BMI Healthy Weight Range
From your height, show the WHO/CDC BMI weight bands — underweight, healthy (18.5–24.9), overweight, and obesity thresholds — so you can see the full target range, not a single number.
Limitations: BMI is a population-level screening metric, NOT a clinical diagnosis. It does not distinguish muscle from fat — athletes and very muscular people often score 'overweight' while being healthy. Older adults, certain ethnic groups (South Asian populations have proposed cutoffs of 23 / 27.5), pregnancy, and amputation all complicate BMI interpretation. Use the range as a conversation-starter with a clinician, not a target on its own.
What to do next: If your weight falls outside the healthy band but you exercise regularly and feel well, ask your clinician for body-composition (DEXA / bioelectrical impedance) before drawing conclusions. If it falls inside but you've gained or lost weight rapidly, the trend matters more than the absolute number.
Educational reference, not medical advice. Consult a licensed healthcare provider before changing diet, exercise, or treatment based on a weight-range estimate.