What is Body Fat Percentage?
The proportion of your bodyweight that's fat versus everything else (muscle, bone, organs, water).
Body fat percentage is the share of your total bodyweight that's fat tissue, versus the share that's everything else — muscle, bone, organs, water, connective tissue. It's a much better proxy for health and fitness than the scale or BMI alone. Healthy ranges run roughly 10 to 20 percent for men and 18 to 28 percent for women, with athletic populations lower and average sedentary adults higher.
Quick definition
Two people can weigh the same and look completely different. Body fat percentage is what tells you why.
How it actually works
Measurement methods vary in accuracy. DEXA scans (dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry) are the clinical gold standard — about ±1 to 2 percent accuracy. Hydrostatic weighing and BodPod sit close behind. Bioimpedance scales (the home ones) are convenient but vary widely with hydration — ±3 to 8 percent error is common. Skin-fold calipers are surprisingly accurate in trained hands and useful for tracking change over time even if the absolute number is rough.
The relationship between body fat percentage and health risk isn't linear. Risk for cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, and metabolic syndrome accelerates above about 25 percent in men and 32 percent in women — but where the fat is matters as much as how much. Visceral fat drives most of the metabolic risk.
For weight loss, body fat percentage matters more than the scale. Losing 20 lbs of fat while gaining 5 lbs of muscle shows up as a 15-lb scale loss but a body composition transformation that dwarfs what the scale tells you.
Why it matters for weight loss
Track body fat percentage through the diet, not just scale weight. Take a baseline measurement (DEXA at a clinic, calipers, or even a careful waist tape) and re-measure every 8 to 12 weeks. The trend matters more than the absolute number.
Common misconceptions
The biggest myth: lower is always better. Below 8 percent for men and 15 percent for women, hormonal disruption, immune suppression, and bone density loss become real risks. Athletes hold low body fat for competition and rarely sustain it year-round.
The second myth: BMI and body fat are the same. They aren't. A heavily muscled lifter can have a "obese" BMI and 12 percent body fat. BMI is a population statistic. Body fat is an individual one.
Related terms
- Lean Body Mass Everything you weigh that isn't fat — muscle, bone, organs, water. What you protect during a diet.
- Visceral Fat Deep belly fat packed around your organs. Metabolically active. The dangerous kind.
- Subcutaneous Fat The fat directly under your skin — the kind you can pinch. Less metabolically dangerous than visceral.
- Muscle Protein Synthesis · MPS The process of building new muscle tissue. Driven by protein intake and resistance training.
- Sarcopenia Age-related muscle loss. Starts around 30, accelerates after 60. The reason resistance training matters more with age.
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Sources
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Body composition basics — Harvard Health Harvard Health
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