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BMI Calculator ยท 6 min read

BMI vs Body Fat Percentage โ€” Which One Actually Matters?

BMI is easy to calculate. Body fat percentage is more accurate. Here's what each tells you, where BMI breaks down, and when you actually need a DEXA scan.

What Each Measurement Actually Is

BMI is a ratio: weight divided by height squared. It takes 30 seconds to calculate and requires no equipment. It tells you about your body size relative to your height โ€” not what that body is made of.

Body fat percentage is a direct measure of how much of your total weight is fat tissue. A person who is 80 kg with 20% body fat is carrying 16 kg of fat and 64 kg of lean mass (muscle, bone, organs, water). BMI cannot tell you any of this.

Where BMI Goes Wrong

A landmark study by Romero-Corral et al. (2008) tested BMI against DEXA scan measurements in a large US population sample. The findings were stark:

  • BMI misclassified 39% of women and 25% of men who had high body fat as having "normal" weight
  • This phenomenon โ€” normal BMI with excess body fat โ€” is called normal weight obesity
  • These individuals had similar rates of metabolic syndrome as people classified as obese by BMI

The reverse is also true. Highly muscular individuals โ€” athletes, bodybuilders โ€” regularly show BMI values in the overweight or obese range despite very low body fat percentages and excellent metabolic health.

Normal Weight Obesity: A Hidden Risk

Normal weight obesity describes a condition where BMI is within the "normal" range (18.5โ€“24.9) but body fat percentage exceeds healthy levels โ€” typically above 30% for women or 25% for men. These individuals often have:

  • Elevated visceral fat despite a slim appearance
  • Insulin resistance and elevated fasting glucose
  • Dyslipidaemia (abnormal cholesterol profile)
  • Increased cardiovascular risk that a BMI measurement would miss entirely

How to Measure Body Fat Percentage

MethodAccuracyCost
DEXA scanVery high (gold standard)โ‚น3,000โ€“โ‚น8,000 / $50โ€“$150
Hydrostatic weighingHighLab access required
Bioelectrical impedance (BIA scale)Moderateโ‚น2,000โ€“โ‚น10,000
Skinfold calipersModerate (operator-dependent)Low
BMI (proxy only)Low for individualsFree

Healthy Body Fat Ranges

CategoryWomenMen
Athletic14โ€“20%6โ€“13%
Fitness21โ€“24%14โ€“17%
Acceptable25โ€“31%18โ€“24%
Excess32%+25%+

When to Use Each

Use BMI when: you want a quick, free screening check; you are tracking population-level trends; you have no access to body composition measurement.

Use body fat percentage when: you are an athlete or highly muscular; you want accurate risk stratification; you have a normal BMI but metabolic risk factors; you are tracking the effect of a fitness programme.

Calculate your BMI โ†’

References

  1. Romero-Corral, A., et al. (2008). Accuracy of body mass index in diagnosing obesity in the adult general population. International Journal of Obesity, 32(6), 959โ€“966.
  2. Okorodudu, D.O., et al. (2010). Diagnostic performance of body mass index to identify obesity as defined by body adiposity. International Journal of Obesity, 34(5), 791โ€“799.
  3. Flegal, K.M., et al. (2013). Association of all-cause mortality with overweight and obesity using standard body mass index categories. JAMA, 309(1), 71โ€“82.
  4. Prentice, A.M. & Jebb, S.A. (2001). Beyond body mass index. Obesity Reviews, 2(3), 141โ€“147.