Every benchmark cites a public source — explore the Benchmarks hub.
HomeHealth › Body Fat Calculator

Body Fat Calculator

Estimate your body fat percentage using the U.S. Navy tape method. Enter your measurements in inches. This is a general estimate, not a medical or clinical body-composition test.

in
in
in
in
Body fat
Category

Where you land

How you compare

💪 Shop body tape measures & scales

Check it out

About the Navy method

The U.S. Navy formula estimates body fat from a few tape measurements: neck and waist for everyone, plus hips for women, all relative to height. It's free and surprisingly consistent, but it's an estimate — not as precise as a DEXA scan or calipers in trained hands. Measure snugly and consistently, and treat results as a trend rather than an exact figure. This isn't medical advice.

How it’s calculated

U.S. Navy method: body fat % from a logarithmic formula using neck, waist (and hips for women) relative to height.

Results update as you type and are estimates, not professional advice — verify important decisions with a qualified professional.

Sources: U.S. Navy body fat method.

Worked example

A man 70 inches tall with a 34-inch waist and 15-inch neck estimates about 17.5% body fat (fitness range).

Common mistakes

  • Measuring the waist or neck in the wrong place.
  • Treating an estimate like a clinical body-composition test.

Where it is used

  • Tracking body-fat trends over time.
  • Setting a fitness target alongside weight.

Frequently asked questions

How accurate is it?

Reasonably good for tracking trends, typically within a few percent. Clinical methods like DEXA are more precise.

Where do I measure?

Waist at the navel, neck just below the larynx, hips at the widest point. Keep the tape level and snug, not tight.

Do women need the hip measurement?

Yes — the female formula requires neck, waist, and hip. Men use neck and waist only.