Your weight doesn't tell the full story. Body fat percentage reveals the ratio of fat to lean muscle — the number that truly matters for health and performance.
US Navy circumference method
Calculated using the US Navy circumference method (Hodgdon & Beckett, 1984). Typical accuracy is ±3–4% versus DEXA scanning. Accuracy depends heavily on careful, consistent measurement technique.
Body fat percentage is the proportion of your total body weight made up of fat tissue. Unlike BMI, it distinguishes between fat mass and lean mass — muscles, bones, organs, and water — making it a more accurate measure of body composition.
Two people with identical weight and height can have very different body compositions. A trained athlete may have 12% body fat while a sedentary person of the same weight carries 28%. Only body fat percentage captures this difference.
This calculator uses the US Navy circumference method (Hodgdon & Beckett, 1984). For men: height, waist, and neck measurements are used. For women: hip circumference is added. The formula applies logarithms to estimate fat volume relative to total body volume — no calipers or lab equipment required.
Accuracy depends heavily on measurement technique. Use a flexible, non-stretch tape measure and follow these guidelines carefully.
Measure horizontally at navel level. Keep the tape parallel to the floor and do not compress the skin or suck in your stomach.
Measure just below the larynx (Adam's apple), with the tape perpendicular to the neck's long axis. Look straight ahead while measuring.
Measure at the widest point of your hips and buttocks, keeping the tape horizontal. Take each measurement twice and average the results.