BMI for 100 kg and 185 cm
Using Indian BMI standards (ICMR / WHO Asia-Pacific guidelines)
Your BMI
29.2
Obese (Class I)
Ideal weight for 185 cm (Indian standard)
63 – 78 kg
Your weight poses health risks. Consult a doctor and consider a structured diet and exercise plan.
Full BMI Calculator - adjust your measurements
Healthy Weight Range
53.5–66.2 kg
Weight to Lose
3.8 kg to Normal
BMI Prime
0.97
| Category | BMI Range (South Asian) |
|---|---|
| Underweight | < 18.5 |
| Normal | 18.5 – 22.9 |
| Overweight | 23 – 27.4 |
| Obese I | 27.5 – 32.4 |
| Obese II+ | ≥ 32.5 |
This calculator is for informational purposes only and is not medical advice. Consult a healthcare professional before making changes to your diet, exercise, or health routine.
What is the BMI for 100 kg and 185 cm?
The BMI for 100 kg weight and 185 cm height is 29.2 — Overweight on the standard WHO scale and Obese (Class I) on the Indian/Asia-Pacific scale. The healthy weight for 185 cm is 63.3–85.2 kg (WHO BMI 18.5–24.9), or the stricter 63–78 kg (Indian BMI 18.5–22.9) recommended by the ICMR.
BMI 29.2 on both classification scales
WHO / International
Asia-Pacific / India (ICMR)
A BMI of 29.2 is classified as Overweight internationally and Obese (Class I) under the lower Indian cutoffs, which flag health risk from a BMI of 23 rather than 25.
Healthy weight range for 185 cm
WHO healthy range (BMI 18.5–24.9)
63.3 – 85.2 kg
international standard
Indian healthy range (BMI 18.5–22.9)
63 – 78 kg
ICMR / Asia-Pacific
Above the healthy range by
14.8 kg over
to reach 85.2 kg
At 100 kg you are about 14.8 kg above the 85.2 kg upper limit of the healthy WHO range for 185 cm.
Reaching a healthy weight from 100 kg
To move from 100 kg into the healthy range you would aim to lose about 14.8 kg (down to 85.2 kg). A safe, sustainable pace is 0.5 kg per week, which needs roughly a 550 kcal/day calorie deficit.
14.8 kg
to lose
~30 weeks
at 0.5 kg/week (≈ 7 months)
~550 kcal
daily deficit
In practice that means eating roughly 2567 kcal/day (men) or 2310 kcal/day (women) from the maintenance estimates below, ideally combining a modest food reduction with more daily movement rather than dieting alone. Losing faster than about 1 kg/week is rarely advisable without medical supervision.
Estimated daily calories at 100 kg / 185 cm
Men (maintenance)
3117 kcal/day
BMR 2011 kcal × 1.55 activity
Women (maintenance)
2860 kcal/day
BMR 1845 kcal × 1.55 activity
These figures use the Mifflin-St Jeor BMR equation and assume age 30 with moderate activity (exercise 3–5 days a week, activity factor 1.55). They are estimates only — your actual needs shift with age, sex, muscle mass, and how active you really are. To lose about 0.5 kg/week, subtract roughly 550 kcal/day from these numbers.
How BMI changes near 100 kg (at 185 cm)
| Weight | BMI | WHO category | Indian category |
|---|---|---|---|
| 90 kg | 26.3 | Overweight | Obese (Class I) |
| 95 kg | 27.8 | Overweight | Obese (Class I) |
| 100 kg (this page) | 29.2 | Overweight | Obese (Class I) |
| 105 kg | 30.7 | Obese | Obese (Class II) |
| 110 kg | 32.1 | Obese | Obese (Class II) |
At 185 cm, every 5 kg changes your BMI by about 1.5 points. Small, steady changes in weight move you gradually between BMI bands — there is no need for drastic swings.
This is general information based on BMI and standard formulas, not medical advice. BMI is a screening tool and does not measure body fat, muscle, or fat distribution. For guidance specific to you, consult a doctor or registered dietitian.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is 100 kg a healthy weight at 185 cm?▾
At 100 kg and 185 cm your BMI is 29.2. On the standard WHO scale that is "Overweight", and on the Asia-Pacific/India scale (ICMR) it is "Obese (Class I)". A weight of 63.3–85.2 kg (WHO BMI 18.5–24.9), or the stricter 63–78 kg by the Indian cutoff, is considered healthy for this height. Your weight poses health risks. Consult a doctor and consider a structured diet and exercise plan.
What is the ideal weight for 185 cm height?▾
For 185 cm, the healthy weight band is 63.3–85.2 kg using the WHO BMI range (18.5–24.9), and 63–78 kg using the Indian/Asia-Pacific range (18.5–22.9). Classic ideal-weight formulas (Hamwi, Devine, Robinson, Miller) average to about 78.2 kg for men and 72.5 kg for women at this height — a single "ideal" figure inside the same range.
How much weight do I need to lose to be normal at 185 cm?▾
To reach the healthy range (up to 85.2 kg for 185 cm), you would aim to lose about 14.8 kg. At a safe 0.5 kg/week that is roughly 30 weeks (about 7 months), supported by an approximate 500–550 kcal/day calorie deficit.
How many calories a day maintain 100 kg at 185 cm?▾
Using the Mifflin-St Jeor equation and assuming age 30 with moderate activity (exercise 3–5 days a week, activity factor 1.55), an estimated maintenance intake at 100 kg / 185 cm is about 3117 kcal/day for men and 2860 kcal/day for women. These are estimates — your real needs vary with age, muscle mass, and how active you are.
Is BMI accurate for muscular or athletic builds?▾
BMI only compares weight to height — it does not distinguish muscle from fat. A muscular or athletic person can show a BMI of 29.2 in the "overweight" band while carrying very little body fat, and a sedentary person at the same BMI can carry much more. For lean, heavily trained bodies, waist circumference, waist-to-height ratio, or a body-fat measurement gives a truer picture than BMI alone.
Why are the Indian (Asian) BMI cutoffs lower than the WHO standard?▾
Indians and other South and East Asians tend to carry more body fat and abdominal (visceral) fat at the same BMI as Western populations, and face heart-disease and type-2-diabetes risk at lower weights. So the ICMR and the WHO Asia-Pacific guidelines lower the thresholds: normal is 18.5–22.9 (not 24.9), the overweight/at-risk band starts at 23, and obesity begins at 25 instead of 30. At BMI 29.2 this is why your Indian category ("Obese (Class I)") can differ from the WHO category ("Overweight").
What health category does BMI 29.2 fall into?▾
A BMI of 29.2 is "Overweight" on the WHO scale and "Obese (Class I)" on the Indian/Asia-Pacific scale. Your weight poses health risks. Consult a doctor and consider a structured diet and exercise plan. BMI is a screening tool, not a diagnosis — use it alongside waist size, blood pressure, blood sugar, and your doctor's advice.