Baby Growth Calculator
Calculate your baby's weight and length percentiles by age using WHO/CDC growth chart approximations. Track growth trends and check developmental milestones.
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Weight Percentile
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Length Percentile —
Interpretation —
Average Weight at This Age —
Extended More scenarios, charts & detailed breakdown ▾
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Weight Percentile
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Length Percentile —
Head Circumference Percentile —
Weight-for-Length Assessment —
Overall Interpretation —
Professional Full parameters & maximum detail ▾
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Percentiles
Weight Percentile —
Length Percentile —
Head Circumference Percentile —
Z-Scores & Composition
Weight-for-Length —
BMI-for-Age (2+ yrs) —
Weight Z-Score —
Length Z-Score —
Clinical Notes
Corrected Age (if preterm) —
Growth Assessment —
How to Use This Calculator
- Enter your baby's age in months, current weight in pounds, length in inches, and sex.
- The calculator estimates weight and length percentiles using WHO/CDC growth chart approximations.
- Use the Growth Tracking tab to enter 3 measurements at different ages and see the trend.
- Use the Milestone Check tab to see expected developmental milestones for any age.
Formula
Percentile estimated from z-score: z = (measured value − age/sex mean) / SD
WHO mean weight (boys, 6 months) ≈ 7.9 kg | WHO mean length (boys, 6 months) ≈ 67.6 cm
Results are approximations — use official WHO/CDC charts for clinical decisions.
WHO mean weight (boys, 6 months) ≈ 7.9 kg | WHO mean length (boys, 6 months) ≈ 67.6 cm
Results are approximations — use official WHO/CDC charts for clinical decisions.
Example
Example: A 6-month-old boy weighing 16 lbs (7.3 kg), length 26 in (66 cm): z-weight ≈ −0.6 (≈ 25th–50th percentile), z-length ≈ −0.6 (≈ 25th–50th percentile) — normal growth.
Frequently Asked Questions
- A percentile shows how your baby compares to other babies of the same age and sex. The 50th percentile is the median. A baby at the 25th percentile weighs more than 25% and less than 75% of babies the same age — all percentiles within the 3rd to 97th range are considered normal.
- No. Any percentile from the 3rd to 97th is within the normal range. What matters most is consistent growth along the same percentile curve over time. A drop across two or more major percentile lines warrants discussion with your pediatrician.
- Pediatricians typically measure growth at well-child visits: 2, 4, 6, 9, 12, 15, 18, 24, and 30 months. Home measurements between visits can help monitor trends.
- Babies born before 37 weeks should have their age corrected until 24 months: corrected age = actual age minus weeks premature. For example, a 6-month-old born 4 weeks early has a corrected age of about 5 months for growth assessment.
Related Calculators
Sources & References (5) ▾
- WHO — WHO Child Growth Standards: Methods and Development (2006) — World Health Organization
- CDC/NCHS — 2000 CDC Growth Charts for the United States: Methods and Development. Vital and Health Statistics Series 11, No. 246 (2002) — CDC / NCHS
- American Academy of Pediatrics — Bright Futures: Recommendations for Preventive Pediatric Health Care (2022) — AAP
- Grummer-Strawn LM et al. — Use of World Health Organization and CDC Growth Charts for Children Aged 0-59 Months in the United States. MMWR 2010;59(RR-9):1-15 — CDC / MMWR
- de Onis M et al. — WHO Child Growth Standards: growth velocity based on weight, length and head circumference. Acta Paediatr. 2009;98(Suppl 460) — Acta Paediatrica / WHO