Waist-to-height ratio is a simple but powerful health indicator that measures how much fat is stored around your abdomen relative to your overall frame. A ratio above 0.5 indicates increased health risk from visceral fat (abdominal fat stored around organs), regardless of overall BMI. Many experts consider it a better predictor of cardiovascular and metabolic risk than weight or BMI alone.
The Formula
Waist-to-Height Ratio = Waist Circumference / Height
Both in the same units (centimeters or inches).
Interpretation
| Ratio | Risk Level |
|---|---|
| < 0.4 | Low risk |
| 0.4–0.5 | Normal risk |
| 0.5–0.6 | Increased risk |
| > 0.6 | High risk |
A ratio below 0.5 is considered healthy across all ages and ethnicities.
Worked Example
A man with waist circumference 92 cm and height 180 cm:
Ratio = 92 / 180 = 0.511
This ratio (0.51) falls into the "increased risk" category, suggesting he should work on reducing abdominal fat despite possibly having a normal BMI.
Why Waist Matters More Than Overall Weight
Abdominal (visceral) fat is metabolically active and releases inflammatory compounds linked to:
- Type 2 diabetes
- Cardiovascular disease
- High blood pressure
- Elevated triglycerides
Someone with normal weight but high abdominal fat is at higher risk than someone with excess weight distributed evenly.
Measuring Waist Circumference Correctly
Measure at the narrowest point between ribs and hips, not over clothing. Stand relaxed (not sucking in), at the level of your natural waist. Some guides recommend measuring at the navel level instead — check which your healthcare provider prefers.
How to Measure Height
Measure without shoes, barefoot, against a wall, with eyes level ahead. Record to nearest 0.5 cm. Slight variations don't matter much — the ratio is a rough indicator, not a precision tool.
Comparison to BMI
A person with BMI 25 (overweight) but waist-to-height ratio 0.48 is at lower risk than someone with BMI 23 but ratio 0.55. This shows why the ratio is sometimes preferred — it identifies problematic fat distribution regardless of overall weight.
Tips
Monitor waist circumference over time rather than weight alone. Even without losing pounds, reducing waist circumference through exercise (especially cardio and strength training) reduces visceral fat and improves metabolic health. Also remember the ratio isn't perfect — genetics, age, and sex affect fat distribution patterns.
Use our Waist-to-Height Risk Calculator to assess your abdominal health risk instantly.