Waist-to-Hip Ratio: A Better Health Metric Than You Think
BMI tells you how much you weigh relative to your height. Waist-to-hip ratio tells you something BMI cannot: where your body stores fat. And as research consistently shows, location matters far more than amount when it comes to metabolic disease risk.
What Is Waist-to-Hip Ratio?
Waist-to-hip ratio (WHR) is calculated by dividing your waist circumference by your hip circumference. It produces a simple number — typically between 0.70 and 1.10 for adults — that reflects the relative distribution of body fat between your midsection and your hips and buttocks.
WHR = Waist circumference ÷ Hip circumference
Both measurements in the same unit (cm or inches).
For example, if your waist measures 80 cm and your hips measure 100 cm: WHR = 80 ÷ 100 = 0.80
WHR has been used in clinical research for decades and endorsed by the World Health Organization as a more sensitive predictor of cardiovascular and metabolic risk than BMI alone.
How to Measure Correctly
Accuracy matters — a few centimetres of measurement error can shift your WHR into a different risk category. Here's how to measure properly:
Measuring Your Waist
Your waist is measured at the narrowest point of your torso — typically about halfway between your lowest rib and the top of your hip bone. For most people, this is approximately 2–3 cm above the navel. Take the measurement after a normal exhale, with the tape snug but not compressed into skin. Don't suck in your stomach. Repeat twice and average the results.
Measuring Your Hips
Your hip circumference is measured at the widest point of your hips and buttocks — typically at or just below the bony prominences of the hip. Stand with feet together, keep the tape horizontal, and again take the average of two measurements.
Both measurements should be taken without clothing, or with only thin, form-fitting clothing that does not add meaningfully to the measurement.
WHO Risk Thresholds
The World Health Organization defines the following WHR thresholds for health risk:
| Risk Level | Men (WHR) | Women (WHR) |
|---|---|---|
| Low risk | ≤ 0.85 | ≤ 0.75 |
| Moderate risk | 0.86–0.90 | 0.76–0.85 |
| High risk | > 0.90 | > 0.85 |
Some organisations use slightly different thresholds. The American Heart Association uses 0.90 for men and 0.80 for women as the cut-points for elevated cardiovascular risk. The key pattern is consistent: women naturally have lower WHRs than men due to differences in fat distribution, and the risk thresholds reflect this.
Check Your BMI Too
Use WHR alongside BMI for a more complete picture of your weight-related health risk.
Apple vs Pear: Why Body Shape Matters
The reason WHR is clinically meaningful lies in the distinction between two fat storage patterns:
Apple-Shaped (Central Obesity)
People who store fat predominantly in the abdomen — around the waist, stomach, and upper body — have an "apple" body shape and higher WHR values. This is more common in men. Central obesity is strongly linked to elevated cardiometabolic risk, including type 2 diabetes, heart disease, hypertension, and metabolic syndrome. The mechanism is largely driven by the nature of the fat that accumulates in this region.
Pear-Shaped (Peripheral Fat Distribution)
People who store fat predominantly in the hips, buttocks, and thighs — with a relatively slimmer waist — have a "pear" shape and lower WHR values. This is more common in women. Peripheral fat distribution carries significantly lower metabolic risk and may even be partially protective against some conditions. A person with a pear shape who is technically overweight by BMI may have materially lower cardiovascular risk than a normal-BMI person with central obesity.
Visceral vs Subcutaneous Fat
The core reason why central fat distribution is so much more dangerous comes down to the type of fat stored in the abdomen: visceral fat.
Visceral fat is stored deep inside the abdominal cavity, surrounding the liver, pancreas, kidneys, and intestines. Unlike subcutaneous fat (the fat you can pinch under your skin), visceral fat is metabolically active in a harmful way — it releases fatty acids and inflammatory cytokines directly into the portal circulation, elevating triglycerides, impairing insulin signalling, and promoting systemic inflammation.
Subcutaneous fat — whether stored in the abdomen, thighs, or elsewhere — is metabolically less active and poses much lower risk. It is the fat you can see and feel, and while large amounts are not desirable, it does not carry the same disease risk as visceral fat.
WHR is a practical proxy for visceral fat accumulation. A high WHR, particularly a high waist circumference, strongly predicts high visceral fat content even when total body weight is normal.
WHR vs Waist Circumference Alone
Some researchers argue that waist circumference alone is an equally or more informative predictor of metabolic risk than WHR. The argument: absolute waist circumference directly reflects the amount of central fat, while the WHR ratio can produce misleading results in people with very wide or narrow hips that don't relate to metabolic risk.
The current consensus is that both measures are useful:
- Waist circumference cut-points: Men > 94 cm (37 in) = increased risk; > 102 cm (40 in) = high risk. Women > 80 cm (31.5 in) = increased risk; > 88 cm (35 in) = high risk.
- WHR adds the distributional perspective — it adjusts for body frame and tells you how your waist compares to your hips, not just an absolute value.
Using both together provides more information than either alone, and both together with BMI provides more still.
How to Improve Your WHR
Visceral fat, fortunately, is among the most responsive types of fat to lifestyle intervention. It tends to be mobilised preferentially during calorie deficit and is highly sensitive to exercise — particularly aerobic exercise.
- Calorie deficit: Even modest reductions in total body fat will reduce visceral fat, often disproportionately to subcutaneous fat.
- Aerobic exercise: Consistent cardio (150+ minutes of moderate activity per week) reduces visceral fat even without significant weight loss.
- Sleep: Chronic sleep deprivation is independently associated with increased visceral fat accumulation, regardless of diet or activity.
- Stress management: Chronically elevated cortisol (the stress hormone) drives visceral fat deposition. Stress reduction practices have measurable effects on central adiposity over time.
- Reduce alcohol: Alcohol preferentially promotes abdominal fat storage and is one of the clearest dietary drivers of high WHR.
The Bottom Line
Waist-to-hip ratio is an underused but highly informative health metric. It captures something that weight and BMI cannot: where your body chooses to store fat. A high WHR — especially above 0.90 in men or 0.85 in women — is a meaningful signal of elevated cardiovascular and metabolic risk that warrants attention regardless of what the scale says. Measure it, understand it, and use it alongside BMI for a more complete picture of your health.
Check Your BMI Too
Pair your WHR with your BMI for a fuller view of weight-related health risk. Fast, free, private.