile or above
These categories are screening tools — not diagnoses. A child at the 90th percentile who is tall and muscular may have a perfectly healthy body composition. Your pediatrician considers BMI alongside other factors like growth trends, body composition, family history, and overall health.
Why BMI Has Limitations for Children
BMI doesn't distinguish between muscle and fat. Active, muscular children may have elevated BMI percentiles without excess body fat. Conversely, a child with low muscle mass may have a "normal" BMI despite unhealthy body composition. During puberty, BMI naturally increases as body composition changes — this is expected and doesn't necessarily indicate a problem.
Despite these limitations, BMI-for-age remains the recommended screening tool for childhood weight status because it's simple, non-invasive, and correlates well with body fat at the population level.