Accurate Height Calculator
Predict adult height for children using proven methods
Quick Start Guide
- Hey, curious about your kid’s future height? Pick the Parents’ Heights tab for unborn babies or infants – just enter mom and dad’s measurements.
- For kids over 4, switch to Child Data. Add their age, current size, weight, and parents’ heights for the sharpest prediction.
- Need something fast? Try Quick Method with your little one’s height from toddler years.
- Results show in inches or cm – mix units if you like, it auto-converts. Expect a range since growth varies.
Growth Factors Chat
Picture this: genetics set about 60-80% of height, like passing down eye color. But daily eats, sleep, and play fill the rest. A kid hitting growth spurts around puberty might add inches quick – girls peak near 15, boys around 18.
Ever notice tall parents with average kids? That’s regression to the mean pulling things closer to typical heights. Nutrition wins big too – fresh foods fuel bones better than junk.
Average Heights by Age
| Age (years) | Boys (inches) | Girls (inches) |
|---|---|---|
| 4 | 40.5 | 39.5 |
| 8 | 50.5 | 50 |
| 12 | 58.5 | 59.5 |
| 16 | 68 | 64 |
| 20 | 69.5 | 64.5 |
Common Questions
Method Breakdown
Parents’ Heights uses mid-parental formula: average parents’ heights, tweak +2.5 inches for boys, -2.5 for girls. Simple but wide range.
Child Data taps Khamis-Roche: factors age, weight, parents. Best for 4-9 year olds, error under 2.3 inches.
Quick doubles toddler height – rough guide from early charts.
References
- Khamis HJ, Roche AF. Predicting adult stature without using skeletal age: the Khamis-Roche method. Pediatrics. 1994;94(4):504-7.
- Greulich WW, Pyle SI. Radiographic atlas of skeletal development of the hand and wrist. 2nd ed. Stanford University Press; 1959.
- CDC Growth Charts, United States. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; 2000.
- WHO Child Growth Standards. World Health Organization; 2006.