Child growthFull growth chart

Did you know?

Children don't grow at steady rates — they grow in spurts. A toddler might not change height for weeks, then grow half an inch overnight. Growth charts show percentiles, not ideals: a child at the 25th percentile isn't "below average" in any meaningful sense. They're simply shorter than 75% of children their age. The pattern over time matters more than any single measurement.

BMI compared to same age and sex

BMI 14.9
BMI percentile · Normal weight · Z-score -0.60
Percentiles for this child (by age)
Weight-for-age
15.9th
Height-for-age
59.5th
BMI-for-age
27.4th
Weight-for-height
97.2th

Good to know

Growth charts describe populations, not individuals. The CDC charts are based on how American children grew in the 1970s-90s. The WHO charts describe how children grow under optimal conditions. Neither is a prescription for your child. A healthy child might track along the 10th percentile their whole life — that's their normal.

Crossing percentile lines matters more than the percentile itself. A child who has always been at the 20th percentile is likely fine. A child who drops from the 60th to the 20th percentile in six months needs evaluation. Sudden changes in either direction warrant attention; stable tracking at almost any percentile is usually reassuring.

Premature babies need adjusted calculations. For babies born early, use corrected age (age from due date, not birth date) until age 2. A baby born 2 months early is compared to babies 2 months younger. Your pediatrician makes this adjustment automatically.

More facts

Disclaimers & sources

WHO Child Growth Standards. Screening only — not a diagnosis. Consult a healthcare provider.

Frequently asked questions