Healthy Body Fat Percentage — Charts for Men and Women by Age

Body fat percentage is a more meaningful measure of health and body composition than weight or BMI alone. Two people can weigh exactly the same and have identical BMIs but dramatically different health profiles — if one has 14% body fat and the other has 36%. This guide explains what healthy body fat percentage looks like for men and women at different ages, how to measure it accurately, and what your number actually means for your health.

Body Fat Percentage Chart for Men and Women

The American Council on Exercise (ACE) classification system is one of the most widely referenced frameworks for body fat percentage ranges. These figures apply to adults aged 20–65.

Body Fat Percentage Ranges for Women

CategoryBody Fat %Description
Essential fat10–13%Minimum needed for basic physiological function — not sustainable long-term
Athletic14–20%Typical of female athletes and very active women
Fit21–24%Above average fitness, healthy and sustainable
Acceptable25–31%Within healthy range but toward the higher end
Obese32%+Associated with elevated health risk

Body Fat Percentage Ranges for Men

CategoryBody Fat %Description
Essential fat2–5%Minimum needed for basic physiological function — not sustainable
Athletic6–13%Typical of male athletes and very active men
Fit14–17%Above average fitness, healthy and sustainable
Acceptable18–24%Within healthy range but toward the higher end
Obese25%+Associated with elevated health risk
Why women have higher essential body fat than men: Women require more essential fat to support oestrogen production, reproductive function, and hormonal balance. A woman at 18% body fat is lean but healthy; a man at 18% body fat is at the upper end of the fit range. The comparison is not symmetrical.

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Healthy Body Fat Percentage by Age

Body fat naturally increases with age even when body weight stays the same — because muscle mass gradually declines (sarcopenia) and is partially replaced by fat tissue. The ranges that indicate healthy body composition therefore shift upward with age.

Healthy Body Fat Percentage for Women by Age

AgeUnderfatHealthyOverfatObese
20–39Below 21%21–32%33–38%39%+
40–59Below 23%23–33%34–39%40%+
60–79Below 24%24–35%36–41%42%+

Healthy Body Fat Percentage for Men by Age

AgeUnderfatHealthyOverfatObese
20–39Below 8%8–19%20–24%25%+
40–59Below 11%11–21%22–27%28%+
60–79Below 13%13–24%25–29%30%+

These ranges are based on the American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM) guidelines which account for age-related body composition changes. A 60-year-old woman at 30% body fat may be in the healthy range for her age — even though the same percentage in a 25-year-old woman would indicate she is overfat.

What Is a Healthy Body Fat Percentage?

The straightforward answer: for most adults, the healthy body fat range is 21–32% for women and 8–19% for men (ages 20–39). These ranges are associated with the lowest all-cause mortality risk and the best metabolic health markers in large population studies.

However, body fat percentage alone does not tell the complete health story. Two people at 22% body fat can have very different metabolic health profiles depending on where that fat is distributed. Visceral fat — stored around the abdominal organs — poses significantly greater cardiometabolic risk than subcutaneous fat stored in the hips, thighs, and arms. A person with 22% body fat concentrated in the abdomen is at higher metabolic risk than someone with 26% body fat distributed more across the hips and legs.

Body Fat Percentage vs BMI — Which Is Better?

Body fat percentage is a more precise measure of health-relevant body composition than BMI because it directly quantifies fat mass rather than using weight and height as a proxy. The key limitations of BMI that body fat percentage addresses:

  • Muscular individuals: A highly trained man with 12% body fat and significant muscle mass may have a BMI of 27 — classified as “overweight” despite excellent body composition. Body fat percentage correctly identifies him as lean.
  • Skinny fat: A sedentary person with low muscle mass may have a “normal” BMI of 22 but 30% body fat — classified as normal weight by BMI but metabolically overfat. Body fat percentage reveals this.
  • Age and sex differences: BMI uses the same thresholds for all adults regardless of age or sex. Body fat percentage standards appropriately adjust for both.

The practical limitation of body fat percentage is measurement accuracy — it is significantly harder to measure precisely than weight and height. BMI remains useful as a rapid population-level screening tool precisely because it requires nothing beyond a scale and a measuring tape.

BMI vs Body Fat Percentage — Key Differences

BMIBody Fat %
What it measuresWeight relative to heightFat mass as % of total mass
Ease of measurementVery easy — scale + tapeModerate to difficult
AccuracyModerate (population level)High (when measured correctly)
Accounts for muscleNoYes
Accounts for age/sexNoYes
Best used forQuick health screeningBody composition assessment

How to Measure Body Fat Percentage

Several methods are available at different levels of accuracy and cost. Understanding the trade-offs helps you choose the right method for your situation.

DEXA Scan (Most Accurate)

Dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DEXA) is the gold standard for body composition measurement. It provides precise measurements of fat mass, lean mass, and bone density across different body regions. Typical error: ±1–2%. Available at sports clinics, university labs, and some private health facilities. Cost: £50–150 per scan. Recommended for: anyone wanting a precise baseline measurement and periodic reassessment.

Hydrostatic Weighing

Being weighed underwater uses the principle that fat is less dense than water and lean mass is denser. Highly accurate (±1–3%) when performed correctly. Less widely available than DEXA. Requires full submersion and exhalation of all air — some people find it uncomfortable.

Skinfold Calipers

Measuring skin fold thickness at specific sites (typically 3–7 sites on the body) and using equations to estimate total body fat. Accuracy depends heavily on the skill of the person taking measurements — error ranges from ±3–5% when done well to much higher when done poorly. Widely available in gyms and with trained fitness professionals. Cost: low. Useful for tracking changes over time even if absolute accuracy is limited.

Bioelectrical Impedance Analysis (BIA)

Sending a small electrical current through the body — fat conducts electricity poorly, lean mass conducts it well — to estimate body composition. Found in many consumer body composition scales. Accuracy is significantly affected by hydration status, time of day, and recent food intake. Error can be ±3–8% or more in consumer devices. More accurate devices (InBody, Tanita professional models) reduce this to ±2–4%. Useful for tracking trends rather than absolute values — measure at the same time and under the same conditions each time.

Navy Method (Tape Measurement)

Using waist, neck, and hip measurements (for women) to estimate body fat percentage via a validated formula. Free, requires only a tape measure, and has reasonable accuracy for most people (±3–5%). A practical option for anyone who cannot access clinical measurement.

Practical advice: For most people, the best approach is a DEXA scan once as a baseline, then tracking changes using the same BIA scale or tape measurement method consistently. The method matters less than consistency — use the same measurement tool, same time of day, and same conditions each time to track meaningful trends.

Healthy Body Fat Percentage for Women — What to Know

Women’s body fat physiology differs from men’s in several important ways that affect how body fat percentage should be interpreted:

Essential Fat Is Higher

Women require 10–13% essential body fat to support hormonal function, reproductive health, and basic physiology. Female athletes competing in physique or endurance sports who fall below this level frequently experience amenorrhoea (loss of periods), bone density loss, and immune suppression — collectively called the Female Athlete Triad or Relative Energy Deficiency in Sport (RED-S).

Fat Distribution Changes With Hormones

Oestrogen promotes fat storage in the hips, thighs, and breasts — areas that are metabolically less harmful than abdominal fat. After the menopause, declining oestrogen causes fat to redistribute toward the abdomen, increasing visceral fat and cardiometabolic risk even when total body fat percentage remains similar.

Athletic Ranges Are Different

A female athlete at 18–20% body fat is genuinely lean and well-conditioned. A woman at 25% may be at an excellent healthy weight for her age and frame — these numbers mean something quite different than they would for a man at the same percentages.

Healthy Body Fat Percentage for Men — What to Know

Men’s essential fat requirement is just 2–5% — far lower than women’s — reflecting the absence of reproductive fat requirements. The practical implications:

Visible Abs and Body Fat

Abdominal muscle definition (“visible abs”) typically becomes apparent in men at approximately 10–12% body fat and is clearly defined below 10%. For women, visible abdominal definition typically requires 16–19% body fat due to the higher essential fat requirement. Chasing extremely low body fat for aesthetic reasons — below 8% for men — carries health risks and is not sustainable for most people.

Muscle Mass Affects the Number

Two men at 15% body fat can look very different if one has significantly more muscle mass. A man at 90 kg and 15% body fat carries 13.5 kg of fat. A man at 75 kg and 15% body fat carries 11.25 kg of fat. The percentage is the same but the metabolic and visual outcomes differ because of the lean mass difference.

How to Reduce Body Fat Percentage

Reducing body fat percentage requires either losing fat mass, gaining muscle mass, or ideally both simultaneously (body recomposition). The evidence-based approach:

  • Create a moderate calorie deficit — 300–500 kcal below TDEE produces 0.3–0.5 kg of fat loss per week without significant muscle loss
  • Maintain high protein intake — 1.6–2.2 g/kg preserves muscle mass during a deficit, improving body fat percentage faster than calorie restriction alone
  • Resistance training 2–4 times per week — builds and maintains muscle mass, increasing lean mass and reducing body fat percentage even without significant scale weight change
  • Progressive overload — gradually increasing training stimulus over time is what drives ongoing muscle adaptation
  • Be patient — meaningful improvements in body fat percentage take months, not weeks. Body recomposition (gaining muscle while losing fat simultaneously) is slower than either pure fat loss or pure muscle gain
Avoid crash diets for body fat reduction. Very low calorie diets produce rapid weight loss but a large proportion of that loss is muscle mass, which worsens body fat percentage and lowers metabolic rate. The goal is to lose fat while preserving muscle — which requires a moderate deficit, adequate protein, and resistance training.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is a healthy body fat percentage for a woman?
For women aged 20–39, a healthy body fat percentage is 21–32%. For women aged 40–59, the healthy range shifts to 23–33%, and for women aged 60–79 it is 24–35%. These ranges reflect the higher essential fat requirements of women compared to men and the natural increase in body fat that occurs with age as muscle mass declines. Women below 21% (in their 20s–30s) are considered underfat and may experience hormonal disruption, while women above 32–35% (depending on age) are classified as overfat with associated health risks.
What is a healthy body fat percentage for a man?
For men aged 20–39, a healthy body fat percentage is 8–19%. For men aged 40–59, the healthy range is 11–21%, and for men aged 60–79 it is 13–24%. Men below 8% (in their 20s–30s) may experience hormonal disruption and are at increased risk of bone density loss. Men above 25% (younger adults) are classified as obese by body fat percentage, regardless of their BMI. Men who do regular resistance training often sit toward the lower end of the healthy range with greater lean mass than sedentary peers of the same weight.
How accurate are body fat percentage scales?
Consumer BIA scales (like those from Withings, Garmin, or Fitbit) have accuracy errors of ±3–8% in typical use. Professional BIA devices (InBody, Tanita professional) are more accurate at ±2–4%. The biggest source of error is hydration — measuring after exercise, after a large meal, or when dehydrated can shift readings by 3–5%. For meaningful results, always measure at the same time of day (first thing in the morning before eating or drinking), under the same hydration conditions. Use the readings to track trends over weeks and months rather than treating any individual reading as precise.
Can you have a healthy BMI but too much body fat?
Yes — this is called “normal weight obesity” or being “skinny fat.” It occurs most commonly in sedentary people who have low muscle mass and higher-than-appropriate fat mass, but whose total body weight falls within the normal BMI range. Research suggests that 20–30% of people with a normal BMI (18.5–24.9) have body fat percentages in the obese category. These individuals have significantly higher metabolic risk than their BMI suggests. The solution is resistance training to build muscle and improve body composition without necessarily changing scale weight.
What body fat percentage is needed to see abs?
Visible abdominal definition in men typically becomes apparent at approximately 10–12% body fat, with clearly defined abs below 10%. In women, the higher essential fat requirement means visible abs typically require 16–19% body fat — significantly higher than for men at equivalent visible definition. Individual variation is significant — genetics, muscle development, and fat distribution patterns all affect when abs become visible. Focusing on a specific body fat percentage for aesthetic reasons is less useful than focusing on consistent training and sustainable nutrition that supports long-term body composition improvement.

The Bottom Line

A healthy body fat percentage for most adults is 21–32% for women and 8–19% for men (ages 20–39), with ranges shifting upward appropriately with age. Body fat percentage is a more informative measure of health-relevant body composition than BMI because it directly accounts for fat mass, muscle mass, age, and sex.

The most accurate measurement method available to most people is a DEXA scan for a baseline, with consistent BIA scale or tape measurement for ongoing tracking. What matters most is the trend over months — is your body fat percentage moving in the direction you want — rather than any single precise measurement.

Improving body fat percentage comes down to two levers: reducing fat mass through a moderate calorie deficit and high protein intake, and building lean mass through consistent resistance training. Both together produce faster and more sustainable improvements in body composition than either approach alone.

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ⓘ Medical Disclaimer The information in this article is intended for general educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Results from our calculators are estimates based on population-level formulas and may not reflect your individual circumstances. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before making changes to your diet, exercise routine, or health management plan.

Sources & References

  • American Council on Exercise (ACE). Tools & Calculators / Percent Body Fat. Source of the body-fat percentage classification categories (essential, athletic, fit, acceptable, obese) used in this guide. acefitness.org
  • Mountjoy M, et al. “International Olympic Committee (IOC) Consensus Statement on Relative Energy Deficiency in Sport (RED-S): 2018 Update.” British Journal of Sports Medicine, 2018. Basis for the essential-fat and Female Athlete Triad / RED-S discussion. PubMed: 29771168
  • American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM). Body composition and health guidelines. Basis for the age-adjusted healthy body-fat ranges. acsm.org

Last reviewed against the above sources: June 2026.