What BMI is — and what it isn't
Body Mass Index is your weight (kg) divided by your height squared (m²). The World Health Organization uses these adult cutoffs (Source: WHO, Obesity: preventing and managing the global epidemic, 2000):
| BMI | Category |
|---|---|
| < 18.5 | Underweight |
| 18.5–24.9 | Healthy weight |
| 25.0–29.9 | Overweight |
| ≥ 30 | Obesity |
BMI was designed by Adolphe Quetelet in the 1830s as a population-level screening tool (Source: Eknoyan, Adolphe Quetelet (1796-1874) — the average man and indices of obesity, Nephrol Dial Transplant, 2008). It works because, on average, taller people are heavier and unhealthy weight scales roughly with the square of height. It was never meant to be a diagnosis for an individual.
Where BMI gets it right
For sedentary or recreational populations, BMI tracks reasonably well with body fat and downstream metabolic risk:
- It's a strong predictor of all-cause mortality risk at the extremes (very low or very high) (Source: Berrington de Gonzalez et al., Body-mass index and mortality among 1.46 million white adults, N Engl J Med, 2010).
- It's easy and free. No calipers, no scales, no expensive scans.
- It's a fine starting point for someone with no other data.
If your BMI is 32 and you don't lift, BMI is telling you the truth.
Where BMI fails
BMI doesn't see what your weight is made of. Two cases where it lies:
1. Muscular lifters
A 5'10" lifter at 200 lb has a BMI of 28.7 — "overweight." If that lifter is also 12% body fat, they are objectively healthy. The number is wrong about them. This is the classic case of BMI mislabeling lean athletes (Source: Romero-Corral et al., Accuracy of body mass index in diagnosing obesity in the adult general population, Int J Obes, 2008).
2. "Normal weight obesity"
The opposite case is more common and more dangerous: someone with a BMI of 23 who has very little muscle and a high fat percentage. They look "fine" on paper while carrying meaningful metabolic risk (Source: Romero-Corral et al., Normal weight obesity: a risk factor for cardiometabolic dysregulation and cardiovascular mortality, Eur Heart J, 2010).
The lesson: BMI is a screen, not a verdict. Pair it with at least one composition or distribution metric.
What to track instead (or alongside)
These are ordered from "free and easy" to "more accurate but harder."
Waist-to-height ratio
Just measure your waist (at the navel) and divide by your height. A ratio at or below 0.5 is a useful cardiometabolic risk marker for adults of all heights (Source: Ashwell et al., Waist-to-height ratio is a better screening tool than waist circumference and BMI, Obes Rev, 2012).
Waist circumference alone
The CDC's elevated-risk thresholds are >40 inches (102 cm) for men and >35 inches (88 cm) for non-pregnant women (Source: NIH/NHLBI, Clinical Guidelines on the Identification, Evaluation, and Treatment of Overweight and Obesity in Adults, 1998).
Body fat percentage
- Skin-fold calipers — operator-dependent, free if you own them.
- Bioelectrical impedance scales — convenient, accuracy varies day to day with hydration.
- DEXA scan — the practical gold standard. Most cities have a sub-$100 option.
Progress photos
The most underrated tool. Same time of day, same lighting, front/side/back. Two months of photos tells you more than two months of scale data.
How to use BMI in real life
Do all of these for the most useful read:
- Calculate BMI as a baseline screen.
- Add waist-to-height to catch normal-weight-obesity cases.
- Take monthly progress photos.
- Track strength — bench, squat, pull-ups, deadlift. Lean mass that's getting stronger month over month is the single best signal that your "weight loss" is fat loss.
Common questions
My BMI says I'm overweight but I lift. Should I lose weight? Probably not on the basis of BMI alone. Look at waist circumference, photos, and how you feel training. If those are healthy, ignore BMI.
My BMI is normal but I don't feel lean. What gives? Likely high fat / low muscle. Lift twice a week and your composition will improve at the same scale weight.
Does BMI work for kids? Use age- and sex-specific percentile charts, not the adult thresholds.
Is there a better single number? Waist-to-height ratio is the strongest single number with comparable simplicity to BMI.
How Fitly helps you track what matters
Fitly tracks the metrics BMI can't:
- Body measurements (waist, hips, thigh, arm) plotted over time.
- Progress photos kept private with end-to-end privacy controls.
- Body composition entries (DEXA, InBody, calipers).
- Strength PRs — the cleanest signal that lean mass is going up.
Open the BMI calculator Get the macro cheatsheet