How to Use Waist-to-Hip Ratio Calculator
The Waist-to-Hip Ratio (WHR) calculator determines the ratio of your waist circumference to your hip circumference. This simple metric is a key indicator of where your body stores fat, offering a more nuanced view of health risk than Body Mass Index (BMI) alone.
What It Does
Use the calculator with intent
The Waist-to-Hip Ratio (WHR) calculator determines the ratio of your waist circumference to your hip circumference. This simple metric is a key indicator of where your body stores fat, offering a more nuanced view of health risk than Body Mass Index (BMI) alone.
This guide is for anyone interested in a more comprehensive understanding of their health beyond just weight or BMI. It's particularly useful for fitness enthusiasts tracking progress, individuals concerned about metabolic health, or those advised by healthcare professionals to monitor their fat distribution for conditions like heart disease, type 2 diabetes, or stroke.
Interpreting Results
Start with Ratio. Then compare Risk Category and Risk Description before deciding what changes the answer most.
Input Steps
Field by field
- 1
Waist Cm
Measure waist at the narrowest point (typically 0.5–1 inch above the navel), not the widest. Measure hips at the widest point of the buttocks. Stand relaxed — do not hold breath or tense abdomen.
- 2
Hip Cm
WHR below 0.80 (women) and 0.90 (men) = low cardiovascular risk. WHR above 0.85 (women) and 0.95 (men) = high risk — this threshold is independent of BMI and body weight.
- 3
Gender
WHR is a stronger cardiovascular risk predictor than BMI because it specifically captures central/abdominal fat distribution — the metabolically active, inflammation-promoting fat depot surrounding organs.
- 4
Setup
Abdominal fat responds preferentially early in a calorie deficit. WHR often improves noticeably before overall scale weight moves significantly — track it monthly during a cut.
- 5
Setup
If your WHR falls in high-risk territory, the primary intervention is a sustained calorie deficit (300–500 below TDEE). Spot reduction does not exist — abdominal fat decreases as part of overall fat loss.
Run one base case and one sensitivity case before trusting a single output.
Common Scenarios
Use realistic starting points
Baseline assumptions
Waist Cm
85
Hip Cm
100
Gender
male
Start with ratio and compare it with risk category before changing anything.
Higher Waist Cm
Waist Cm
102
Hip Cm
100
Gender
male
Watch how ratio shifts when waist cm changes while the rest stays steady.
Lower Hip Cm
Waist Cm
85
Hip Cm
85
Gender
male
Watch how ratio shifts when hip cm changes while the rest stays steady.
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FAQ
Questions people ask next
The short answers readers usually want after the first pass.
Sources & References
- Waist-to-hip ratio as a screening tool for cardiovascular risk in adults: a systematic review — Obesity Reviews, US National Library of Medicine
- Waist-Hip Ratio (WHR) and Health Risk — World Health Organization (WHO)