Waist-to-Height
Ratio Calculator

The simple rule: keep your waist to less than half your height. WHtR predicts metabolic health risk more accurately than BMI alone.

cm
Measure at the midpoint between your lowest rib and the top of your hip bone — roughly at navel level. How to measure →
cm
Very low
<0.34
Healthy
0.34–0.49
Increased risk
0.50–0.59
High risk
≥0.60
Healthy waist for your height
Waist to lose for healthy range

How to Measure Your Waist

Accurate measurement is key — a 2 cm error changes your result meaningfully.

1
Find the midpoint between your lowest rib and the top of your hip bone (roughly navel level)
2
Stand relaxed, feet together. Breathe out gently — do not suck in your stomach
3
Wrap the tape snugly but not tight. Measure over bare skin, not clothing. Take two readings and average them

WHtR Risk Categories

Thresholds apply to adult men and women equally.

Category WHtR Range Health Implication
Very low (lean)< 0.34May indicate underweight
Healthy0.34 – 0.49Lowest metabolic risk
Increased risk0.50 – 0.59Elevated diabetes & CVD risk
High risk≥ 0.60Significantly elevated risk

The 0.5 boundary applies universally across sex, age (adults), and ethnicity — making WHtR one of the simplest health screening tools available.

Frequently Asked Questions

A healthy waist-to-height ratio is below 0.5 for most adults. The simple rule: keep your waist circumference to less than half your height. A WHtR between 0.5 and 0.59 indicates increased health risk, and 0.6 or above indicates high risk. These thresholds apply equally to men and women.
Research suggests WHtR is a better predictor of cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, and mortality risk than BMI. This is because WHtR directly measures central (abdominal) fat — the most metabolically dangerous type — whereas BMI cannot distinguish between fat and muscle, or between abdominal and peripheral fat. For the most complete picture, use both alongside each other. Try our BMI calculator and compare your results.
The universal threshold of 0.5 applies to both men and women. However, some researchers suggest women may be healthier at slightly higher WHtR values (up to 0.52–0.54) because women naturally carry more subcutaneous fat on the hips and thighs, which is less metabolically harmful. For practical screening purposes, 0.5 remains the recommended boundary for both sexes.
Yes — the 0.5 rule applies across ethnicities, including Asian adults. In fact, WHtR is particularly useful for Asian populations because it sidesteps the debate about Asian-specific BMI cutoffs entirely. A WHtR above 0.5 signals increased risk regardless of ethnicity. That said, some studies suggest Asian adults begin to see increased metabolic risk at WHtR values closer to 0.46–0.48. See also our Asian BMI Calculator.
WHtR is simply your waist circumference divided by your height, both in the same unit (both in cm, or both in inches):

WHtR = Waist (cm) ÷ Height (cm)

For example, a person with a 80 cm waist and 170 cm height has a WHtR of 80 ÷ 170 = 0.47 — in the healthy range.
Yes. Reducing abdominal fat — which directly lowers your waist circumference — is achievable through a sustained calorie deficit, regular aerobic exercise (particularly moderate-intensity cardio), strength training to preserve muscle, and improving sleep quality. Check our guides on how to lose belly fat and how many calories to lose weight for practical steps.

Waist-to-height ratio risk categories

Underweight Below 0.40 Healthy ✓ 0.40 – 0.49 Overweight ⚠ 0.50 – 0.59 High risk ✗ 0.60 and above Simple rule: keep your waist below half your height

Why Waist-to-Height Ratio Matters More Than the Scale

Your bathroom scale tells you how heavy you are. Your BMI tells you whether that weight is proportionate to your height. But neither of these measurements tells you where your body stores its fat — and location matters enormously for health.

Fat stored in the abdomen — wrapping around the liver, pancreas, and intestines — is called visceral fat. It is far more metabolically active than subcutaneous fat (the fat just under your skin), releasing inflammatory signals and fatty acids that disrupt insulin signalling and damage blood vessel walls. People with high visceral fat are at dramatically increased risk of type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, fatty liver disease, and certain cancers — even when their overall body weight appears normal.

Waist-to-height ratio captures this risk directly. By measuring how much fat you carry around your midsection relative to your overall height, WHtR provides a more accurate metabolic risk signal than a scale weight or BMI value ever could.

The Research Behind the 0.5 Rule

The 0.5 threshold has been validated across multiple large studies and populations. A landmark 2012 systematic review and meta-analysis by Ashwell, Gunn, and Gibson, published in Nutrition Research Reviews, pooled data from over 300,000 adults across 31 countries. It found that WHtR outperformed both BMI and waist circumference alone in predicting cardiometabolic risk factors including hypertension, dyslipidaemia, diabetes, and cardiovascular events.

The "keep your waist to less than half your height" message was deliberately designed to be memorable and universally applicable — no age or sex adjustments needed, no complex calculations, no charts to look up.

💡 Simple rule: WHtR < 0.5 means your waist is less than half your height — this is the target for lowest metabolic risk at any age, for any ethnicity, for men and women.

How to Lower Your WHtR

Since WHtR is driven by waist circumference, the goal is to reduce abdominal fat. The most effective strategies are:

For a step-by-step guide, see our article on how to lose belly fat.

WHtR vs BMI vs Waist Circumference

Each metric has strengths and weaknesses. Using them together gives the most complete picture:

References:
Ashwell M, Gunn P, Gibson S. Waist-to-height ratio is a better screening tool than waist circumference and BMI for adult cardiometabolic risk factors: systematic review and meta-analysis. Obesity Reviews. 2012;13(3):275–286.
Browning LM, Hsieh SD, Ashwell M. A systematic review of waist-to-height ratio as a screening tool for the prediction of cardiovascular disease and diabetes. Nutrition Research Reviews. 2010;23(2):247–269.
World Health Organization. Waist Circumference and Waist-Hip Ratio: Report of a WHO Expert Consultation. Geneva, 2011.

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