Ideal Weight Calculator
Calculate your ideal body weight using multiple medical formulas (Devine, Robinson, Miller, Hamwi). Compare results by height, age, sex, and frame size.
How This Calculator Works
Calculation methodology and assumptions
Uses four established medical formulas based on height over 5 feet: Devine (1974): M=50+2.3×in, F=45.5+2.3×in. Robinson (1983): M=52+1.9×in, F=49+1.7×in. Miller (1983): M=56.2+1.41×in, F=53.1+1.36×in. Hamwi (1964): M=48+2.7×in, F=45.5+2.2×in. Frame size adjusts ±10%. Results converted to pounds.
How to Use This Health & Fitness Calculator
- 1
Enter your physical measurements
Input your height, weight, age, and biological sex. These are used in medically-validated formulas (Mifflin-St Jeor for TDEE, Navy method for body fat, standard BMI formula).
- 2
Select your activity level
Choose from sedentary (desk job, no exercise) to very active (intense exercise 6-7 days/week). This determines your Total Daily Energy Expenditure (TDEE) multiplier.
- 3
Set your goal (if applicable)
For calorie/deficit calculators, choose weight loss, maintenance, or muscle gain. A safe deficit is 500 calories/day (1 lb/week loss). Aggressive deficits above 1,000 cal/day are not recommended.
- 4
Review your results
Results include your BMR (calories burned at complete rest), TDEE (total daily burn), and recommended calorie targets with macronutrient breakdown (protein, carbs, fats).
Example Calculation
Let's calculate daily calorie needs for a typical adult.
A 30-year-old male, 5'10" (178 cm), 185 lbs (84 kg), with moderate activity (exercise 3-4 days/week). Using the Mifflin-St Jeor equation: BMR = 10 × 84 + 6.25 × 178 − 5 × 30 − 5 = 1,802 calories. With a moderate activity multiplier of 1.55, TDEE ≈ 2,793 calories/day.
Result: To maintain weight: ~2,793 cal/day. For safe weight loss (1 lb/week): ~2,293 cal/day. Protein target at 0.8g/lb bodyweight: 148g. These are estimates — individual metabolism varies ±10-15%. Track for 2-3 weeks and adjust based on actual weight changes.
What Affects Your Results
Activity Level
The most impactful variable. The difference between sedentary (1.2x BMR) and very active (1.9x BMR) is 800–1,200 calories/day.
Age
Basal metabolic rate decreases ~2% per decade after age 20 due to muscle loss. Resistance training helps maintain muscle mass and metabolic rate.
Body Composition
Muscle tissue burns ~6 cal/lb/day at rest vs. ~2 cal/lb/day for fat. Two people at the same weight but different muscle mass have different calorie needs.
Sex
Males typically have 5-10% higher BMR than females of the same weight and height due to higher average muscle mass.
Thermic Effect of Food
Digesting protein burns 20-30% of its calories, carbs burn 5-10%, and fats burn 0-3%. High-protein diets slightly boost total calorie expenditure.
Tips for Ideal Weight Residents
- BMI is a screening tool, not a diagnosis. It doesn't distinguish between muscle and fat mass. Athletes often have "overweight" BMIs despite low body fat.
- The Mifflin-St Jeor equation is the most accurate BMR formula for most adults (±10% accuracy). For very muscular or obese individuals, the Katch-McArdle formula using lean body mass is more accurate.
- Protein intake matters more than most people think. Aim for 0.7–1.0g per pound of bodyweight to preserve muscle during weight loss and support recovery from exercise.
- A 500 calorie/day deficit produces ~1 lb/week fat loss. Larger deficits can cause muscle loss, metabolic adaptation, and are harder to sustain long-term.
- Hydration affects weight measurements by 2-4 lbs day-to-day. Weigh yourself at the same time daily (morning, after bathroom) and track the weekly average, not individual readings.
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StateCalc Team
Editorial Team
The StateCalc team builds free financial calculators using data from official government sources including the IRS, U.S. Census Bureau, BLS, and state revenue departments. All formulas are validated by an automated test suite and cross-referenced against published data.
Our editorial standardsFrequently Asked Questions
Which ideal weight formula is most accurate?
No single formula is universally best. The Devine formula is most commonly used in clinical settings. The Robinson formula tends to give slightly higher estimates. Averaging all four provides a reasonable range. Your ideal weight also depends on muscle mass, body composition, and frame size — not just height.
Does frame size matter?
Yes. Small-framed individuals typically weigh 10% less than medium-framed, while large-framed individuals weigh 10% more. Measure your wrist circumference: Men — small (<6.5"), medium (6.5-7.5"), large (>7.5"). Women — small (<6"), medium (6-6.5"), large (>6.5").
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