Waist to Hip Ratio Explained: What Your Number Really Means

By the Super Simple Digital Tools Team · Updated June 2026 · Calculators

Two people can weigh the same and share an identical BMI yet face very different health risks, and waist to hip ratio is one of the simplest ways to see why. The measurement compares how much fat you carry around your abdomen against how much sits around your hips and buttocks. Fat stored deep in the belly, surrounding the organs, behaves differently from fat on the hips and thighs, and decades of population research link a higher proportion of abdominal fat to greater risk of heart disease, stroke, and type 2 diabetes.

The calculation could not be more direct: divide your waist measurement by your hip measurement. A 32-inch waist and a 40-inch hip produce a ratio of 0.80. Because both numbers are in the same unit, the result is a pure proportion with no units attached, which is why a centimetre measurement and an inch measurement of the same body give the same answer. The World Health Organization reads that proportion against thresholds of 0.90 for men and 0.85 for women, above which abdominal fat is considered elevated.

Good measurement is where most errors creep in. Stand relaxed, breathe out normally, and resist the urge to pull your stomach in, which artificially lowers the waist reading. Find the narrowest part of your torso rather than measuring exactly at the navel, since waistlines differ. For the hips, locate the widest point of the buttocks and check in a mirror that the tape is level front to back. Taking each measurement twice and averaging smooths out the small slips that change a ratio at the second decimal place.

Once you have a number, treat the risk band as a starting point rather than a verdict. An apple-shaped result with more fat around the middle is the pattern most associated with metabolic problems, while a pear-shaped distribution carries comparatively lower risk. Research following thousands of adults has found that a high waist to hip ratio is associated with greater risk of early death even among people whose BMI looks moderate, which is exactly why the measurement adds value alongside the scale.

Finally, know the boundaries of the tool. Waist to hip ratio is not designed for children or for use during pregnancy, when hip and waist proportions change for reasons unrelated to health risk, and it becomes less reliable for people who are very short or who have a very high BMI. It is a fast, free screening number you can track over weeks and months, but a rising or already elevated reading is a reason to talk with a doctor, not to self-diagnose.

Quick tips

  • Measure first thing in the morning before eating, when bloating is minimal, so repeat checks over time stay comparable.
  • Use a soft tailor's tape rather than a stiff metal one, and keep it snug against the skin without denting it.
  • Record the raw waist and hip numbers, not just the ratio, so you can tell whether a change came from the waist or the hips.
  • Re-check every few weeks instead of daily, since meaningful changes in fat distribution happen slowly.

The Waist to Hip Ratio Calculator is free to use as often as you like — no signup required.