Valid for ages 2–20 years (standing height). For infants, use our baby length tool.
Measure without shoes, standing straight against a wall.
This child height percentile calculator estimates CDC/WHO‑style height‑for‑age percentiles using a standard z‑score approach with smooth medians and spread. Results are for educational and home tracking use only and are not a medical diagnosis.
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How to Use Child Height Percentile Calculator: CDC/WHO Growth Charts
Step 1: Select Sex
Choose Boy or Girl to load the correct CDC/WHO growth curve.
Step 2: Enter Age
Enter your child's age in years and months (e.g., 10 years 6 months). Valid for ages 2–20.
Step 3: Choose Units
Pick centimeters or feet and inches to match your tape measure.
Step 4: Enter Height
Measure without shoes against a wall, then enter the standing height.
Step 5: View Results & Growth Chart
See the percentile, z-score, and your child's position on the visual growth chart with CDC/WHO percentile bands.
Step 6: Save & Track
Tap “Add to History” to track percentile trends and growth velocity over time. Export as CSV or print.
Key Features
- CDC/WHO growth chart references for ages 2–20
- Visual growth curve with percentile bands
- Sex-specific height percentile for boys and girls
- Growth velocity tracking over time
- Feet/inches and centimeter support
- CSV export and print report
Understanding Your Child's Height Percentile Results
How the Height Percentile Formula Works
The child height percentile calculator estimates a z‑score using a standard CDC/WHO growth‑chart approach. We use a smooth median (M) and an age‑dependent spread (S) for boys and girls. The z‑score is computed with a coefficient‑of‑variation model (L≈1): z = (height/M − 1) / S. That z‑score is converted to a height‑for‑age percentile using the normal distribution. Results closely reflect CDC/WHO‑style growth charts and are suitable for home tracking.
Height Percentile Reference Ranges
The median (50th percentile) is the typical height for a given age and sex. Values around the 5th–95th percentiles are generally considered within the usual range. The visual growth chart above shows your child's position relative to these CDC/WHO percentile bands. Clinicians focus on trajectory—a child who stays near the same band over time is usually growing as expected. During puberty, temporary jumps are common as peers mature at different times.
How to Measure Your Child's Height Accurately
Measure barefoot on a flat floor with the back against a wall, heels together, and eyes level (Frankfort plane). Use a book as a headpiece, mark the wall lightly, and read with a metal tape. Take two measurements and average them. Measuring at the same time of day reduces small shifts due to posture and hydration. Recording notes—growth spurts, recent illness, changes in sleep or activity—adds context to the percentile trend and makes your next comparison more meaningful.
Assumptions & Limitations
This child height percentile calculator provides educational estimates and is not a diagnosis. Small technique differences (posture, shoes, time of day) can shift results. If you notice a sustained change across major percentile bands or a prolonged stall in growth velocity, discuss with your clinician. For children under two years, use recumbent length and our infant growth tools.
Complete Guide: Child Height Percentile Calculator: CDC/WHO Growth Charts

Use the child height percentile calculator to see height‑for‑age percentiles and z‑scores from CDC/WHO charts. Enter age, sex, height and track trends.
On this page
Using the child height percentile calculator
Enter your child's age in years and months, select sex, and type a careful standing height measured without shoes. The child height percentile calculator maps your entry to CDC/WHO reference curves and returns the height‑for‑age percentile plus a quick interpretation. You can enter height in centimeters or feet and inches—the calculator converts automatically. Use the same tape, wall, and time of day for repeat measurements to keep your trend trustworthy.
Percentiles are most useful over time. If your child moves from the 40th to the 45th across several visits, that is a gentle upward trend. A single dip after an illness or growth spurt noise is common—watch the growth curve, not one point. Pair percentile tracking with simple checks like nutrition, sleep, and activity; together they give a clearer growth picture. The built‑in CDC/WHO growth chart shows your child's position against standard percentile bands so you can visualize progress at a glance.
Practical ways to use height percentiles
Translate the percentile into easy conversations and small actions. Share the number and the overall curve at checkups ("we're tracking around the 45th"), then ask whether measurement technique, nutrition, sleep, or activity could improve the trend. If a point looks surprising, confirm the next one before worrying—consistent technique often explains sudden bumps. The child height percentile calculator is a guidepost, not a grade.
When to re‑measure your child's height
For routine tracking, many families measure every 2–3 months in toddlers and every 4–6 months in older kids unless a clinician recommends otherwise. Re‑measure sooner if there was illness, a growth spurt, or a technique concern last time. Use the same wall, tape, and time of day to keep noise low—small differences in posture or shoe thickness can shift a percentile point without reflecting true change.
What height percentiles mean
A percentile compares your child’s height with a reference population of children of the same age and sex. If your child’s height is at the 60th percentile, it means roughly 60% of children in the reference group are shorter and 40% are taller. Percentiles are not grades, targets, or diagnoses—they are a way to map where a child sits relative to peers. Clinicians are most interested in the trajectory across time (the growth curve), not a single number.
In practice, staying near the same band (for example, around the 35th–45th percentile over several visits) is usually a reassuring sign that growth is steady. Larger, persistent shifts across major curves—like moving from the 60th to the 15th and remaining there—can prompt a closer look. Even then, context matters: measurement technique, recent illness, sleep, nutrition, activity, and family genetics all influence short‑term changes.
How this calculator estimates CDC/WHO percentiles
Our tool uses a standard z‑score approach consistent with the LMS framework used in growth charts. We derive a smooth median (M) curve and an age‑dependent spread (S) for boys and girls between ages 2 and 20. The z‑score is calculated with a coefficient‑of‑variation model (L≈1) and then converted to a percentile using a normal distribution approximation. This produces realistic estimates suitable for home tracking and education. Exact clinical assessments should use the official growth chart tables provided by the CDC/WHO.
Authoritative references: the U.S. CDC Growth Charts and the WHO Child Growth Standards. Our calculator is designed for clarity and accessibility and should be considered informational, not medical advice.
Understanding CDC Height Charts for Boys and Girls
The CDC height‑for‑age charts are the standard reference used by pediatricians in the United States for children aged 2–20 years. These growth charts were developed from large national surveys and show height percentile bands (5th, 10th, 25th, 50th, 75th, 90th, and 95th) for each age. Our child height percentile calculator uses these CDC/WHO reference values to plot your child's position on the growth curve.
The CDC recommends using WHO growth charts for children under 2 years and CDC charts for ages 2–20. Boys and girls have separate charts because their growth patterns differ—boys tend to be slightly taller on average at most ages, and puberty timing shifts the curves significantly. The visual growth chart in this calculator shows all seven percentile bands so you can see exactly where your child falls relative to age‑matched peers.
Key things to look for on a CDC height chart: a steady trajectory along the same percentile band is typically reassuring. Crossing upward or downward across two or more major percentile lines over time may warrant a conversation with your pediatrician. Remember that the chart shows a snapshot of a reference population—your child's genetics, nutrition, activity level, and overall health all contribute to where they fall on the curve.
How to measure height accurately at home
Small technique differences can shift results by one or two percentile points. For the most consistent readings: remove shoes and bulky hair accessories; have your child stand with heels together, legs straight, and shoulders relaxed; place heels, buttocks, and upper back lightly against a wall; use a rigid, flat object on top of the head and mark the wall; measure the mark to the floor using a metal tape. Take two measurements back‑to‑back and average them. Measure at a similar time of day if you track results monthly.
For children under two years, use recumbent length instead of standing height. If that applies, try our Baby Length Percentile Calculator and our Baby Weight Percentile Calculator designed for 0–24 months.
Growth spurts and timing of puberty
Rapid growth is not evenly distributed across childhood. Most children have steady, modest gains each year with a notable acceleration during puberty. For many girls the growth spurt begins between ages 9 and 11 and peaks around 11–12; for many boys it starts later, between 11 and 13, peaking around 13–14. Genetics and overall health can shift these windows earlier or later. During a spurt, height may jump several centimeters over months; outside of that window, growth is slower and steadier.
Because the timing of puberty varies, a lower percentile at age 11 for a late‑maturing boy might normalize by 14 or 15. Similarly, an early‑maturing girl may sit at a higher percentile temporarily and then settle as peers catch up. This is one reason clinicians watch the curve across time rather than reading too much into a single point.
Interpreting low and high percentiles
Percentiles describe position, not "good" or "bad." A consistently low percentile can be normal in a family of shorter adults; a consistently high percentile can be normal in a family of taller adults. Signals that merit discussion include a sustained drop across major percentile bands, height that is markedly discordant from family patterns, or height far outside typical ranges combined with other findings. Interpretation is nuanced and should consider growth velocity, weight‑for‑age and BMI‑for‑age, family heights, and clinical context.
You can pair this tool with our Child BMI Percentile Calculator to add context from weight‑for‑age and BMI‑for‑age charts. For a one‑stop overview, see the Child Growth Calculator, which brings these measures together for quick comparisons.
Growth velocity: what’s typical by age
Outside of puberty, many school‑age children grow around 5–7 cm per year, though the range is broad. During the growth spurt, annual gains can exceed 8–10 cm. Our calculator shows a simple, educational estimate of recent growth velocity when you save at least two entries in the history. Velocity estimates are sensitive to measurement error and spacing between entries, so treat them as a helpful trend indicator rather than a diagnostic value.
Percentiles vs. predicted adult height
A height percentile at age 8 does not directly forecast adult height. Clinicians sometimes estimate target height using mid‑parental height and bone age, which provides a range rather than a precise number. Percentiles are still useful for tracking near‑term growth health. To experiment with possibilities, you can explore our general Height Calculator, which offers simple projections based on common methods. Projections should always be treated with caution.
When to talk with your clinician
Reach out to your clinician if you notice a persistent drop across major percentile lines, a prolonged stall in growth velocity, or height readings that seem far off from expected family patterns. Bring your measurements (you can download a CSV from this tool) and note timing, technique, illness, and nutrition changes. Your clinician may review official growth charts, ask about family heights, and consider additional evaluation if needed. Most of the time, reassurance and better measurement technique are all that’s required.
Height‑for‑Age Percentile by Age Group
Height‑for‑age percentiles vary significantly across childhood. Toddlers (ages 2–4) typically grow 5–8 cm per year. School‑age children (5–11) grow more steadily at around 5–7 cm per year. During the pubertal growth spurt, annual gains can reach 8–12 cm for girls (typically ages 10–14) and 10–14 cm for boys (typically ages 12–16). The child height percentile calculator accounts for these age‑specific patterns using separate reference curves for each sex.
Parents often wonder what percentile is "normal" for their child's age. The answer is that any percentile can be normal as long as the child is growing consistently along their own curve. A 3‑year‑old at the 20th percentile who stays near the 20th at age 5, 7, and 10 is growing exactly as expected. What matters is the pattern over time, not the number itself. Use this calculator to save measurements at each checkup and watch the trend on the growth chart.
Common measurement mistakes (and how to avoid them)
Frequent pitfalls include: measuring with shoes on; slouching posture; not aligning the headpiece level; using soft tape or carpeted floors; rounding to whole inches; and measuring at very different times of day. For better accuracy: use a wall and rigid right‑angle object, remove shoes, stand tall with heels lightly touching the wall, and measure on a hard floor. If your child is near a growth spurt, repeat measurements monthly rather than weekly to reduce noise from small day‑to‑day variation.
Quick answers to common questions
Does a higher percentile mean healthier? Not necessarily. Healthy growth happens across a wide range of percentiles. What matters is a steady curve over time and results that make sense in the family context.
Can I compare siblings directly? Use age‑ and sex‑matched percentiles rather than raw height. Siblings can differ in timing of puberty and peak growth, making direct comparisons misleading.
Should I measure monthly? For school‑age kids outside a spurt, measuring every 3–6 months is reasonable. During spurts, every 2–3 months can capture change without excessive noise. Always use the same technique.
Can I use feet and inches? Yes—switch units in the calculator to inches if that’s easier. The calculation is the same; results are displayed in your chosen unit.
You might also find these tools helpful:
- Child BMI Percentile Calculator
- Child Growth Calculator
- Height Percentile Calculator (general)
- Baby Length Percentile Calculator (0–24 months)
- Baby Weight Percentile Calculator (0–24 months)

Written by Marko Šinko
Lead Developer
Computer scientist specializing in data processing and validation, ensuring every health calculator delivers accurate, research-based results.
View full profileFrequently Asked Questions
What does the child height percentile calculator show?
It estimates your child's height‑for‑age percentile and z‑score using CDC/WHO‑style growth curves for ages 2–20 years, with a quick range for interpretation.
How accurate are these child height percentiles?
They are educational estimates based on standard z‑score methods with smooth medians. Clinicians use official CDC/WHO tables for clinical decisions.
Does a higher percentile mean healthier growth?
Not by itself. Healthy growth occurs across many percentiles. Clinicians watch the child's trajectory over time and consider family heights and context.
How often should I measure height?
Outside growth spurts, every 3–6 months is typical. During spurts, every 2–3 months can capture change while avoiding day‑to‑day noise.
Can I use inches instead of centimeters?
Yes. Switch the calculator to inches; the computation is the same and results will display in your chosen unit.
What if my child is under two years old?
Use recumbent length and our infant tools: Baby Length Percentile and Baby Weight Percentile calculators (0–24 months). This tool is for standing height ages 2–20.
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