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Pregnancy

Baby Weight & Length Percentile Chart

Enter your baby weight and length to see their growth percentile compared to WHO standards. Birth to 24 months.

📅 Updated April 2026 Formula verified 📖 4 min read 🆓 Free · No sign-up

Understanding Growth Percentiles

Growth percentiles compare your baby to other babies of the same age and gender using WHO (World Health Organization) growth standards. The 50th percentile means your baby is right at the average. The 75th percentile means 75% of babies that age weigh less. Any percentile between the 5th and 95th is considered normal. What matters most is not the specific percentile but whether your baby is following their own growth curve consistently over time.

When to Be Concerned

Falling off their curve: If a baby drops from the 60th to the 20th percentile over 2-3 visits, that warrants investigation — even though 20th percentile is technically normal. Below 3rd or above 97th: These extremes may need evaluation but are not automatically concerning — some babies are simply small or large. Most important: Consistent growth along ANY curve is healthy. A baby consistently at the 15th percentile is thriving; a baby dropping from the 80th to the 15th needs attention.

⚡ CalcWolf Insight

Baby growth percentile calculator has exceptional engagement — new parents check obsessively, often after every pediatrician visit. Users average 4+ minutes on page and frequently explore related baby and pregnancy calculators. The parenting audience is highly valuable for baby product advertisers ($5-12 CPC).

Frequently asked questions
What is a normal weight for a 6-month-old?
Average 6-month-old weight: boys ~17.2 lbs, girls ~16.1 lbs. The normal range (5th-95th percentile) is approximately 14-21 lbs. Breastfed babies may be slightly leaner than formula-fed babies at this age, but both patterns are healthy. Your pediatrician tracks your baby specific growth curve, which matters more than any single measurement.
Should I worry if my baby is in the 10th percentile?
Not necessarily. Any percentile between the 3rd and 97th is within normal limits. What matters is consistency — a baby who has always tracked along the 10th percentile is growing perfectly normally. Concern arises when a baby crosses percentile lines (e.g., dropping from 50th to 10th over several months), which could indicate a feeding or health issue worth discussing with your pediatrician.
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Kevin Glover
Founder, CalcWolf · GLVTS · Blickr
All formulas sourced from primary references — IRS publications, peer-reviewed research, and official standards. Results are tested against independent reference calculators before publishing. Rates and brackets updated when official sources change. Editorial policy →
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