
Estimate your lean body mass using Boer, James, Hume, and body fat methods
Lean Body Mass = total weight minus fat mass. Includes muscle, bone, organs, and water.
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Lean Body Mass (LBM) represents everything in your body except fat muscles, bones, organs, connective tissue, and water. Unlike total body weight, LBM tells you how much metabolically active tissue you carry, making it essential for nutrition planning, fitness tracking, and understanding body composition changes.
This lean body mass calculator applies three validated medical formulas: Boer, James, and Hume. Each was derived from different populations and uses slightly different mathematical approaches, but all estimate your fat-free mass using only height, weight, and gender. When you have body fat percentage data (from calipers, DEXA, or bioelectrical impedance), the calculator also shows the direct subtraction method: total weight minus fat weight.
Fitness enthusiasts use LBM to set protein intake targets (1.6-2.2 grams per kg of LBM), track muscle gain during bulking phases, and assess whether weight changes come from fat or lean tissue. Powered by Toolraxy, this calculator processes your measurements instantly and provides results in both kilograms and pounds with a color-coded gauge showing LBM as a percentage of total weight.
Select your gender — Choose Male or Female (formulas differ by biological sex)
Enter your weight — Type your body weight and select kilograms (kg) or pounds (lbs)
Enter your height — Input your height and choose your unit (cm, inches, meters, or feet)
Add body fat % (optional) — Enter your body fat percentage for the direct calculation method
Click Calculate — Results update automatically as you type, or press the Calculate button
Review all three formulas — Compare Boer, James, and Hume estimates
Check the body fat method — See LBM calculated from your body fat percentage (if entered)
View the average LBM — See the mean of all three formulas with visual gauge
Lean Body Mass calculations estimate fat-free mass using height, weight, and gender. The calculator provides three independent formulas plus an optional direct method when body fat percentage is known.
Weight conversion to kilograms (kg):
Pounds (lbs) to kg: multiply by 0.453592
Kilograms (kg): no conversion needed
Height conversion to centimeters (cm):
Inches (in) to cm: multiply by 2.54
Meters (m) to cm: multiply by 100
Feet (ft) to cm: multiply by 30.48
Centimeters (cm): no conversion needed
| Formula | Male Equation | Female Equation |
|---|---|---|
| Boer (1984) | 0.407 × W + 0.267 × H − 19.2 | 0.252 × W + 0.473 × H − 48.3 |
| James (1976) | 1.1 × W − 128 × (W/H)² | 1.07 × W − 148 × (W/H)² |
| Hume (1966) | 0.32810 × W + 0.33929 × H − 29.5336 | 0.29569 × W + 0.41813 × H − 43.2933 |
Where W = weight in kg, H = height in cm
When body fat percentage is entered (0–60 range):
Lean Body Mass = Total Weight × (1 − Body Fat % ÷ 100)
This method is the most accurate when body fat percentage comes from reliable measurement (DEXA, hydrostatic weighing, or trained caliper assessment).
This provides a balanced estimate across the three formula methodologies.
The visual gauge shows LBM as a percentage of total body weight:
Green (>70% LBM): Excellent lean mass proportion
Yellow (50–70% LBM): Average range
Red (<50% LBM): Low lean mass proportion
| Scenario | Behavior |
|---|---|
| Weight ≤ 0 or Height ≤ 0 | All results show “—”; gauge resets |
| Body fat % between 0 and 60 | Body fat method calculates and displays |
| Body fat % = 0 or >60 | Body fat method shows “Enter body fat %” |
| All formulas valid | Average calculated from Boer, James, Hume |
Scenario: A 35-year-old male weighs 82 kg, stands 178 cm tall, and has a DEXA-measured body fat percentage of 18%. He wants to know his lean body mass for protein intake planning.
Step-by-step calculation:
Boer Formula (male):
0.407 × 82 = 33.374
0.267 × 178 = 47.526
33.374 + 47.526 − 19.2 = 61.7 kg LBM
James Formula (male):
(Weight/Height)² = (82 ÷ 178)² = (0.4607)² = 0.2122
128 × 0.2122 = 27.16
1.1 × 82 = 90.2
90.2 − 27.16 = 63.0 kg LBM
Hume Formula (male):
0.32810 × 82 = 26.90
0.33929 × 178 = 60.39
26.90 + 60.39 − 29.5336 = 57.8 kg LBM
Body Fat Method:
Fat mass = 82 kg × (18 ÷ 100) = 14.8 kg
Lean Body Mass = 82 − 14.8 = 67.2 kg
Average LBM (Boer + James + Hume):
(61.7 + 63.0 + 57.8) ÷ 3 = 182.5 ÷ 3 = 60.8 kg
Gauge calculation:
LBM as % of weight = (60.8 ÷ 82) × 100 = 74.1%
Interpretation: The three formulas produce estimates ranging from 57.8 kg (Hume) to 63.0 kg (James). The body fat method (67.2 kg) is likely most accurate given DEXA data. The average formula estimate of 60.8 kg LBM (74% of body weight) places this individual in the “excellent” lean mass category. For protein intake, using the body fat method LBM of 67.2 kg × 1.8 g/kg = 121 grams of protein daily for muscle maintenance.
Lean Body Mass (LBM) encompasses all body components except fat: skeletal muscle, smooth muscle, cardiac muscle, bones, organs (liver, kidneys, brain, heart), connective tissue, and body water. Unlike Fat-Free Mass (FFM), which excludes essential fat stored in bone marrow and organs, LBM is essentially interchangeable with FFM in practical use. LBM matters because it determines basal metabolic rate each kilogram of lean tissue burns approximately 22-25 calories daily at rest. When people lose weight, preserving LBM while losing fat maintains metabolic rate and physical function. Athletes track LBM to ensure weight gain comes from muscle, not fat. Clinicians use LBM for medication dosing (particularly chemotherapy and anesthetics) and nutritional assessment.
The most frequent error is confusing LBM with muscle mass. LBM includes bones, organs, and water — muscle is only a portion (typically 40-50% of LBM). Another common mistake is assuming formulas work for extreme body types — very short, very tall, very muscular, or very obese individuals exceed formula validation ranges. Using inconsistent units (height in meters with weight in pounds) produces nonsense results. Forgetting that LBM includes water leads to misinterpretation of day-to-day fluctuations (hydration changes LBM by 1-2 kg). Finally, comparing raw LBM values without normalizing for height misses the point — taller individuals naturally have higher absolute LBM.
A 45-year-old female begins a resistance training program at 70 kg, 165 cm, with body fat 35% (estimated by calipers). Initial LBM (body fat method) = 70 × 0.65 = 45.5 kg. After 6 months of training with adequate protein intake, she weighs 68 kg with body fat 30%. New LBM = 68 × 0.70 = 47.6 kg — a gain of 2.1 kg lean tissue despite losing 2 kg total weight. Without LBM tracking, she might be disappointed by the scale not dropping. With LBM data, she knows she gained muscle while losing fat — excellent progress. Her protein target based on LBM increased from 45.5 × 1.8 = 82 g/day to 47.6 × 1.8 = 86 g/day, supporting continued muscle maintenance.
Saves time — Three medical formulas calculated instantly
Multiple estimation methods — Boer, James, Hume, and optional body fat method
No body fat required — Formulas work with only height, weight, and gender
Free to use — No premium version, subscriptions, or registration
Private — All calculations in your browser; no data transmitted
Accessible on any device — Works on phones, tablets, and computers
Visual gauge — LBM as percentage of weight with color coding
Dual units — Results display in both kilograms and pounds
Shareable results — Copy or share LBM data for nutrition planning
Without body fat input, formula estimates have ±3-5 kg accuracy compared to DEXA for normal-weight individuals. Accuracy decreases for athletes (underestimates LBM) and obese individuals (overestimates LBM). For best accuracy, enter measured body fat percentage.
Research suggests Boer has the best validation across diverse populations, followed by James. Hume is older (1966) but still commonly used clinically. The calculator averages all three to reduce individual formula bias. For individuals with known body fat, the body fat method is most accurate.
No. The Boer, James, and Hume formulas work with only height, weight, and gender. Body fat percentage is optional — if entered, the calculator also shows the direct calculation method for comparison.
In practical use, they are interchangeable. Strictly, fat-free mass excludes essential fat (stored in bone marrow and organs), while lean body mass includes it. The difference is approximately 2-4% of body weight. Most calculators and research use the terms synonymously.
Yes. Gender selection changes coefficients for all three formulas to reflect biological differences in body composition. Female formulas produce lower LBM estimates at the same height and weight, consistent with higher essential body fat and different lean tissue distribution.
LBM includes total body water (typically 50-60% of LBM). Dehydration reduces measured LBM by 1-3 kg; overhydration increases it. For consistent tracking, measure under similar hydration conditions — typically morning, post-void, before eating or drinking.
There’s no single “good” LBM because it depends on frame size, muscle mass, and activity level. Instead, track changes over time with consistent measurement conditions. For reference, elite natural male bodybuilders at competition weight often have LBM 2.0-2.5 kg per cm of height (e.g., 70-88 kg LBM at 175 cm).
Yes. LBM naturally declines after age 30 at approximately 0.2-0.5 kg per year without resistance training. This age-related loss (sarcopenia) accelerates after 50. Regular strength training can maintain or even increase LBM into older age. LBM tracking helps detect unwanted loss.
Yes. LBM tracking helps ensure weight loss comes primarily from fat, not muscle. Calculate your LBM before starting a diet, then recalculate periodically. If LBM decreases while total weight decreases, increase protein intake and resistance training. Target protein: 1.6-2.2 g per kg of LBM daily.
FFMI (Fat-Free Mass Index) normalizes LBM by height squared — analogous to BMI but using lean mass. FFMI = LBM in kg ÷ (height in m)². FFMI enables comparison of muscularity across different heights. This calculator shows LBM in absolute terms; use the FFMI calculator for height-normalized comparison.
The body fat method uses measured or estimated body fat percentage, which has its own error (typically ±3-5% for calipers, ±2-3% for DEXA). Formulas estimate LBM from population averages. Disagreement of 2-5 kg is normal. For an individual with known body fat, the body fat method is more accurate.
This Lean Body Mass (LBM) calculator provides estimates only and does not constitute medical, fitness, or nutritional advice. Formula accuracy varies by individual body composition. Body fat percentage input requires reliable measurement; inaccurate body fat inputs produce inaccurate LBM estimates. Always consult qualified healthcare or fitness professionals before making dietary, exercise, or medication decisions based on LBM calculations. This tool is for educational and informational purposes. No data is stored or transmitted. Powered by Toolraxy.
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