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At 6'5" and 240 lbs, your BMI is 28.5, placing you in the Overweight category. A BMI of 28.5 falls in the overweight range (25 to 29.9). Modest reductions in weight through diet and exercise can meaningfully improve health outcomes.
28.5
BMI
Overweight
Category
156-210
Healthy range (lbs)
-30 lbs
To healthy high
BMI 28.5: Overweight
| BMI | Category | Weight (lbs) | Your Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Below 18.5 | Underweight | Below 156 lbs | - |
| 18.5 to 24.9 | Normal | 156 to 210 lbs | Goal range |
| 25.0 to 29.9 | Overweight | 211 to 252 lbs | You are here |
| 30.0+ | Obese | Above 252 lbs | - |
Your BMI of 28.5 puts you in the Overweight category for someone 6'5".
To reach the upper boundary of the healthy range (210 lbs), you would need to lose approximately 30 lbs. A sustainable rate is 0.5 to 1 lb per week, which means roughly 40 weeks at a moderate calorie deficit.
Keep in mind that BMI does not account for muscle mass. Two people at 6'5" and 240 lbs can have very different body compositions. Body fat percentage is a more precise indicator of health risk.
A healthy weight for someone 6'5" is between 156 and 210 lbs, based on a BMI of 18.5 to 24.9. This range reflects the weights most associated with reduced risk of chronic disease. Individual factors like muscle mass, frame size, and body fat distribution also matter.
A BMI of 28.5 falls in the Overweight range. A BMI of 28.5 falls in the overweight range (25 to 29.9). Modest reductions in weight through diet and exercise can meaningfully improve health outcomes. BMI is a population-level screening tool, not a diagnostic measure. Factors like waist circumference, body fat percentage, blood pressure, and cholesterol provide a more complete picture of metabolic health.
You would need to lose approximately 30 lbs to reach the high end of the healthy range. The healthy BMI range (18.5 to 24.9) corresponds to 156 to 210 lbs for someone 6'5". A sustainable rate of weight loss is 0.5 to 1 lb per week through a calorie deficit of 250 to 500 calories per day.
BMI is a useful screening tool but has real limitations. It does not distinguish between muscle and fat, so muscular athletes often show elevated BMI despite low body fat. It also does not account for where fat is stored. Waist-to-height ratio and body fat percentage are more precise measures. Use BMI as a starting point, not a definitive health verdict.
To reach low end (156 lbs)
84 lbs to lose
To reach high end (210 lbs)
30 lbs to lose
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