US Trends

how do you measure waist

To measure your waist accurately, you only need a flexible tape measure and a mirror or someone to help.

Quick Scoop

Measuring your waist tells you both your clothing size and gives a rough clue about health risks linked to belly fat. Most health organisations and clothing brands now use a very similar method , based on the midpoint between your lowest rib and the top of your hip bone.

Step‑by‑step: how do you measure waist

  1. Stand up straight, feet hip‑width apart, stomach relaxed and breathing normally.
  1. Find your “waist point”: feel for your lowest rib and the top of your hip bone on one side, then find the halfway point between them; this is usually around or just above your belly button.
  1. Wrap a soft tape measure around this point, all the way around your body, keeping it level (use a mirror or ask someone to check the back).
  1. Make sure the tape is snug but not digging into your skin; don’t pull your tummy in and don’t hold your breath.
  1. Breathe out normally, then read the number on the tape where it meets; that is your waist measurement.
  1. Repeat once more and, if the two numbers differ, use the average.

Mini notes for clothes vs health

  • For clothing size charts, brands usually ask for your “natural waist”: the smallest part of your midsection, typically just below the rib cage and above the belly button.
  • For health checks (like waist‑to‑height ratio or cardio‑metabolic risk), guidance often uses the midpoint between lowest rib and top of hip bone, which is very close to the belly‑button level.
  • Many health tools suggest your waist should be no more than about half your height (waist‑to‑height ratio of 0.5 or lower) as a simple rule of thumb.

Simple example

Imagine you are 170 cm tall and you measure your waist at that midpoint and get 80 cm. Your waist‑to‑height ratio is 80 ÷ 170 ≈ 0.47, which many tools class as within a healthier range (under 0.5).

TL;DR: Find the midpoint between your lowest rib and hip bone, wrap a level, snug (not tight) tape around it, breathe out normally, and read the number—that’s how you measure your waist.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.