Ideal Weight for a 6'1" Male
For a 6'1" male, the healthy weight range is 140–189 lbs (BMI 18.5–24.9). The four medical formulas average about 173 lbs (79 kg). Your best target inside that range depends on frame and muscle — use the calculator below to compare all formulas.
How to use this calculator
Height is pre-set to 6'1" and sex to male — adjust either to compare. Optionally enter your current weight to see where you sit against the ideal range.
Understanding ideal weight at 6'1"
"Ideal weight" is a range, not a single number. At 6'1", the four classic formulas span roughly 164 lbs (75 kg) to 183 lbs (83 kg) because each was fitted to a different population. The healthy BMI range is the widest and most clinically used benchmark. None of these adjust for muscle mass or frame.
Frequently asked questions
Every formula's answer for 6'1" (male)
Four widely used medical formulas plus the healthy BMI range, computed for this exact height:
| Formula | Ideal weight (male, 6'1") |
|---|---|
| Devine (1974) | 176 lbs (80 kg) |
| Robinson (1983) | 169 lbs (77 kg) |
| Miller (1983) | 164 lbs (75 kg) |
| Hamwi (1964) | 183 lbs (83 kg) |
| Average of the four | 173 lbs (79 kg) |
| Healthy BMI range (18.5–24.9) | 140 – 189 lbs |
Weight categories at 6'1"
How BMI classifies weights at this height. BMI is a screening tool — muscular builds can read "overweight" while metabolically healthy:
| Weight at 6'1" | BMI category |
|---|---|
| Under 140 lbs | Underweight (BMI below 18.5) |
| 140 – 189 lbs | Healthy weight (BMI 18.5–24.9) |
| 190 – 226 lbs | Overweight (BMI 25–29.9) |
| 227 lbs and above | Obese (BMI 30+) |
How 6'1" compares to nearby heights
Each inch of height shifts the healthy range by roughly 3–4 lbs:
| Height | Healthy range (male) | Formula average |
|---|---|---|
| 5'11" | 133 – 179 lbs | 164 lbs (74 kg) |
| 6'0" | 136 – 184 lbs | 169 lbs (76 kg) |
| 6'2" | 144 – 194 lbs | 178 lbs (81 kg) |
| 6'3" | 148 – 199 lbs | 182 lbs (83 kg) |
Related calculators
Ideal weight for nearby heights
Each page shows the healthy range and all four formulas for that height.