How to Use This Chart
Body fat percentage is the share of your total weight that is fat tissue — the single best everyday indicator of body composition, and far more informative than scale weight or BMI alone. The silhouettes below are stylized references: find the shape that most resembles your midsection relaxed (not flexed, not sucked in), and you have a working estimate within a few points.
Two people at the same percentage can look different — muscle mass sharpens definition and fat distribution is partly genetic — so treat this as a starting point and confirm with the Navy-method calculator below.
Men
- Visible abs, vascularity
- Clear muscle separation
- Hard to maintain year-round
- Ab outline, athletic look
- Definition when flexed
- Sustainable and healthy
- Little visible definition
- Soft midsection
- Upper end of healthy
- Waist wider than hips
- No definition visible
- Health risks rise from here
Women
- Defined muscle, athletic
- Near the essential-fat floor
- Typical of competitors
- Toned with slight softness
- Visible shape, light definition
- Very fit, sustainable
- Typical healthy appearance
- Softness throughout
- Within the healthy range
- Rounder waist and hips
- No visible definition
- Health risks rise from here
Stop Guessing — Measure It
The visual estimate gets you close; a tape measure gets you consistent. The U.S. Navy circumference method needs only your height, waist and neck (plus hips for women) and tracks change reliably over time — accurate to within roughly 3–4% of a DEXA scan.2
Our body fat calculator runs the formula for you in metric or imperial and also estimates your fat mass and lean mass. Muscular build distorting your BMI? Cross-check with the Smart BMI calculator, which separates fat mass from muscle.
Frequently Asked Questions
How accurately can I estimate body fat visually?
Comparing against reference levels typically lands within 3–5 percentage points. Muscle mass, fat distribution and lighting all shift appearance — use the chart to orient, then measure to confirm.
Why are women's healthy ranges higher than men's?
Essential fat is roughly 10–13% for women versus 2–5% for men, due to hormone production and reproductive physiology. All female categories sit about 8–10 points higher as a result.
What body fat percentage should I aim for?
For most men 12–20%, for most women 20–30% — the ranges where health, appearance and sustainability meet. Contest-lean levels are temporary by design and unhealthy to hold year-round.
What's the best way to measure at home?
The Navy tape method wins on consistency: cheap, repeatable, and within ~3–4% of DEXA. Smart scales are convenient but readings swing with hydration; if you use one, weigh at the same time each day and watch the trend.
References
This guide is built from peer-reviewed research. Key sources:
- Gallagher D, Heymsfield SB, Heo M, et al. Healthy percentage body fat ranges: an approach for developing guidelines based on body mass index. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. 2000;72(3):694–701. PubMed
- Hodgdon JA, Beckett MB. Prediction of percent body fat for U.S. Navy men from body circumferences and height. Naval Health Research Center. 1984; Report No. 84-11. Report