Body fat percentage — the proportion of your total weight that's fat tissue — is a much more meaningful health metric than weight or BMI alone. Two people can weigh the same but have completely different body compositions, fitness levels, and health risks.

What's a Healthy Body Fat Percentage?

CategoryMenWomen
Essential fat2–5%10–13%
Athletic6–13%14–20%
Fitness14–17%21–24%
Average18–24%25–31%
Obese25%+32%+

Women naturally carry more essential fat due to hormonal and reproductive functions.

Method 1: US Navy Tape Measure Method

Accurate to within 3–4% and requires only a tape measure. Different formulas for men and women.

For Men (measure neck and abdomen):

Body fat % = 86.010 × log₁₀(abdomen − neck) − 70.041 × log₁₀(height) + 36.76

All measurements in centimetres.

For Women (measure neck, waist, and hips):

Body fat % = 163.205 × log₁₀(waist + hip − neck) − 97.684 × log₁₀(height) − 78.387

How to measure:

  • Neck: Measure at the narrowest point (just below the larynx for men)
  • Abdomen (men): At the navel level, relaxed (not sucked in)
  • Waist (women): At the narrowest point, usually just above the navel
  • Hips (women): At the widest point of the buttocks

Example — Male: Height 180 cm, neck 38 cm, abdomen 90 cm

Body fat % = 86.010 × log₁₀(90 − 38) − 70.041 × log₁₀(180) + 36.76
           = 86.010 × log₁₀(52) − 70.041 × log₁₀(180) + 36.76
           = 86.010 × 1.716 − 70.041 × 2.255 + 36.76
           = 147.6 − 157.9 + 36.76
           ≈ 26.4%

Method 2: Skinfold Calipers

Skinfold calipers pinch and measure subcutaneous fat at specific sites on the body. More time-consuming but can be accurate to 3–4% when done consistently.

Common sites (7-site Jackson-Pollock protocol): Chest, abdomen, thigh, triceps, suprailiac, subscapular, midaxillary

Durnin-Womersley 4-site (bicep, tricep, subscapular, suprailiac): This is commonly used in UK clinical settings.

Skinfold accuracy depends heavily on technique — the same person measuring consistently over time gives better trend data than absolute numbers.

Method 3: BMI-Based Estimate

Body fat can be roughly estimated from BMI:

Deurenberg formula:

Body fat % = (1.20 × BMI) + (0.23 × age) − (10.8 × sex) − 5.4

Where sex = 1 for male, 0 for female.

Example — 35-year-old man, BMI 24:

= (1.20 × 24) + (0.23 × 35) − (10.8 × 1) − 5.4
= 28.8 + 8.05 − 10.8 − 5.4
= 20.65%

Limitations: Less accurate than tape or calipers. Doesn't account for athletic build (high muscle mass).

Method 4: DEXA Scan

Dual-Energy X-ray Absorptiometry (DEXA) is considered the gold standard for body composition measurement.

How it works: A low-dose X-ray machine scans your body and distinguishes between fat, lean mass, and bone mineral density with high precision.

Accuracy: ±1–2% — the most accurate non-laboratory method.

Cost: £50–200 per scan at specialist clinics. Not typically available from a GP.

Best for: Baseline measurement and tracking progress over 3–6 months.

Method 5: Bioelectrical Impedance (BIA)

Scales and handheld devices that send a small electrical current through the body to estimate body fat.

How it works: Fat conducts electricity poorly; muscle (with water) conducts it well. The resistance measured gives an estimate of body fat.

Accuracy: ±3–8% — highly variable depending on hydration, time of day, and device quality.

Best for: Rough tracking of trends, not absolute numbers.

Comparison of Methods

MethodAccuracyCostConvenience
Navy tape±3–4%FreeEasy
Skinfold calipers±3–5%£10–30Moderate
BMI formula±5–7%FreeEasy
BIA scales±3–8%£30–200Very easy
DEXA scan±1–2%£50–200Specialist clinic
Hydrostatic weighing±1–2%£50–100Rare

Which Method Should You Use?

For most people: The Navy method is the best balance of accuracy and convenience. Measure consistently — same time of day, same person measuring.

For athletes: DEXA scan once or twice a year for precise tracking.

For daily tracking: BIA scales are fine for trend data, as long as you weigh under consistent conditions (same time, fasted, after using the bathroom).

Why BMI Misses the Point

Two people with a BMI of 25 can have vastly different body compositions:

  • Person A: BMI 25, body fat 12% — lean and muscular
  • Person B: BMI 25, body fat 28% — "skinny-fat" — low muscle, higher fat

BMI gives no information about this distinction. Body fat percentage does.


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