Overview
BMI (Body Mass Index)
Body Mass Index is a simple calculation using your height and weight to categorize you as underweight, normal weight, overweight, or obese. It's a quick screening tool but doesn't directly measure body fat.
Try Calculator →Body Fat Percentage
Body fat percentage measures the proportion of your total body weight that comes from fat tissue versus lean mass (muscle, bone, organs, water). It provides a more accurate picture of body composition and health.
Try Calculator →Feature Comparison
| Feature | BMI (Body Mass Index) | Body Fat Percentage |
|---|---|---|
| What It Measures | Weight relative to height | Actual fat tissue vs. lean mass |
| Measurement Method | Simple calculation (weight/height²) | Calipers, DEXA scan, BIA scale, or Navy method |
| Accuracy for Athletes | Poor (may classify muscular people as overweight) | High (accounts for muscle mass) |
| Accuracy for Elderly | Poor (may not detect muscle loss) | Better (detects changes in composition) |
| Cost to Measure | Free | Varies (free to expensive) |
| Health Correlation | General population health indicator | Direct link to body composition health |
| Ease of Tracking | Very easy (scale and height) | Moderate (requires tools/method) |
BMI (Body Mass Index)
Pros
- Quick and easy to calculate
- Free and accessible to everyone
- Useful for population-level studies
- Generally correlates with health for average people
- Standard medical screening tool
- Helps track weight trends over time
- Wide acceptance in healthcare
Cons
- Does not distinguish muscle from fat
- Can misclassify athletic individuals
- Does not account for body shape
- Not accurate for elderly (sarcopenia)
- Ignores fat distribution
- Can be misleading for various body types
- Not a direct measure of health
Body Fat Percentage
Pros
- Measures actual body composition
- Accounts for muscle mass differences
- More accurate health indicator
- Works well for athletes
- Detects age-related muscle loss
- Accounts for fat distribution
- Better for tracking fitness progress
- Personalized to your body type
Cons
- Harder to measure accurately
- Measurement tools can be expensive
- Methods can vary in accuracy
- Not as widely used in healthcare
- Requires more effort to track
- No single standard measurement method
- Can be less convenient
Which Should You Choose?
Choose BMI (Body Mass Index) if...
BMI is useful as a quick, free screening tool for general health assessment, especially if you're an average person without significant muscle mass. It's helpful for tracking weight trends and is standard in medical settings. However, use it as a starting point rather than a definitive health measure.
Choose Body Fat Percentage if...
Body fat percentage is better if you're athletic, lift weights, want to accurately track fitness progress, are concerned about age-related muscle loss, or want a more precise picture of your health. It's especially valuable if your BMI classifies you as overweight despite being fit and muscular.