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Healthy Weight for Height: What the Charts Don’t Tell You

Last updated: May 2026

A healthy weight for your height falls within the BMI 18.5–24.9 range — but that’s just the starting point. Healthy weight is also shaped by your body frame, sex, ethnicity, age, and body composition. Here’s what the chart tells you and what it misses.

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Healthy Weight Ranges by Height (Standard Chart)

Height Healthy Weight (BMI 18.5–24.9) Overweight (BMI 25–29.9) Obese (BMI 30+)
4′ 10″ 91–115 lb 119–138 lb 143+ lb
5′ 0″ 97–123 lb 128–148 lb 153+ lb
5′ 2″ 104–131 lb 136–158 lb 164+ lb
5′ 4″ 110–140 lb 145–169 lb 174+ lb
5′ 6″ 118–148 lb 155–179 lb 186+ lb
5′ 8″ 125–158 lb 164–190 lb 197+ lb
5′ 10″ 132–167 lb 174–202 lb 209+ lb
6′ 0″ 140–177 lb 184–213 lb 221+ lb
6′ 2″ 148–186 lb 194–225 lb 233+ lb
6′ 4″ 156–197 lb 205–238 lb 246+ lb

Source: NIH/NHLBI BMI tables. Applies to adults 18+; same chart for men and women.

Why This Chart Is a Starting Point, Not a Verdict

Frame size affects healthy weight significantly

At the same height, a large-framed person with heavy bones will naturally weigh more than a small-framed person — and both can be equally healthy. Body frame size is estimated from wrist circumference:

Muscle mass shifts the equation

Someone who strength trains regularly may weigh more than the “healthy” range suggests — but with very low body fat. A 5’8″ athlete at 168 lbs has BMI 25.5 (technically overweight) but may have 12% body fat and excellent cardiovascular health. BMI can’t make this distinction.

Ethnicity changes the thresholds

The standard healthy weight chart was calibrated on primarily European populations. For people of Asian, South Asian, Middle Eastern, or Black African descent, health risks can appear at different BMI thresholds:

Population Healthy Weight Overweight Begins Obese Begins
Standard (WHO) BMI 18.5–24.9 BMI 25 BMI 30
Asian/South Asian BMI 18.5–22.9 BMI 23 BMI 27.5

For people of Asian descent, the standard healthy weight ranges overshoot what would be considered healthy. A 5’4″ person of Asian descent at 140 lbs (BMI 24.0 — technically healthy) may actually benefit from targeting the lower end of the range because their health risk threshold begins at BMI 23.

Related Reading

How Much Should I Weigh? A Science-Based Guide →

Why a Healthy Weight Matters

Being within the healthy weight range for your height is associated with lower risk of:

Being underweight (BMI <18.5) is also associated with health risks including malnutrition, weakened immunity, bone density loss, and fertility problems.

Four Ways to Assess Healthy Weight Beyond the Chart

1. Waist circumference

Even within the healthy BMI range, a large waist can indicate excess visceral fat. Healthy targets: waist <35″ for women, <40″ for men.

2. Waist-to-height ratio

Keep waist circumference below half your height. A 5’8″ person (68″) should have a waist under 34″. This works for all ages and ethnicities.

3. Waist-to-hip ratio

Healthy: below 0.85 for women, below 0.90 for men. Higher ratios indicate central fat distribution, which carries higher cardiovascular risk.

4. Body fat percentage

For an athletic 5’10” man at 180 lbs (BMI 25.8 — technically overweight), body fat percentage of 14% tells a very different health story than what the chart shows. Healthy ranges: 14–24% for men (ages 20–29), 21–31% for women (ages 20–29).

Setting a Realistic Target

Rather than targeting the middle of the healthy weight range as an arbitrary goal, consider what functional outcomes would make a meaningful difference in your daily life and health:

Research consistently shows that even modest weight reduction (5–10% of body weight) produces measurable health improvements for most people — you don’t need to reach an “ideal” number to benefit.

Related Reading

Ideal Weight for Height: Full Chart from 4’10” to 6’4″ →

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the same healthy weight range used for men and women?

Yes — the same BMI 18.5–24.9 range applies to both. However, at the same height, men typically fall in the upper portion of the healthy range (more muscle and denser bones) while women typically fall toward the middle or lower portion. The chart gives the same weight range for both, but the physiological composition at that weight differs.

Can you be healthy above the healthy weight range?

Yes. The healthy weight range is a population-level reference, not a diagnostic cutoff. An individual at BMI 26–28 who has normal blood pressure, healthy blood sugar, low waist circumference, and is physically active may have lower actual disease risk than someone at BMI 22 who is sedentary with elevated blood glucose. Health is not determined by a single number.

Get Your Healthy Weight Range

Our ideal weight calculator gives you a personalized healthy weight range based on height, sex, and frame size.

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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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