U.S. Navy circumference method
Enter each measurement in metric or imperial units. Fields stay in sync. Hip is required for female estimates and ignored for male estimates.
How tape-measure body-fat estimates work
Circumference formulas, not DEXA
This calculator estimates body-fat percentage from tape measurements using methods such as the U.S. Navy circumference equations. Results are screening estimates for general interest. Laboratory methods (DEXA, hydrostatic weighing) and quality callipers will disagree — sometimes by several percentage points.
Worked example
Two people with the same weight and height can return different Navy-method estimates if waist and neck differ. That is the point of circumference methods: they try to capture distribution, imperfectly.
Common mistakes
- Measuring over thick clothing.
- Pulling the tape tight enough to dent soft tissue.
- Treating a single reading as a medical diagnosis.
FAQs
- How does this relate to BMI?
- BMI ignores fat vs muscle; this estimate tries (crudely) to infer fatness. See BMI & BRI.
- Guide?
- Body-fat estimates explained.
When this page helps
Use it when you want a transparent, browser-side calculation with the assumptions spelled out — then verify anything high-stakes against primary docs, a professional, or your own measurements. The related links below point to sibling tools and longer guides when you need more context.
Accuracy notes
Results depend entirely on the numbers you enter and the simplified model described above. Device clocks, tape measurements, market rates, and recipe conventions can all differ from a perfect textbook case. If an output looks surprising, re-check units first, then re-read the formula section.
Related: BMI & BRI, Waist-to-Height, Ideal Weight.
Last updated: July 2026