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What Is BMI? Understanding Body Mass Index, Ranges, and What It Means for Your Health

What Is BMI? Understanding Body Mass Index, Ranges, and What It Means for Your Health

Body Mass Index (BMI) is one of the most widely used screening tools in preventive medicine. Doctors, insurance companies, and health programmes use it as a quick initial assessment of whether a person’s weight is appropriate for their height. While it has real value as a population-level screening tool, it also has important limitations that every individual should understand before interpreting their own number.

How Is BMI Calculated?

BMI = Weight (kg) / Height² (m²)

Example: A person weighing 72 kg with a height of 1.70 m:
BMI = 72 / (1.70 × 1.70) = 72 / 2.89 = 24.9

Calculate yours instantly with our free BMI Calculator.

Standard WHO BMI Categories

BMI Range Category Health Risk
Below 18.5 Underweight Nutritional deficiency, bone density loss, immune weakness
18.5–24.9 Normal Weight Lowest risk range for most populations
25.0–29.9 Overweight Increased risk of cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes
30.0–34.9 Obese Class I High risk — lifestyle intervention recommended
35.0–39.9 Obese Class II Very high risk — medical evaluation essential
40.0+ Obese Class III (Morbid) Extremely high risk — immediate medical attention

Asian BMI Thresholds: Why Indians Need Different Cutoffs

Research consistently shows that South Asians, including Indians, develop metabolic complications (insulin resistance, type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease) at lower BMI values than Caucasian populations. The Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) and WHO’s Asia-Pacific guidelines recommend modified cutoffs for Indian adults:

BMI Range Category (Asian/Indian Guidelines)
Below 18.5 Underweight
18.5–22.9 Normal
23.0–24.9 Overweight (risk increases)
25.0–29.9 Obese Class I
30.0+ Obese Class II

Under these guidelines, an Indian adult with a BMI of 24 (normal by WHO standards) is already in the overweight category and at elevated metabolic risk. This is a critical distinction that many Indians are unaware of.

Important Limitations of BMI

BMI is a population-level screening tool, not a diagnostic instrument. It has well-documented limitations for individual assessment:

  • Cannot distinguish fat from muscle: A muscular athlete may have a BMI of 27 (overweight category) despite having very low body fat. A sedentary person with the same BMI may have high fat and low muscle — the opposite health profile.
  • Cannot identify fat distribution: Visceral fat (belly fat around organs) is far more metabolically dangerous than subcutaneous fat. Two people with the same BMI can have very different cardiovascular risk depending on where their fat is stored. Waist circumference is a better predictor of metabolic risk.
  • Not gender-adjusted: Women naturally carry a higher percentage of body fat than men at the same BMI, yet the same cutoffs apply to both.
  • Not age-adjusted: Older adults naturally lose muscle mass; a BMI of 22 at age 70 may reflect higher fat percentage than the same BMI at age 30.

Better Complementary Metrics

Use these alongside BMI for a more complete health picture:

  • Waist circumference: Risk increases above 80 cm (women) / 90 cm (men) for Indians
  • Waist-to-hip ratio: Above 0.85 (women) / 0.90 (men) indicates abdominal obesity
  • Body fat percentage: Measured by DEXA scan, bioelectrical impedance, or skinfold calipers; more accurate than BMI for individuals. Calculate with our Body Fat Calculator.
  • Fasting blood glucose and lipid profile: These functional metabolic markers reveal actual disease risk, not just weight status

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Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Consult a qualified healthcare professional for personalised health assessment and guidance.

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