Last updated: April 2026 • 13 min read
Body Mass Index works differently for children and teenagers compared to adults. While the BMI formula (weight ÷ height²) is the same, interpretation is completely different because children's body composition changes dramatically as they grow and develop.
During childhood and adolescence:
Key Difference: Adult BMI uses fixed categories (18.5-24.9 = normal weight). Child BMI uses percentiles that compare a child to other children of the same age and sex. A BMI of 21 might be perfectly healthy for one age but concerning for another.
Because of these developmental differences, children's BMI is expressed as a percentile relative to other children of the same age and sex, rather than as a fixed number range.
A BMI percentile indicates where a child's BMI falls relative to other children of the same age and sex in a reference population. These percentiles are based on growth chart data from the CDC (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention).
If a child is at the 75th percentile, it means their BMI is higher than 75% of children their age and sex, and lower than 25%. This doesn't mean they're unhealthy — it simply shows where they fall on the distribution.
May indicate nutritional deficiency or health issue
Normal, healthy range for most children
Above healthy range, lifestyle changes may help
Significantly elevated health risk, medical attention advised
An 8-year-old girl with a BMI of 18:
This example illustrates why using raw BMI numbers without age-specific percentiles is meaningless for children.
The CDC defines four weight status categories for children and teens aged 2-19:
| Category | Percentile Range | Implications |
|---|---|---|
| Underweight | Below 5th percentile | May need evaluation for nutritional status, eating patterns, or underlying health conditions |
| Healthy Weight | 5th to 84th percentile | Appropriate weight for height and age; maintain healthy habits |
| Overweight | 85th to 94th percentile | Higher risk of becoming obese; focus on healthy eating and activity |
| Obese | 95th percentile or above | Increased risk of health problems; medical evaluation and intervention recommended |
Additionally, children at or above the 99th percentile are sometimes categorized as having "severe obesity," indicating the highest level of health risk.
Growth charts are essential tools for tracking children's development over time. Here's how healthcare providers use them:
Use the standard BMI formula: weight (kg) ÷ height (m)² or [weight (lb) ÷ height (in)²] × 703
Select the correct growth chart based on the child's sex. The CDC provides separate charts for boys and girls aged 2-20 years.
Find the child's age on the horizontal axis and BMI on the vertical axis. Mark where these intersect.
The curved lines on the chart represent different percentiles. Find which percentile curve the child's point is closest to.
More important than any single measurement is tracking the trend over time. Is the child following a consistent growth curve, or are there significant changes?
Important: Growth charts are screening tools, not diagnostic tools. A BMI percentile outside the "healthy" range warrants further evaluation by a healthcare provider but doesn't automatically indicate a problem.
It's normal for children to appear "chubby" at this age. BMI typically peaks around age 1 and then decreases until around age 6 (called adiposity rebound). Concerning patterns include:
This is when childhood obesity often begins to develop. BMI should remain relatively stable on growth charts (following the same percentile line). Watch for:
Puberty causes significant body composition changes:
BMI has several important limitations when applied to children:
Athletic children with significant muscle mass may have higher BMI without excess body fat. This is particularly relevant for teen athletes.
During rapid height growth, BMI may temporarily appear lower. When weight catches up, BMI increases. Single measurements can be misleading.
Early or late puberty affects body composition. A 12-year-old who has completed puberty has very different body composition than one who hasn't started yet, even with similar height and weight.
Growth chart percentiles are based on population averages and may not account for normal variation between different ethnic groups or individual body types.
BMI indicates weight status, not health. A child at the 90th percentile might be healthy with good fitness, while a child at the 60th percentile might have poor metabolic health. Other factors matter.
Parents and caregivers should consider consulting a healthcare provider when:
BMI crosses two or more percentile lines upward or downward in a short time, indicating rapid weight gain or loss.
BMI is consistently below the 5th percentile (underweight) or above the 95th percentile (obese).
Child stops following their established growth curve and begins tracking on a significantly different line.
Weight changes are accompanied by other symptoms: fatigue, mood changes, sleep problems, or physical discomfort.
Signs of disordered eating: extreme restriction, binge eating, excessive exercise, or preoccupation with weight.
Children at high BMI percentiles may be at increased risk for:
Whether a child is at a healthy weight or needs to improve their weight status, these principles support long-term health:
Emphasize healthy behaviors rather than numbers on a scale. The goal is raising healthy children who have a positive relationship with food and their bodies.
Children can't control the food environment — parents do. Making changes as a family is more effective and less stigmatizing than singling out one child:
Poor sleep is linked to childhood obesity. Children need:
Unless medically supervised, putting children on restrictive diets can:
For overweight children, the goal is often to maintain current weight while they grow taller, allowing BMI to normalize naturally.
Discussions about weight with children require care to avoid harm:
Adult BMI categories (18.5-24.9 = normal weight) begin at age 20. From ages 2-19, BMI percentiles should be used. There's no abrupt transition — a 19-year-old's percentile and adult category often align closely.
Athletic children may have higher BMI due to muscle mass. If your child is physically active, eats well, has good energy, and their healthcare provider isn't concerned, a percentile in the 85th-94th range may be perfectly healthy. Context matters more than the number alone.
Generally, no. Traditional "dieting" is not appropriate for growing children. Instead, focus on improving nutrition quality and increasing activity for the whole family. For most overweight children, maintaining weight while they grow taller allows BMI to normalize. Severely obese children may need medical intervention, but this should be supervised by healthcare professionals.
Not necessarily. Some children are naturally small. The key questions are: Is the child following a consistent growth pattern? Are they meeting developmental milestones? Do they have energy and appear healthy? If yes, they may simply be on the smaller end of normal. Consistent deviation from their own growth curve or other symptoms warrants evaluation.
The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends annual BMI screening starting at age 2. If there are concerns (very high or low percentiles, rapid changes), more frequent monitoring may be appropriate. Regular well-child visits typically include growth monitoring.
Need to calculate your own BMI? Use our BMI calculator for adults to find your Body Mass Index.
Calculate Adult BMI →