Child Height Predictor
Estimate your child's adult height using two methods: growth curve projection (from their current percentile) and mid-parental target height (from parent heights). Ages 2–17.
What is a height predictor? A height predictor estimates your child's adult height based on their current growth trajectory and parental heights. This calculator uses two methods — growth curve projection from CDC Growth Charts (2000) percentile data and mid-parental target height — to provide a range of predicted adult stature.
How This Height Predictor Works
This calculator uses two independent methods to estimate your child's adult height, based on where your child currently falls on the height-for-age percentile curve. Using both methods together gives you a more complete picture than either one alone.
Method 1: Growth Curve Projection
This method analyzes where your child currently falls on the CDC growth chart and projects what height they would reach as an adult if they continue tracking along the same percentile curve. A child currently at the 75th percentile for height at age 5 would be projected to reach the 75th percentile of adult height — about 178 cm (5'10") for boys or 166 cm (5'5") for girls.
This is a trajectory-based prediction that captures your child's actual growth so far. Its main limitation is that children can shift percentiles during puberty, especially if they enter puberty earlier or later than average.
Method 2: Mid-Parental Target Height
This classic method — also called the Tanner method — estimates your child's genetic height potential from both parents' heights. The formula adjusts for the average 13 cm (5 inch) height difference between adult men and women:
- Boys: (Mother's height + Father's height + 13 cm) ÷ 2
- Girls: (Mother's height + Father's height − 13 cm) ÷ 2
The result has a standard error of approximately ±8.5 cm (3.3 inches), meaning 68% of children end up within that range of the prediction. This method captures genetics but doesn't account for the child's own growth trajectory.
Why Two Methods?
When both methods agree closely, you can have higher confidence in the prediction. When they disagree, it may indicate the child is growing faster or slower than their genetic potential suggests — which could be normal variation, differences in pubertal timing, or worth discussing with a pediatrician.
Track Growth Over Time
A single prediction improves with more data. Log your child’s measurements at each well-child visit using the Growth Tracker to see how their percentile evolves. Check whether their current rate of gain is on track with the Growth Velocity Calculator, and see their height-for-age percentile at any single point. During puberty, height predictions become less certain — learn more about the pubertal growth spurt timeline.