BMI 계산기
체질량지수 및 건강 체중 범위 계산
사용 방법
- Select your preferred unit system: 미터법 (kg, cm) or 야드파운드법 (lb, ft/in).
- Enter your height and weight.
- Enter your age and sex for a more accurate healthy weight range.
- BMI가 자동으로 계산되어 분류 및 건강 범위와 함께 표시됩니다.
Note: BMI is a screening tool, not a diagnostic tool. Consult a healthcare provider for a complete assessment.
공식
야드파운드법: BMI = 703 × 몸무게(lb) / 키²(in)
BMI란 무엇이며 왜 중요한가요?
Body Mass Index (BMI) is a numerical value derived from your height and weight that serves as a widely adopted screening metric for weight-related health risks. Developed in the early 19th century by Belgian mathematician Adolphe Quetelet and later popularized in clinical medicine, BMI has become the global standard for classifying adults into weight categories—underweight, healthy weight, overweight, and obese. Today, it is endorsed by the World Health Organization (WHO) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) as an affordable, non-invasive first-line assessment tool.
While BMI does not directly measure body fat percentage, research published in journals such as the International Journal of Obesity consistently shows that BMI is moderately correlated with more precise measures like dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DEXA) scans. For most adults, a BMI between 18.5 and 24.9 kg/m² is considered the healthy range associated with the lowest risk of weight-related disease.
BMI는 어떻게 계산되나요? 공식 뒤에 숨은 과학
The BMI formula is elegantly simple: your body weight in kilograms divided by the square of your height in metres. In imperial units, the same result is achieved by multiplying 703 by your weight in pounds divided by height in inches squared. Despite its simplicity, the formula encapsulates a useful relationship between body size and health risk for population-level screening.
Imperial: BMI = 703 × weight (lb) ÷ height² (in)
Beyond raw BMI, our calculator also computes BMI 프라임—the ratio of your BMI to the upper limit of normal (25 kg/m²). A BMI Prime below 1.0 indicates you are within or below the healthy range, while values above 1.0 signal overweight or obesity. The Wikipedia article on BMI Prime provides an in-depth discussion of this metric and its cross-population utility. The calculator additionally shows the 퍼전달 지수 (kg/m³), which scales more appropriately for very tall or very short individuals.
BMI 카테고리 설명: 저체중부터 심각한 비만까지
The WHO classifies BMI into six distinct categories for adults aged 20 and older. Each bracket carries different health implications and recommended clinical actions:
Children & Teens (ages 2–20): BMI is interpreted differently. The CDC uses age- and sex-specific percentiles rather than fixed cutoffs. Healthy weight falls between the 5th and 85th percentile; a BMI at or above the 95th percentile is classified as obese. See the CDC's Child & Teen BMI calculator for age-adjusted results.
비정상적인 BMI로 인한 건강 위험: 연구 결과
⚠️ Risks of High BMI (Overweight & Obesity)
A BMI above 25 kg/m² has been linked in meta-analyses to a significantly elevated risk of developing serious chronic conditions. The Wikipedia overview of obesity health effects summarises decades of epidemiological evidence:
- Type 2 diabetes — up to 7× higher lifetime risk
- Coronary artery disease & stroke
- Hypertension (high blood pressure)
- Obstructive sleep apnea
- Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD)
- Certain cancers (breast, colon, endometrial, kidney)
- Osteoarthritis of the knee and hip
- Reduced psychological wellbeing & quality of life
❄️ 낮은 BMI(저체중)의 위험
Being underweight (BMI < 18.5) carries its own set of serious health consequences, often overlooked compared to obesity-related discourse:
- Malnutrition and micronutrient deficiencies
- Anemia and impaired immune function
- Osteoporosis and increased fracture risk
- Delayed wound healing
- Fertility issues and menstrual irregularities
- Muscle wasting (sarcopenia)
- Greater surgical complication rates
- All-cause mortality risk comparable to Class I obesity
BMI 제한: 이 수치가 말해주지 못하는 것
BMI is a population-level screening metric, not a personalised diagnostic tool. Understanding its limitations helps you put your result in the right context:
For a deeper dive into the science and controversy surrounding BMI, the Wikipedia section on BMI limitations and this New England Journal of Medicine perspective on BMI and obesity offer balanced, evidence-based perspectives.
건강한 BMI에 도달하고 유지하는 방법
Whether your goal is to lower an elevated BMI or build mass from an underweight baseline, sustainable lifestyle changes consistently outperform short-term diets. Key evidence-based strategies include:
Focus on whole foods, adequate protein (1.6–2.2 g/kg body weight for muscle retention), and a moderate caloric deficit or surplus. Use our 칼로리 계산기 to find your target intake.
The WHO recommends at least 150–300 minutes of moderate-intensity aerobic activity per week, plus muscle-strengthening exercises on 2+ days. Check our 하루 총 소비 칼로리 계산기 to plan your energy expenditure.
Chronic sleep deprivation elevates hunger hormones (ghrelin) and suppresses satiety signals (leptin), making weight management significantly harder. Aim for 7–9 hours per night.
Sustained high cortisol promotes fat accumulation—particularly visceral abdominal fat—independent of caloric intake. Mindfulness, yoga, and adequate social support all help.
Combining BMI tracking with complementary tools gives a fuller picture of your health trajectory. We recommend also monitoring your Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR), body fat percentage, and ideal weight range to set realistic, personalised goals.
BMI에 관해 자주 묻는 질문
BMI 25가 위험한가요?
A BMI of exactly 25 kg/m² sits at the boundary between "healthy weight" and "overweight" categories. By itself, this value is not dangerous, but it signals the point at which statistical health risk begins to increase. Context matters enormously: waist circumference, blood pressure, blood glucose, and cholesterol levels paint a more complete picture than BMI alone.
여성과 남성의 건강한 BMI는 무엇입니까?
The WHO applies the same BMI cutoffs (18.5–24.9 for healthy weight) to both sexes. However, at any given BMI, women typically carry 5–10% more body fat than men due to hormonal and reproductive factors. This is physiologically normal and does not inherently imply elevated health risk.
건강한 BMI를 갖고 있으면서도 건강에 해로울 수 있나요?
Yes. The concept of "metabolically obese, normal weight" (MONW) describes individuals with a normal BMI who carry excess visceral fat and have metabolic risk factors such as insulin resistance, dyslipidemia, or hypertension. Conversely, some individuals with a BMI just above 25 are metabolically healthy. This underscores the importance of comprehensive health assessments beyond BMI alone.
BMI를 얼마나 자주 확인해야 합니까?
For most adults, checking BMI every 3–6 months is sufficient to track meaningful trends. Daily fluctuations in body weight (due to hydration, meals, clothing) can mask true changes, so tracking weekly averages is more informative than single readings.
BMI Prime은 무엇이며 왜 유용한가요?
BMI Prime is your BMI divided by 25 (the upper limit of normal). A value of 1.00 means you are exactly at the boundary; values below 1.00 indicate healthy or underweight status, while values above 1.00 indicate overweight or obesity. BMI Prime is particularly useful for communicating deviation from the healthy range in a simple, percentage-based format.
Related Health Calculators
Tracking your BMI alongside other health metrics provides a comprehensive view of your overall wellbeing. Explore our suite of free health tools:
References & Further Reading
- World Health Organization. Obesity and Overweight Fact Sheet. WHO, 2024.
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. About Body Mass Index. CDC, 2024.
- Wikipedia contributors. Body Mass Index. Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia.
- Wikipedia contributors. Obesity — Health Effects and Epidemiology. Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia.
- Flegal KM, et al. Association of All-Cause Mortality with Overweight and Obesity Using Standard BMI Categories. JAMA, 2013.
- Nuttall FQ. Body Mass Index: Obesity, BMI, and Health — A Critical Review. Nutrition Today, 2015.
- WHO Expert Consultation. Appropriate body-mass index for Asian populations. The Lancet, 2004.