WAIST-TO-HEIGHT
RATIO CALCULATOR

A single measurement that predicts cardiometabolic risk better than BMI. Keep your waist below half your height.

✅ Better Than BMI for Risk📋 WHO Recommended📈 Instant Risk Category
Your Measurements
Your Result
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Waist-to-Height Ratio
Category--
💡 Target Waist (50% of Height)--
💡 To Reach Healthy Ratio--
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WHtR Classification
CategoryWaist-to-Height RatioHealth Risk
Extremely Slim< 0.40Possible underweight risk
Healthy ✓0.40–0.49Low cardiometabolic risk
Overweight0.50–0.59Elevated risk
Obese≥ 0.60High to very high risk
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What Is Waist-to-Height Ratio?

Waist-to-height ratio (WHtR) is calculated by dividing your waist circumference by your height, both measured in the same unit. The healthy threshold is simple and universal: keep your waist circumference below half your height. This corresponds to a WHtR below 0.5 for most adults.

Why WHtR Outperforms BMI

Unlike BMI, WHtR directly captures central adiposity — the accumulation of visceral fat around the abdomen, which is the most metabolically harmful type of fat. Multiple large meta-analyses have found WHtR to be a stronger predictor of cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, hypertension, and all-cause mortality than BMI. A 2012 analysis of over 300,000 adults found WHtR identified cardiometabolic risk with significantly higher sensitivity than BMI alone.

WHtRCategoryHealth Risk
<0.4Extremely SlimPossible underweight risk
0.4–0.49HealthyLow
0.5–0.59OverweightElevated
≥0.6ObeseHigh to Very High
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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

What is a healthy waist-to-height ratio?
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A waist-to-height ratio below 0.5 is widely considered healthy for adults. The simple rule: keep your waist circumference below half your height. For example, a person 175cm tall should aim for a waist measurement below 87.5cm.
Is waist-to-height ratio better than BMI?
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Research suggests yes, for cardiometabolic risk specifically. WHtR directly measures central adiposity (visceral fat), which is more strongly associated with metabolic disease than total body fat. Multiple large studies have found WHtR outperforms BMI as a predictor of cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, and hypertension.
How do I measure my waist correctly?
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Measure at the midpoint between the bottom of your lowest rib and the top of your hip bone, typically at or just above the navel. Breathe normally — do not suck in. Measure after breathing out gently. Use a flexible tape measure held snugly but without compressing the skin.