Height Calculator

Predict a child's adult height using the mid-parental method. Enter parents' heights to estimate how tall your child will be.

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Predicted Adult Height
Height in Centimeters
Range Low (−2 in)
Range High (+2 in)
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Predicted Height
In Centimeters
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High Estimate
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Predicted Adult Height

Mid-Parental Method
Khamis-Roche Estimate
Predicted Height (cm)
Range Low (−2 in)
Range High (+2 in)

Child's Current Stats

Child's Current BMI
BMI Category (age-adjusted)
Current Height in cm
Current Height in meters

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter both parents' heights in feet and inches.
  2. Select the child's sex.
  3. The calculator instantly shows the predicted adult height using the mid-parental method, plus a ±2 inch range.

Formula

Boys: (Mom + Dad) / 2 + 2.5 inches
Girls: (Mom + Dad) / 2 − 2.5 inches

Range: Predicted ± 2 inches (covers ~95% of outcomes)

Example

Example: Mom is 5'4" (64"), Dad is 5'10" (70"). For a boy: (64+70)/2 + 2.5 = 69.5" = 5'9.5". Range: 5'7.5" to 5'11.5".

Frequently Asked Questions

  • The mid-parental formula is accurate to about ±2 inches for most children. Genetics account for roughly 80% of adult height, with the remaining 20% influenced by nutrition, sleep, and health during childhood.
  • For boys: (mother's height + father's height) / 2 + 2.5 inches. For girls: (mother's height + father's height) / 2 − 2.5 inches. The ±2 inch range captures ~95% of children.
  • Girls typically stop growing around age 14-16, about 2 years after their first period. Boys usually stop growing around age 16-18 after voice changes and other puberty milestones.
  • Yes. Adequate protein, calcium, vitamin D, and zinc are critical during childhood and adolescence. Chronic malnutrition can reduce final height by several inches below genetic potential.
  • Yes, approximately. A child at the 50th percentile at age 5 tends to stay near the 50th percentile into adulthood. Growth charts and bone age X-rays can refine predictions further.

Related Calculators

Sources & References (5)
  1. Tanner JM & Whitehouse RH — Clinical longitudinal standards for height, weight, height velocity, weight velocity, and stages of puberty. Arch Dis Child. 1976;51(3):170-179 — Archives of Disease in Childhood
  2. Luo ZC et al. — Target height as predicted by parental heights in a population-based study. Pediatr Res. 1998;44(4):563-571 — Pediatric Research
  3. Silventoinen K — Determinants of variation in adult body height. J Biosoc Sci. 2003;35(2):263-285 — Journal of Biosocial Science
  4. WHO — Growth reference data for 5-19 years — World Health Organization
  5. CDC — Child & Teen BMI Calculator Background: Growth Charts — CDC