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Ideal Running Weight: How to Calculate Your Racing Weight

Ideal running weight – man and woman jogging together outdoors for recreational runners
Last updated: June 2026

Ideal running weight is not the lowest number you can hit on a scale — it’s the weight at which you generate the most power for the least energy cost. Think of it like a car: stripping the chassis too light risks structural failure, but carrying unnecessary ballast costs you at every mile. Finding that balance is what racing weight is about.

Start with Your Ideal Body Weight

Our ideal weight calculator gives you a healthy weight baseline using multiple formulas — a useful starting point before applying running-specific adjustments.

Calculate Ideal Body Weight →

The “Double the Inches” Baseline

A widely used rule of thumb for estimating running weight starts with your height:

Baseline running weight (lbs) = height in inches × 2

Then adjust for frame size:

Frame SizeAdjustmentExample: 5’10” (70″)
SmallSubtract 5–10 lbs130–135 lbs
MediumNo adjustment140 lbs
LargeAdd 5–10 lbs145–150 lbs

This formula was developed for competitive runners and reflects a lean, athletic target — not necessarily a weight sustainable year-round. It also doesn’t distinguish male from female runners, though women typically run at the lighter end of the range for their height.

Related Reading

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

The Racing Weight Formula (Body Fat Method)

A more precise approach uses your current body fat percentage and a target body fat percentage:

Racing Weight = [Current Weight × (1 − Current BF%)] ÷ (1 − Target BF%)

This formula first calculates your lean mass (the part of you that isn’t fat), then adds back only the target fat percentage.

Example: A runner weighing 80 kg at 20% body fat targeting 15% body fat:

  1. Lean mass = 80 × (1 − 0.20) = 80 × 0.80 = 64 kg
  2. Racing weight = 64 ÷ (1 − 0.15) = 64 ÷ 0.85 = 75.3 kg

This runner’s racing weight target is 75.3 kg — a reduction of 4.7 kg of fat while preserving all lean mass.

Body Fat Percentage Targets by Training Level

LevelMenWomen
Elite runners5–8%12–16%
Competitive recreational (80th percentile)10–15%18–23%
Casual recreational15–20%20–28%

For most dedicated recreational runners, the 80th percentile benchmark — 10–15% for men, 18–23% for women — represents a meaningful performance target without requiring the lifestyle sacrifices of competitive athletes.

Related Reading

Adjusted Body Weight Calculator: The Formula Used in Clinical Settings →

Why BMI Is a Poor Metric for Runners

BMI is based purely on height and weight. It cannot distinguish between a runner who is lean and muscular and one who carries excess fat at the same weight. Two runners with a BMI of 23 may have body fat percentages of 10% and 22% respectively — the former is near elite running shape, the latter has meaningful room to improve power-to-weight ratio.

The ponderal index corrects for some of BMI’s height bias but still can’t measure body composition. For performance-focused runners, body fat percentage is the only number that directly measures what matters: how much of your mass is working tissue versus carried weight.

How Much Does Racing Weight Actually Matter?

Research suggests that losing approximately 1 kg of body fat (not lean mass) improves marathon performance by roughly 2–3 minutes at recreational pace. The performance impact scales with distance:

DistanceWeight Impact
5KSmall — speed and power matter more than weight-to-height ratio
Half marathonModerate — weight starts to compound over the back miles
Marathon and beyondSignificant — carrying excess weight for 26+ miles has a clear performance cost

Seasonal Weight Management

Elite marathoners typically allow themselves to sit 3–5 kg above racing weight during off-season and base-building phases. This approach preserves recovery capacity, supports immune function, and prevents injury. Racing weight is a peak condition, not a year-round maintenance target. Attempting to sustain racing weight off-season increases relative energy deficiency risk and doesn’t produce further performance gains.

Related Reading

Ponderal Index: The More Accurate Alternative to BMI →

Frequently Asked Questions

Should I use the “double the inches” formula or the body fat formula?

If you don’t know your body fat percentage, the “double the inches” formula gives a directional ballpark. If you have your body fat percentage from calipers, a DEXA scan, or a smart scale, the body fat formula gives a more accurate and personalized target.

Is there an ideal running weight for women specifically?

The “double the inches” formula doesn’t distinguish sex, but women generally carry 6–10% more body fat than men at comparable fitness levels. For women using the formula, the lower half of the adjusted range is typically more realistic as a racing weight target.

What if reaching my racing weight would put me below a healthy BMI?

Racing weight calculations can produce targets that fall below what’s clinically healthy for some individuals. If the formula suggests a weight below BMI 18.5, the formula is not appropriate for your body type. Prioritize health markers — energy, hormonal function, bone density, recovery — over any derived weight number.

Related Reading

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

Find Your Ideal Weight Baseline

Before applying running-specific adjustments, start with your ideal body weight — calculated from four established formulas — as your reference point.

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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