Waist-to-Height Ratio Health Guide
Quick Answer
Waist-to-Height Ratio (WHtR) = Waist circumference ÷ Height (both in the same unit: cm or inches)
Healthy range for all adults: below 0.5, "Keep your waist less than half your height."
- Example: Waist 84 cm, Height 175 cm. WHtR = 84 ÷ 175 = 0.48 (Healthy)
- Example: Waist 96 cm, Height 170 cm. WHtR = 96 ÷ 170 = 0.565 (High risk)
Waist-to-height ratio (WHtR) is one of the most reliable simple measurements for assessing cardiometabolic health risk. Research shows it outperforms BMI at predicting type 2 diabetes, heart disease and metabolic syndrome because it directly measures abdominal fat. Use the BMI Calculator on CalConvs alongside WHtR for a complete picture.
How to Measure Your Waist Correctly
- Stand upright and breathe out normally. Do not hold your breath in.
- Find the midpoint between your lowest rib and the top of your hip bone (iliac crest). This is usually just above the navel for most adults.
- Wrap a soft tape measure around your waist at this midpoint. Keep it level and snug but not tight.
- Read the measurement. Take it twice and average the results.
WHtR Classification Table
| WHtR | Assessment |
|---|---|
| Below 0.40 | Underweight or very lean. Possible nutritional concerns for some people. |
| 0.40 to 0.49 | Healthy range. Considered low cardiometabolic risk. |
| 0.50 to 0.59 | Overweight range. Moderately elevated risk of type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease. |
| 0.60 and above | High risk range. Significantly elevated risk of metabolic syndrome, heart disease and diabetes. |
WHtR vs BMI
- BMI: Uses height and weight only. Cannot distinguish between muscle and fat. Does not indicate where fat is stored.
- Waist circumference alone: Useful but does not account for height. A 90 cm waist is more serious in a short person than a tall one.
- WHtR: Accounts for height. Directly measures abdominal fat distribution. Better predictor of metabolic risk. Works equally well across ethnic groups.
WHtR Thresholds by Ethnicity
| Population | Healthy Threshold | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| European adults | Below 0.50 | Standard 0.5 threshold applies |
| South Asian adults (India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh) | Below 0.47 to 0.48 | Metabolic risk starts earlier at lower WHtR |
| East Asian adults (China, Japan, South Korea) | Below 0.47 to 0.49 | Similar to South Asian thresholds |
| Children (6 to 18 years) | Below 0.50 | WHtR is validated for children |
How to Reduce Your WHtR
- Set a sustainable calorie deficit using the Calorie Calculator and TDEE Calculator.
- Include 150 minutes of moderate aerobic activity per week: brisk walking, cycling, swimming.
- Add 2 to 3 sessions of resistance training per week: this reduces visceral fat specifically.
- Reduce added sugar and refined carbohydrates: these are most directly linked to visceral fat accumulation.
- Prioritise adequate sleep: less than 6 hours per night increases cortisol and promotes abdominal fat storage.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is waist-to-height ratio better than BMI?
Research suggests WHtR is a slightly better predictor of cardiometabolic risk than BMI, particularly in diverse populations. Using both together gives the most complete picture. A person with a healthy BMI but a WHtR above 0.50 may still have elevated metabolic risk.
What is a healthy waist size for a woman?
The WHtR ratio is more meaningful than a fixed waist size because it accounts for height. For a woman of 165 cm, a waist below 82.5 cm (0.5 × 165) is the general guideline. WHO waist circumference thresholds: women under 80 cm as a general population guide.
What is a healthy waist size for a man?
For a man of 175 cm, a waist below 87.5 cm (0.5 × 175) is the WHtR guideline. WHO waist circumference thresholds: men under 94 cm as a general guide for European adults. For South Asian men, a threshold of 90 cm is often used.
Related Tools
- BMI Calculator: use alongside WHtR for a complete assessment
- Body Fat Calculator: direct body composition estimate
- Ideal Weight Calculator: healthy weight range for your height
