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Fitness Calculators Tool

Ideal Weight Calculator

Estimate a healthy ideal body weight range based on standard formulas.

Parameters

cm
Calculated Results

Formula & Math

How this calculation works under the hood:

Devine (1974): Male: 50.0 + 2.3 kg/inch over 5ft. Female: 45.5 + 2.3 kg/inch over 5ft. Robinson (1983): Male: 52.0 + 1.9 kg/inch over 5ft. Female: 49.0 + 1.7 kg/inch over 5ft. Hamwi (1964): Male: 48.0 + 2.7 kg/inch over 5ft. Female: 45.5 + 2.2 kg/inch over 5ft.

Worked Example

Real-world scenario walk-through:

For a 5ft 10in (70 inches) male, using Devine: 50 + 2.3 * 10 = 73 kg (160.9 lbs).

Calculation Architecture

Every calculator follows the same four-stage pattern: normalize the inputs, apply the selected formula, compute supporting values, and classify the result against a practical benchmark.

  1. 1. Normalize units and defaults Convert metric and imperial values into a consistent calculation base and apply the configured default values if a field is untouched.
  2. 2. Select the best formula Many tools expose several scientific models so you can compare outputs instead of relying on one narrow estimate.
  3. 3. Compute supporting metrics Secondary outputs such as categories, healthy ranges, or maintenance targets make the result easier to apply in real life.
  4. 4. Interpret the number Use the result as a decision aid, then compare it with the reference ranges and FAQs below for context.

Input Reference

Input Default Bounds Role
Gender
Selection
male Method-dependent Chooses the method or activity tier.
Height
Numeric field
175 / 69 152.4 to 250 cm / 60 to 98 inches Feeds the core formula and result classification.

Formula Breakdown

The calculator can expose one or more formula paths. When multiple equations are available, compare them to understand the spread in the estimate.

Devine (1974)
Male: 50.0 + 2.3 kg/inch over 5ft. Female: 45.5 + 2.3 kg/inch over 5ft. Robinson (1983): Male: 52.0 + 1.9 kg/inch over 5ft. Female: 49.0 + 1.7 kg/inch over 5ft. Hamwi (1964): Male: 48.0 + 2.7 kg/inch over 5ft. Female: 45.5 + 2.2 kg/inch over 5ft.

Worked Example

Step through the sample calculation line by line so the final answer is easy to audit.

  1. For a 5ft 10in (70 inches) male, using Devine: 50 + 2.3 * 10 = 73 kg (160.9 lbs).

Understanding Ideal Weight Calculator

Ideal weight formulas provide a historical clinical reference point for healthy ranges. Modern practitioners combine this with body composition targets.

How to use the fitness result

Fitness calculators work best when you track trends, not just single-day numbers. The goal is to turn the output into a training, nutrition, or body-composition decision.

  • Recheck after a meaningful training block or bodyweight change.
  • Use the result alongside performance, recovery, and waist or body-fat trends.
  • Compare multiple formulas when the calculator offers more than one estimate.

For this calculator in particular, use the output as a practical benchmark for training age, body composition, and benchmark comparisons. If the result looks off, check measurement technique first, then formula choice, then the unit mode.

As a rule, recalculate after a meaningful change in training load, diet, sleep, bodyweight, or performance. That keeps the number relevant without chasing noise.

FAQs

Which formula is best? +

The Devine formula is the most widely used in medical dosages. Robinson is slightly lighter and Hamwi is slightly heavier. We display all three for comparison.

Does this account for frame size? +

No, these classic formulas only utilize height and gender. They do not account for muscle mass or bone density.

How often should I recalculate ideal weight? +

Recalculate whenever your bodyweight, training volume, recovery status, or goal changes enough to move the estimate. For most users, that means every 1 to 4 weeks depending on the calculator and the speed of change.

What should I do if this estimate seems too high or too low? +

Check your measurement inputs, confirm the unit mode, and compare the result against a second formula or a real-world trend. This is especially important for training age, body composition, and benchmark comparisons.

Should I compare this number to athlete standards or my own trendline? +

Use both. Athlete standards tell you where you sit relative to the population, while your own trendline shows whether your training, sleep, and nutrition are actually moving in the right direction.