Anorexic BMI Thresholds for 5'4", 130 lbs
BMI and anorexia-indicator level for 5'4", 130 lbs, compared against the clinical BMI thresholds. Adjust any field below to try your own numbers.
BMI
22.3
Normal Weight
This BMI is at or above the healthy weight range and shows no BMI-based indicators associated with anorexia.
Example
At 5'4" and 130 lbs, the BMI is 22.3 — classified as normal weight, with an anorexia-indicator level of "None — Healthy or Above Range."
What is an Anorexic BMI Calculator?
An anorexic BMI calculator computes standard Body Mass Index and compares it against the BMI thresholds clinicians reference as one physical indicator when evaluating anorexia nervosa. A BMI below 17.5 in adults is one of the commonly cited physical characteristics used alongside behavioral and psychological criteria in diagnosing anorexia — it is never a diagnosis on its own.
This tool uses the same BMI formula as any standard BMI calculator; what's different is that it shows where your result falls relative to the mild, moderate, severe, and critical BMI ranges sometimes used to describe the medical severity of low body weight associated with anorexia nervosa.
BMI Thresholds at Your Height
Every weight below is computed for your exact height, showing what weight corresponds to each BMI threshold.
| Threshold | BMI | Weight at This Height |
|---|---|---|
| Healthy Range (Min) | 18.5 | 107.8 lbs |
| Mild Indicator | 17.5 | 102.0 lbs |
| Moderate Indicator | 16.0 | 93.2 lbs |
| Severe Indicator | 15.0 | 87.4 lbs |
| Extreme Indicator | 13.5 | 78.7 lbs |
| Critical Threshold | 12.0 | 69.9 lbs |
BMI Formula and Anorexia-Related Thresholds
The healthy BMI range is 18.5–25. Below that, the following ranges are commonly referenced in clinical severity ratings for anorexia nervosa:
- Mild: BMI below 17.5
- Moderate: BMI 16.0–16.99
- Severe: BMI 15.0–15.99
- Extreme: BMI below 15.0
- Critical: BMI below 13.5 carries significant organ-failure risk; below 12.0 is considered life-threatening
Why BMI Alone Cannot Diagnose Anorexia
Anorexia nervosa is a psychiatric diagnosis based on a combination of behavioral criteria (restriction of food intake, intense fear of weight gain), psychological criteria (distorted body image, self-worth tied to weight), and physical indicators — of which low BMI is just one. Someone can have a low BMI for entirely unrelated reasons (illness, high metabolism, naturally lean build, other medical conditions), and conversely, some people with anorexia, particularly during earlier or atypical presentations, maintain a BMI within or even above the "normal" range. Clinicians use structured diagnostic interviews, not a BMI number alone, to make an actual diagnosis.
Health Risks of Very Low BMI
Regardless of cause, a BMI in the severe-to-critical range carries serious physical risk: bone density loss, muscle wasting (including heart muscle), electrolyte imbalances that can trigger dangerous heart arrhythmias, hormonal disruption, impaired immune function, and in the most severe cases, organ failure. These risks compound over time and can become life-threatening well before body weight reaches the "critical" thresholds shown above, which is why any concerning trend in weight loss deserves medical evaluation regardless of the exact BMI number.
Example — Your Current Inputs
At 5'4" and 130 lbs, the BMI is 22.3 — classified as normal weight, with an anorexia-indicator level of "None — Healthy or Above Range."
Additional Example — Reference Comparison
A person who is 5'6" (66 inches) has a healthy-range BMI starting at about 114.5 lbs (BMI 18.5). At the same height, a BMI of 17.5 (the mild indicator threshold) corresponds to about 108.4 lbs — a difference of only about 6 lbs from the bottom of the healthy range, illustrating how a relatively small amount of weight can move someone across a clinically meaningful threshold.
About These Parameters
- Gender
- Shown for demographic context. The BMI formula and the thresholds used here are the same standard adult values for both genders — BMI itself is gender-neutral, though body composition at the same BMI can differ between men and women.
- Age
- Shown for context only. This calculator uses standard adult BMI thresholds; BMI interpretation for children and teens uses age- and gender-specific growth-chart percentiles instead, which this tool does not calculate.
- Height and Weight
- Standard standing height and current body weight, used in the standard BMI formula. The threshold table converts each clinical BMI threshold into a specific weight at your exact height for easier comparison.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does a low BMI mean I have anorexia?
No. A low BMI is only one possible physical indicator among the full diagnostic criteria for anorexia nervosa, which also require specific behavioral and psychological features. Many people have a naturally low BMI due to build, genetics, illness, or other factors unrelated to disordered eating. Only a qualified healthcare provider can make an actual diagnosis.
Can someone have anorexia with a normal or high BMI?
Yes. "Atypical anorexia" describes individuals who meet the behavioral and psychological criteria for anorexia nervosa — restrictive eating, intense fear of weight gain, significant recent weight loss — while remaining within or above the statistically "normal" BMI range. This is a recognized clinical presentation, and BMI alone would miss it entirely.
What should I do if this calculator shows a severe or critical result?
Speak with a doctor as soon as possible. Very low BMI carries real physical health risks regardless of the underlying cause, and a healthcare provider can properly evaluate what's going on and connect you with appropriate care, including eating disorder specialists if relevant. This calculator is an educational tool, not a substitute for medical evaluation.
Is BMI a reliable measure of health in general?
BMI is a simple, widely used screening tool, but it has real limitations — it doesn't distinguish muscle from fat, doesn't account for body frame or fat distribution, and isn't calibrated the same way across all ages, ethnicities, and athletic populations. It's best treated as one data point among several (waist circumference, body fat percentage, overall health markers) rather than a complete picture of health on its own.