Waist to Height Ratio Calculator
Enter your waist and height measurements to get your WHtR score, cardiovascular risk level, and the waist size you should aim for.
๐ What is the Waist to Height Ratio?
Waist-to-height ratio (WHtR) is a simple body measurement that divides your waist circumference by your height, both in the same unit. A person with a 82 cm waist and 170 cm height has a WHtR of 0.482. The ratio is dimensionless, meaning it produces the same result whether you use centimetres, inches, or any other consistent unit. The key threshold, supported by research from over 300,000 participants, is 0.50: a healthy waist should be less than half your height.
WHtR is used in three main contexts. First, it serves as a quick screening tool for central obesity, the accumulation of visceral fat around the abdominal organs that is strongly linked to type 2 diabetes, hypertension, and cardiovascular disease. Second, it provides a body-size-adjusted measure of waist size that allows meaningful comparison across people of very different heights. A 155 cm person with a 77 cm waist and a 185 cm person with a 92 cm waist both have a WHtR of approximately 0.496, placing them at the same relative risk level, even though their absolute waist sizes are very different. Third, it gives a concrete, memorable target for individuals managing their weight: get your waist below half your height.
A common misconception is that WHtR and BMI measure the same thing. They do not. BMI divides weight by height squared and cannot distinguish between fat and muscle, or between abdominal fat and fat stored in the hips and thighs. WHtR specifically measures the circumference of the waist, which is the part of the body where visceral fat accumulates and where metabolic risk is concentrated. A muscular athlete and an overweight sedentary person can have the same BMI, but their WHtRs can differ dramatically. Research published in journals including Obesity Reviews and the British Journal of Nutrition shows WHtR often outperforms both BMI and waist circumference alone in predicting cardiometabolic risk factors across diverse ethnic populations.
The Ideal Waist Finder mode works in reverse: enter your height and the calculator returns your target waist range based on the 0.40 to 0.50 healthy WHtR band. This gives a concrete waist measurement goal rather than a vague weight target, which is particularly useful for tracking progress through exercise and dietary changes where waist reduction often precedes changes on the scale.