Calculate child height percentile by age and sex using CDC growth chart data. Includes mid-parental height prediction, z-scores, and growth classification.
The Child Height Percentile Calculator determines where a child's height falls on the CDC 2000 growth charts relative to age- and sex-matched peers. Using the LMS (Lambda-Mu-Sigma) method, it provides precise percentile and z-score calculations for children aged 2-20 years.
Height monitoring is a cornerstone of pediatric well-child care, serving as a sensitive indicator of overall health, nutrition, and potential underlying conditions. Crossing growth percentile channels (moving from one percentile band to another) warrants evaluation more than a single low or high measurement.
The calculator also computes mid-parental height (target adult height based on parental stature), helping clinicians and families understand genetic growth potential and identify children whose growth deviates from their expected trajectory. Check the example with realistic values before reporting. Use the steps shown to verify rounding and units. Cross-check this output using a known reference case. Use the example pattern when troubleshooting unexpected results. Validate that outputs match your chosen standards.
Growth monitoring identifies children who may benefit from early evaluation for growth hormone deficiency, Turner syndrome, celiac disease, inflammatory bowel disease, renal tubular acidosis, and other treatable conditions that present with growth failure.
Providing parents with objective percentile data facilitates meaningful discussions about their child's growth trajectory, expected adult height, and when further evaluation is warranted versus reassurance.
Z-Score = ((Height/Median)^L - 1) / (L × S) [LMS method] Mid-Parental Height (boys) = (Mother height + Father height + 13) / 2 Mid-Parental Height (girls) = (Mother height + Father height − 13) / 2 Target range = MPH ± 8.5 cm
Result: 52nd percentile — Normal
An 8-year-old boy at 128 cm is very close to the median of 127.8 cm, placing him at approximately the 52nd percentile. His mid-parental height target is 178 cm (range 169.5-186.5 cm), suggesting he is tracking appropriately for his genetic potential.
The two most common benign causes of short stature are familial short stature (parents are short, child grows at normal velocity) and constitutional delay of growth and puberty (delayed bone age, late puberty, eventual normal adult height). Pathologic causes include growth hormone deficiency, Turner syndrome (girls), hypothyroidism, celiac disease, and chronic kidney disease.
GH deficiency occurs in approximately 1 in 4,000-10,000 children. Evaluation typically involves GH stimulation testing, IGF-1 levels, bone age X-ray, and brain MRI. Treatment with recombinant GH can significantly improve adult height when started early. Cost and injection burden are important considerations for families.
Average adult height in developed countries has increased approximately 10 cm over the past 150 years due to improved nutrition, healthcare, and sanitation. This secular trend has plateaued in most developed nations but continues in developing countries. Growth charts are periodically updated to reflect current population distributions.
The CDC recommends WHO charts for children under 2 years and CDC 2000 charts for ages 2-20. WHO charts describe how healthy breastfed children should grow; CDC charts describe how US children actually grew. This calculator uses CDC 2000 data for ages 2-20.
Evaluation is warranted for: height below the 3rd percentile, height >2 SD below mid-parental height target, growth velocity below the 25th percentile for age, or crossing down 2 or more major percentile lines. A single measurement below the 5th percentile may be familial.
Mid-parental height provides a rough target range (±8.5 cm encompasses ~95% of offspring). It does not account for epigenetic factors, nutrition, timing of puberty, or secular trends. Bone age X-ray provides more accurate adult height prediction when needed.
Growth velocity varies by age: rapid in infancy (25 cm/year), steady in childhood (5-7 cm/year), and accelerated in puberty (8-14 cm/year). Nutrition, sleep, chronic illness, hormones, and genetics all influence growth rate.
Most children track along a percentile channel after age 2-3. Crossing percentile channels is more concerning than being consistently at a low or high percentile. Normal children may cross channels during catch-up growth (ages 0-2) and pubertal timing differences.
Short stature is a single measurement below a cutoff (e.g., <3rd percentile). Growth failure is declining growth velocity or crossing percentile lines downward over time. Growth failure is more concerning because it implies an active process affecting growth.