IDEAL WEIGHT
CALCULATOR

Calculate your ideal body weight using four clinically validated formulas.

✅ 4 Proven Formulas🎯 Hamwi, Devine, Robinson, Miller⚖ lbs & kg
Your Details
Your Ideal Weight
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Average Ideal Weight (kg)
💡 Hamwi Formula--
💡 Devine Formula--
💡 Robinson Formula--
💡 Miller Formula--
🎯 Healthy BMI Weight Range--
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Ideal Weight by Height (BMI 18.5–24.9)
HeightIdeal Range (Women)Ideal Range (Men)
155 cm48–55 kg54–61 kg
160 cm50–58 kg57–64 kg
165 cm53–62 kg60–68 kg
170 cm57–66 kg63–72 kg
175 cm60–70 kg67–76 kg
180 cm64–75 kg71–81 kg
185 cm68–80 kg75–86 kg
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What This Calculator Does

The Ideal Weight Calculator shows your ideal weight across four clinically validated formulas: Hamwi (1964), Devine (1974), Robinson (1983), and Miller (1983). It also shows your healthy BMI weight range — a broader, more realistic target.

The Formula Explained

Devine formula (men): IBW = 50kg + 2.3kg per inch over 5ft. Devine (women): 45.5kg + 2.3kg per inch over 5ft. Example: 5ft 9in (175cm) male → 50 + (9 × 2.3) = 70.7kg ideal weight. The four formulas give a range of 68–76kg for the same person.

What Your Result Means

No single ideal weight exists for a given height — biological diversity is real. The healthy BMI range (18.5–24.9 kg/m²) gives a 15–20kg window that reflects this. More important than hitting a target weight: achieving a healthy body fat percentage (14–24% men, 21–31% women) within a healthy BMI range.

Next Steps

Body Fat Calculator — more meaningful than weight alone · BMI Calculator to check your healthy weight range

What Is Ideal Body Weight?

Ideal body weight (IBW) formulas were originally developed in clinical settings to estimate appropriate drug dosages and assess nutritional status. They produce a single target weight based on height and sex — but should be interpreted as a rough reference range rather than a precise personal target.

The Four Main Formulas

The Hamwi formula (1964): 48kg for men (or 45.4kg for women) plus 2.7kg (or 2.27kg) per inch over 5 feet. The Devine formula (1974), widely used in medicine, uses 50kg for men (or 45.5kg for women) plus 2.3kg per inch over 5 feet. The Robinson formula (1983) and Miller formula (1983) use slightly different baselines. All four formulas have the same fundamental limitation: they do not account for body composition, muscularity, or frame size.

Ideal Weight vs Healthy Weight

The healthy BMI weight range (18.5–24.9) is generally a more useful target than any single ideal weight formula, as it captures the range of weights associated with lowest health risk rather than a single number. The two measures often agree but can diverge for individuals at the tails of the height distribution.

SM
Medically Reviewed by Dr. Sarah Mitchell, M.D.
Board-Certified Internal Medicine · 12 Years Clinical Experience
Dr. Mitchell reviews all IndexBody health content for clinical accuracy and alignment with WHO, CDC, and NIH guidelines.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is there a single ideal weight?
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No. Different validated formulas produce different ideal weight estimates for the same person. The Hamwi, Devine, Robinson, and Miller formulas can differ by several kilograms. It is more useful to think about a healthy weight range (based on BMI 18.5–24.9) than a single target number.
Does ideal weight account for muscle mass?
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No. All standard ideal weight formulas use only height and sex as inputs. A highly muscular person will have a higher healthy weight than these formulas suggest, as muscle tissue is denser than fat. Athletes should use body fat percentage as a primary guide.
What is a good weight for my height?
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The healthy BMI weight range (BMI 18.5–24.9) provides a personalized range. For example, someone 175cm tall has a healthy weight range of approximately 56.5 to 76.4kg. However, frame size, muscularity, and age all affect what weight is optimal for an individual.