A 150-Year-Old Formula
Body Mass Index was invented in the 1830s by Belgian mathematician Adolphe Quetelet — as a population-level statistical tool, not a personal health measure. It was never designed to diagnose individual health. Yet today it's the world's most commonly used clinical screening metric. Understanding this gap between original intent and current use is essential for interpreting your BMI correctly.
What BMI Actually Measures
BMI = weight (kg) ÷ height² (m²). That's it. It measures only the ratio of weight to height squared. It does not measure body fat, muscle mass, bone density, age, fitness level, or any metabolic marker. A 25-year-old marathon runner and a 60-year-old sedentary office worker could have identical BMIs while having completely different health profiles.
The Categories and Their Risks
| Category | BMI Range | Associated Risks |
|---|---|---|
| Underweight | Below 18.5 | Nutritional deficiency, bone loss, immune suppression |
| Normal Weight | 18.5 – 24.9 | Lowest risk for most chronic diseases |
| Overweight | 25 – 29.9 | Moderately increased risk; highly context-dependent |
| Obese Class I | 30 – 34.9 | Higher risk of type 2 diabetes, hypertension |
| Obese Class II+ | 35+ | Significantly elevated cardiovascular risk |
The Known Limitations
Muscle vs. Fat
Muscle is denser than fat — it takes up less space but weighs more. A professional athlete with 8% body fat and extensive muscle mass might have a BMI of 27 ("overweight") while actually being in exceptional health. BMI cannot distinguish between tissue types.
Ethnic Variation
The standard thresholds were calibrated on European populations in the mid-20th century. Research consistently shows that people of Asian descent face elevated metabolic risks at lower BMI thresholds. Many health organizations now recommend an "overweight" cutoff of 23 (not 25) for Asian populations.
What to Track Alongside BMI
- Waist circumference — measures visceral fat more directly than BMI
- Blood pressure — an independent cardiovascular risk factor
- Fasting blood glucose — detects insulin resistance early
- Resting heart rate — a reliable proxy for cardiovascular fitness
- BMI trend — monthly tracking matters more than a single snapshot
Is a BMI of 24.9 really meaningfully different from 25.0?
No. These are statistical categories, not biological thresholds. Health risk increases gradually and continuously with BMI — there's no cliff edge at exactly 25. The categories exist for convenience in clinical communication, not because 24.9 and 25.0 represent different biological states.