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Adjusted Body Weight Calculator: The Formula Used in Clinical Settings

adjusted body weight calculator – healthcare professional reviewing patient weight and clinical data

Last updated: June 2026

Adjusted Body Weight Calculator: The Formula Used in Clinical Settings

Adjusted body weight (AjBW) is a calculated weight used in place of actual body weight when someone is significantly above their ideal weight. Because excess fat is far less metabolically active than lean tissue, using actual body weight to calculate drug doses or nutritional needs for obese patients can lead to meaningful over- or under-dosing. Adjusted body weight corrects for this by blending ideal body weight with actual body weight using a proven formula.

Find Your Ideal Body Weight First

The adjusted body weight formula requires your ideal body weight as its starting point. Use our calculator to get your IBW instantly by height and sex.

Calculate Ideal Body Weight →

The Adjusted Body Weight Formula

The adjusted body weight formula is:

AjBW = IBW + 0.4 × (ABW − IBW)

Where:

The 0.4 factor reflects the fact that adipose tissue is not completely inert — it still has blood supply, requires some metabolic support, and contributes to certain physiological processes. Using 40% of the excess weight captures this without inflating the estimate the way actual body weight would.

How to Calculate Ideal Body Weight (Devine Formula)

The most widely used IBW equation in clinical practice is the Devine formula, published in 1974:

Sex Formula
Men 50 kg + 2.3 kg for every inch over 5 feet
Women 45.5 kg + 2.3 kg for every inch over 5 feet

For heights under 5 feet, the standard 2.3 kg/inch reduction overpredicts lean mass loss, so clinicians typically use a BMI-based adjustment instead.

Related Reading

Body Frame Size and Ideal Weight: How Your Skeleton Affects Your Target →

Worked Example

A man is 6 feet tall (72 inches) and weighs 210 lbs (95.3 kg).

  1. Inches over 5 feet: 72 − 60 = 12 inches
  2. IBW (Devine, male): 50 + (2.3 × 12) = 50 + 27.6 = 77.6 kg
  3. ABW: 95.3 kg
  4. AjBW: 77.6 + 0.4 × (95.3 − 77.6) = 77.6 + 0.4 × 17.7 = 77.6 + 7.1 = 84.7 kg

In this case, adjusted body weight (84.7 kg) is meaningfully lower than actual body weight (95.3 kg), which would affect drug dosing calculations significantly.

When to Use Adjusted Body Weight

Adjusted body weight is used when actual body weight is substantially above ideal body weight — typically when ABW exceeds IBW by more than 30%. Common clinical applications include:

Application Why ABW Is Used
Aminoglycoside dosing (gentamicin, tobramycin) These drugs distribute into lean tissue; adipose uptake is limited
Vancomycin dosing Poor penetration into fat requires dose adjustment for obese patients
Tidal volume in mechanical ventilation Lung size correlates with height and lean mass, not body fat
Nutritional calorie targets Overfeeding an obese patient using actual weight risks complications

Related Reading

Ponderal Index: The More Accurate Alternative to BMI →

When Not to Use Adjusted Body Weight

Adjusted body weight assumes excess weight comes from fat, not lean tissue. Two common situations where this assumption breaks down:

Related Reading

Ideal Running Weight: How to Calculate Your Racing Weight →

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between IBW and AjBW?

Ideal body weight (IBW) is the estimated healthy weight for a person of a given height and sex, based on formulas like the Devine equation. Adjusted body weight (AjBW) is a modified figure used when actual body weight is significantly above IBW — it splits the difference between IBW and actual weight, accounting for the fact that some of that excess fat still requires metabolic support.

Do I need to use adjusted body weight for drug dosing?

That depends on the drug. Some medications (like aminoglycosides and vancomycin) distribute primarily into lean tissue and require AjBW. Others use actual body weight or IBW. Always confirm with the prescribing guidelines or a pharmacist for specific agents.

What if my actual body weight is below my ideal body weight?

Adjusted body weight only applies when ABW significantly exceeds IBW. If your actual weight is at or below your ideal body weight, you use actual body weight directly.

Related Reading

What Weight Is Considered Skinny? The BMI Underweight Threshold Explained →

Calculate Your Ideal Body Weight

Get your IBW using the Devine, Robinson, Hamwi, and Miller formulas side by side — plus your healthy weight range by BMI.

Use the Ideal Weight Calculator →

Dennis Kiplimo
Written by
Dennis Kiplimo

Dennis Kiplimo is a Registered Nurse and founder of Denstar Fitness. He publishes fitness calculators and writes about training, nutrition and health on Medium.

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