BMI for 100 kg and 200 cm

Instant answer: A person who weighs 100 kg (220 lbs) and is 200 cm (6'7") tall has a BMI of 25.0, classified as overweight.

Someone 200 cm tall has a healthy weight window of 74–99.6 kg, derived from the standard adult BMI range.

What does a BMI of 25.0 mean?

At this BMI level, fitness and waist circumference are arguably more predictive of metabolic health than the BMI number itself.

BMI is a screening tool, not a diagnosis. Two people at 100 kg and 200 cm can have very different body compositions and very different health profiles. Use BMI alongside waist circumference, fitness level, and routine bloodwork.

Healthy weight range for 200 cm

The BMI-based healthy weight range for 200 cm tall adults is 74–99.6 kg (163–220 lbs).

WeightIn lbsBMICategory
85 kg187 lbs21.3Normal weight
90 kg198 lbs22.5Normal weight
95 kg209 lbs23.8Normal weight
100 kg (this page)220 lbs25.0Overweight
105 kg231 lbs26.3Overweight
110 kg243 lbs27.5Overweight
115 kg254 lbs28.8Overweight

Practical next steps

  1. Focus on consistency over intensity — small daily wins beat aggressive short-term plans.
  2. Track food intake for 1–2 weeks to identify high-calorie patterns.
  3. Add strength training to protect lean mass during weight loss.
  4. Re-measure waist every month; expect change there before scale weight.

Frequently asked questions

What is the BMI for 100 kg and 200 cm?

Using the formula BMI = weight (kg) ÷ height (m)², a person who weighs 100 kg and is 200 cm tall has a BMI of 25.0. This places them in the overweight category as defined by the World Health Organization.

Is 100 kg a healthy weight at 200 cm?

The healthy weight range for 200 cm is 74–99.6 kg, corresponding to a BMI of 18.5–24.9. 100 kg gives a BMI of 25.0, which is overweight.

How was this BMI calculated?

BMI = 100 ÷ (2.00 × 2.00) = 100 ÷ 4.0000 = 25.0.

What should I do if my BMI is 25.0?

Focus on consistency over intensity — small daily wins beat aggressive short-term plans. Track food intake for 1–2 weeks to identify high-calorie patterns.

Sources & references