The formula
BMI is calculated by dividing body weight in kilograms by height in meters squared.
Explore practical BMI tools for adults, men, women, and older adults. This English homepage uses a fresh layout, different copy, and a new visual style while keeping the same overall purpose: helping visitors reach the right tool quickly.
Pick the experience that best matches your audience. The cards below keep the original site structure in mind, but the presentation is intentionally redesigned with visible descriptions instead of hover-only calls to action.
A practical starting point for general BMI checks. Ideal for visitors who want the classic body mass index calculation first.
Open calculator →
A dedicated entry point for male visitors who prefer profile-focused guidance before checking the result.
Go to men’s calculator →
A clear route for users who want a women-focused page with matching visuals and navigation.
Go to women’s calculator →
Useful for pages that separate senior-oriented BMI interpretation from the general adult calculator.
View senior calculator →
Designed as an easy-access option for older female visitors who want a page tailored to their profile.
View senior women’s calculator →If you are not sure which page fits best, start with the standard BMI calculator. It works well as the main entry point and keeps the experience simple for first-time visitors.
These cards lead to table-based pages for readers who want to compare BMI ranges and categories instead of calculating immediately. The section mirrors the original content purpose, but with a new hierarchy, tone, and visual treatment.
Use this page to review common BMI classification ranges in a more traditional table format.
Open table →
A direct path for male readers who want to scan BMI categories visually before using a calculator.
View men’s table →
A women-focused table page for quick reading and side-by-side category comparison.
View women’s table →
Structured for visitors looking for senior-specific BMI ranges presented in a reference-first format.
Open senior table →
Helpful for users who want a quick table reference aligned with senior women’s navigation.
Open senior women’s table →This closing block replaces the original “how it works” layout with cleaner fact cards. It still delivers the same core topic, but in a more editorial and compact presentation.
BMI is calculated by dividing body weight in kilograms by height in meters squared.
It is commonly used as a quick screening metric to organize weight status into broad categories.
Some websites separate guidance by audience to make interpretation easier and navigation more intuitive.
BMI is a screening tool, not a full health assessment. Clinical context always matters.