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Ideal Weight Calculator 

🎯 Free Ideal Weight Calculator

Ideal Weight Calculator — Four Formulas, One Real Answer

Most ideal weight tools give you one number from one formula. This calculator runs all four clinically validated formulas — Devine, Robinson, Miller, and Hamwi — alongside your healthy BMI range, and gives you a personalised HealthIQ Weight Score out of 100.

📐 4 Medical Formulas
🎯 HealthIQ Score /100
🦴 Frame Size Adjusted
📏 Metric and Imperial
🔒 Free Forever
🎯 Enter Your Details Frame size adjusts all four formulas by 10% to account for bone density and skeletal structure differences
📋 Basic Stats
years (18-80)
🦴 Frame Size — How Big Are Your Bones?
Small Frame Wrist under 15.2 cm women / 16.5 cm men
Medium Frame Most common — wrist between small and large
Large Frame Wrist over 17 cm women / 19 cm men
Your Ideal Weight Range formula consensus range
HealthIQ Weight Score: /100
📋 Four Formula Comparison
📍 Where You Stand
UnderweightIdeal RangeOverweight
BMI Range
Midpoint Target
Frame Size
4Formulas Used
💡 What This Means For You

Know your ideal weight — now find your calorie plan

Ideal weight gives you the destination. Calorie deficit gives you the route.

The Honest Truth About Ideal Weight Calculators

Here is something most ideal weight calculators will not tell you: the formulas they use were invented to calculate drug dosages. The Devine formula — the one hospitals still use today — was published in 1974 to help doctors dose aminoglycoside antibiotics. It was never designed to be a personal weight target.

That does not make these numbers useless. They give you a reasonable reference range based on your height and sex. But treating them as a precise personal target misses the point. Use the range as context, not a verdict.

Clinical note: Hospitals still use the Devine formula today for ventilator settings and medication dosing — not weight goals. Lung volume scales with lean body mass, and the formula approximates that. This is why the ideal weight your doctor calculates may differ from your personal health goal.

The Four Formulas — What Each One Actually Is

Devine Formula (1974)

The most widely cited. Men: 50 kg plus 2.3 kg per inch over 5 feet. Women: 45.5 kg plus 2.3 kg per inch over 5 feet. Still used in ICUs worldwide for drug and ventilator calculations.

Robinson Formula (1983)

A refinement of Devine. Men: 52 kg plus 1.9 kg per inch over 5 feet. Women: 49 kg plus 1.7 kg per inch over 5 feet. Produces slightly different results at extreme heights.

Miller Formula (1983)

Men: 56.2 kg plus 1.41 kg per inch over 5 feet. Women: 53.1 kg plus 1.36 kg per inch over 5 feet. Consistently the lowest estimates of the four. Some researchers consider it most appropriate for smaller-framed individuals.

Hamwi Formula (1964)

The oldest formula here. Men: 48 kg plus 2.7 kg per inch over 5 feet. Women: 45.5 kg plus 2.2 kg per inch over 5 feet. Widely used in clinical nutrition for hospitalised patient feeding calculations.

Why Frame Size Changes Everything

Two people can be exactly the same height and sex but have meaningfully different bone densities. A large-framed person naturally carries more mass. The standard clinical adjustment is plus or minus 10% for small and large frames — applied to all four formulas here. To measure your frame size: wrap your thumb and index finger around your wrist. If they overlap, small-framed. If they just touch, medium. If they cannot reach, large.

What These Numbers Cannot Tell You

None of these formulas accounts for muscle mass. A 90 kg person at 20% body fat training seriously is in a completely different health position than a 90 kg sedentary person at 35% body fat — even if both get the same output here. For a complete picture, use this alongside the Body Fat Score Calculator and the BMI Calculator.

FormulaDeveloped ForRelative to OthersMost Useful When
DevineDrug dosing (1974)Middle rangeStandard clinical reference
RobinsonClinical refinement (1983)Slightly lowerAverage height adults
MillerInsurance tables (1983)Lowest of fourSmaller-framed individuals
HamwiClinical nutrition (1964)Highest of fourTaller / larger frames
BMI RangeWHO classificationWidest rangeGeneral goal-setting

Frequently Asked Questions

None is definitively most accurate — each was built for different purposes and populations. The Devine formula is the most widely cited in clinical settings. Looking at the range across all four is more informative than picking one. If they cluster around a similar range, that range is meaningful.
Not necessarily. These formulas give a reference point, not a personal prescription. Someone muscular will healthily exceed the outputs. Someone light but carrying dangerous visceral fat may fall within them while still having significant health risks. A better goal is a healthy body fat percentage combined with regular physical activity.
Each was developed using different study populations and methodologies. The spread between them — sometimes 5 kg or more — tells you something about the uncertainty inherent in any formula-based approach. That is why showing all four is more honest than any single number.
Traditional IBW formulas do not include age as a variable. Some research suggests a slightly higher BMI (up to 27) may be acceptable for adults over 65, where a small fat reserve buffers against illness and muscle loss. If you are over 65, the midpoint of your results may be slightly conservative.
A large-framed person has denser, heavier bones. The standard clinical adjustment is plus or minus 10%: small-framed reduces the formula output by 10%, large-framed increases it by 10%. This calculator applies that adjustment automatically once you select your frame size.
Probably not. These formulas do not account for muscle mass. Someone who trains seriously and has significant lean mass will often exceed formula-based ideal weights while being in excellent health. Body fat percentage and cardiovascular fitness are far more meaningful indicators than whether you hit a 1974 drug-dosing formula.
Medical Disclaimer: Ideal weight formulas are estimation tools based on population averages. They do not account for muscle mass, body composition, ethnicity, or health conditions. This calculator is for informational purposes only. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before making weight management decisions.

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Medical Disclaimer: HealthIQ Score tools are for informational purposes only and do not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before making any health decisions.