Last updated: June 2026
The waist-to-height ratio (WHtR) is one of the simplest and most effective ways to assess whether you are carrying too much fat around your abdomen. The core principle is straightforward: your waist circumference should be less than half your height. That single rule — expressed as WHtR below 0.5 — applies to both men and women, adults and children over six, across different ethnic groups. It’s the kind of clarity that BMI, which ignores fat distribution entirely, cannot provide.
Calculate Your Waist-to-Height Ratio
Enter your waist and height measurements to instantly get your WHtR and see how it compares to health risk thresholds.
How to Calculate Waist-to-Height Ratio
The formula is simple:
WHtR = Waist circumference ÷ Height
Both measurements must be in the same unit — either both in centimetres or both in inches. The result is a unitless ratio, typically between 0.3 and 0.7 for most adults.
Example: A person with a 76 cm waist and 170 cm height has a WHtR of 76 ÷ 170 = 0.447.
A second example: A person with a 32-inch waist and 68-inch height (5’8″) has a WHtR of 32 ÷ 68 = 0.471.
How to measure your waist
Waist circumference should be measured at the midpoint between the bottom of the lowest rib and the top of the iliac crest (hip bone) — typically just above the belly button for most people. Wrap a soft tape measure around this point, keep it parallel to the floor, breathe out normally, and read the number without sucking in or pushing out. The tape should sit snug without pressing into the skin.
What Your WHtR Means: Risk Categories
Research from fourteen countries, reviewed in the meta-analysis published in Obesity Reviews (Ashwell, Gunn & Gibson, 2012), established 0.5 as the universal boundary between healthy and increased risk. The Ashwell® Shape Chart, widely used in clinical settings, defines four zones:
| WHtR range | Category | What it means |
|---|---|---|
| Below 0.4 | Take Care | Possibly underweight — no need to reduce waist |
| 0.4 to 0.49 | Healthy | Low risk range — waist is appropriately sized for height |
| 0.5 to 0.59 | Increased risk | Excess abdominal fat — action recommended for adults |
| 0.6 and above | High risk | Significantly elevated risk of cardiometabolic disease |
These boundaries apply regardless of sex or age for adults. The same 0.5 cutoff has been validated in European, Asian, and Central American populations, making it one of the few anthropometric thresholds that holds across different ethnic groups without requiring adjustment.
Related Reading
Why Height Adjustment Matters
Waist circumference on its own is a useful health marker, but it fails to account for height. A waist of 88 cm is not the same health risk in a person who is 6’2″ (188 cm) as it is in someone who is 5’2″ (157 cm). The taller person has a WHtR of 0.47 — healthy range. The shorter person has a WHtR of 0.56 — in the increased-risk zone.
Using a raw waist circumference measurement without height context can underestimate risk in shorter people and overestimate it in taller people. WHtR corrects for this by making height part of the equation. A 2011 study by Schneider and colleagues found that short subjects had a 30% higher prevalence of metabolic syndrome than tall subjects when grouped by waist circumference rather than WHtR — a gap that disappeared when WHtR was used instead.
WHtR vs BMI
BMI (body mass index) divides weight by height squared. It says nothing about where fat is stored. Two people with identical BMI values can have completely different abdominal fat levels and completely different health risks.
A 2012 meta-analysis of studies covering more than 300,000 adults found that WHtR outperformed BMI in identifying people with cardiometabolic risk factors. WHtR improved discrimination of adverse health outcomes by 4–5 percentage points over BMI alone. Crucially, WHtR can identify people with a normal BMI who are nonetheless carrying dangerous levels of abdominal fat — a group that BMI misses entirely.
The practical advantage of WHtR over BMI is also the simplicity of the screening rule: keep your waist circumference to less than half your height. This single message requires no lookup table, no age- or sex-specific percentile charts, and no calculator for a rough self-assessment.
Related Reading
Who Should Use WHtR — and Who Shouldn’t
WHtR is validated for adults and children aged six and older. Its single cutoff value (0.5) applies across sexes and most ethnic groups without modification — a significant practical advantage over metrics requiring sex- or age-specific reference tables.
WHtR is less useful in the following situations:
- Pregnancy — waist circumference is distorted by the pregnancy itself
- Children under 6 — WHtR has not been validated in this age group; the 0.5 cutoff may overestimate risk in very young children
- BMI over 35 — at very high BMI, waist circumference measurement becomes less reliable due to the practical difficulty of accurate measurement
- Conditions affecting height — growth disorders or severe postural issues affect the height denominator
WHtR and Cardiometabolic Risk: The Research Summary
The evidence for WHtR as a health screening tool is extensive:
- A meta-analysis covering data from 14 countries found WHtR superior to both BMI and waist circumference for identifying adults with cardiovascular disease risk factors, high blood pressure, and diabetes.
- A prospective study following over 45,000 women found that abdominal obesity measures (including WHtR) were strong predictors of stroke across 11 years of follow-up, while BMI showed no significant association.
- In children and adolescents, WHtR showed equivalent or better discriminating ability compared to BMI for identifying those with elevated cardiometabolic risk.
The consistent finding across this research: WHtR doesn’t replace every other health metric, but it adds meaningful information that BMI alone cannot provide — particularly around fat distribution and the specific risk posed by central (abdominal) adiposity.
Related Reading
Find Out Your WHtR
Enter your waist and height to calculate your ratio and get an instant assessment against the Ashwell Shape Chart risk categories.
