Determine your body shape type — hourglass, pear, apple, rectangle, or inverted triangle — using bust, waist, and hip measurements with health risk analysis.
The Body Shape Calculator analyzes your measurements to determine which of the five classic body shapes you most closely match: hourglass, pear (triangle), apple (round), rectangle, or inverted triangle. Understanding your body shape is valuable for both health assessment and practical decisions like clothing selection.
Body shape classification goes beyond aesthetics — it's rooted in medical research connecting fat distribution patterns to disease risk. The World Health Organization uses the waist-to-hip ratio (WHR) as a key indicator of cardiovascular and metabolic health. Women with an "apple" shape (WHR above 0.85) face significantly higher risk of heart disease, type 2 diabetes, and stroke compared to women with a "pear" shape who carry weight in the hips and thighs.
This calculator uses a multi-criteria algorithm that evaluates the relationship between your bust, waist, and hip measurements along with waist-to-height ratio to classify your shape with a confidence rating. It also provides WHO health risk assessment, ideal ratio reference tables, and a visual proportions chart. Whether you're shopping for clothes, evaluating your health profile, or simply curious about your body proportions, this tool gives you a comprehensive, data-driven answer.
Knowing your body shape helps in two key areas: health risk awareness and everyday practical decisions. From a health perspective, apple shapes should prioritize cardiovascular screening and waist reduction, while pear shapes can focus on different priorities. Practically, knowing your shape simplifies clothing shopping, helps identify the most flattering styles, and saves time on trial-and-error.
This calculator goes beyond simple shape naming by providing health ratios (WHR, WHtR), a visual proportions chart, and reference tables so you can understand exactly where you fall and what it means for your health.
Body Shape Classification Algorithm: Hourglass: |bust − hips| ≤ 1″ AND waist < 75% of bust Pear: hips − bust ≥ 3.6″ AND waist < 85% of hips Apple: waist ≥ 90% of both bust and hips Rectangle: bust ≈ waist ≈ hips (waist 75–90% of bust) Inverted Triangle: bust − hips ≥ 3.6″ AND waist < 85% of bust WHR = waist / hips | WHtR = waist / height
Result: Hourglass — High Confidence, WHR 0.722, WHtR 0.400
A person with bust and hips both at 36" and a 26" waist has nearly equal bust/hip measurements with a waist under 75% of bust — a classic hourglass silhouette. WHR of 0.72 indicates low cardiovascular risk.
The connection between body shape and disease risk has been extensively studied. A landmark 2007 study published in The Lancet involving over 27,000 participants found that waist-to-hip ratio was a significantly stronger predictor of myocardial infarction (heart attack) than BMI. The INTERHEART study confirmed that central obesity, characteristic of the apple body shape, increases heart attack risk by 2.5–3x compared to peripheral obesity.
The physiological explanation is straightforward: abdominal fat is predominantly visceral fat that surrounds internal organs and is metabolically active. It releases inflammatory cytokines and free fatty acids directly into the portal circulation, affecting liver function, insulin sensitivity, and cholesterol levels. Hip and thigh fat (gynoid distribution) is primarily subcutaneous and does not have the same metabolic effects.
**Hourglass** is characterized by a bust and hips of similar measurements with a significantly smaller waist (typically 25%+ smaller). Only about 8% of women naturally have an hourglass figure, despite it being the most commonly referenced body type. The hourglass shape indicates balanced fat distribution and is generally associated with moderate health risk.
**Pear (Triangle)** features hips notably wider than the bust, with weight carried in the lower body. This is the most common female body type and is associated with the lowest cardiovascular risk due to the protective nature of lower-body subcutaneous fat. Estrogen drives this fat distribution pattern during reproductive years.
**Apple (Round)** is indicated by a waist measurement that approaches or exceeds the bust and hip measurements. Weight is concentrated in the midsection. This shape carries the highest cardiometabolic risk and is more common in post-menopausal women and men.
**Rectangle** describes a relatively straight-up-and-down silhouette where bust, waist, and hips are within a few inches of each other. Health risk depends primarily on total weight and waist circumference rather than fat distribution.
**Inverted Triangle** features a bust and shoulder area notably wider than the hips. This is common in swimmers, rowers, and people who engage in upper-body-dominant sports. Health risk is generally low unless waist circumference is elevated.
Knowing your body shape directly informs clothing decisions. Pear shapes benefit from A-line skirts and structured shoulders; apple shapes from empire waists and V-necklines; hourglass figures from belted styles; rectangles from peplum tops and high-waisted pants; inverted triangles from flared skirts and bootcut jeans. Many online retailers now offer shape-based filtering.
The calculator uses the same measurement relationships that fashion industry stylists and medical researchers use. It provides a "confidence" rating — High means your measurements clearly match one shape, while Moderate means you fall between categories. Most people are not a perfect textbook shape, and that's completely normal.
Yes. Body shape can change with weight gain/loss, aging, pregnancy, hormonal changes (especially menopause), and muscle development. Many women shift from pear to apple shape during menopause as estrogen declines and fat redistributes to the abdomen.
From a cardiovascular perspective, the pear shape is associated with the lowest risk because lower-body fat (hips and thighs) is subcutaneous rather than visceral. Apple shapes carry the highest risk because abdominal fat surrounds internal organs. However, health depends on many factors beyond shape alone.
The waist-to-height ratio (WHtR) divides your waist circumference by your height. A ratio of 0.50 or below is considered healthy for both men and women. Research shows WHtR may be a better predictor of cardiometabolic risk than BMI because it directly measures central adiposity relative to body size.
For bust: measure at the fullest point with a level tape. For hips: measure at the widest point of the buttocks. For waist: measure at the narrowest point, usually just above the navel. For the most accurate results, measure on bare skin or thin undergarments while standing relaxed.
Yes; the shape classifications are measurement-based and work for any sex. However, the health risk thresholds differ: the WHO uses WHR > 0.90 for men (vs > 0.85 for women). Use the sex selector to apply the correct health risk thresholds.