Mid-Parental Height Calculator

Type in two heights, pick a sex, and any mid-parental height calculator will hand you a confident-looking number. What most of them won't tell you is that the formula behind it explains only about a third of why kids end up the height they do. Here's the calculator, the real formula, and — more usefully — an honest read on what the number can and can't tell you.

Mid-Parental Height Calculator

Based on the Tanner formula (1970)

Classic Mid-Parental Height Estimate
Classic ±8.5 cm target range (3rd–97th percentile)
Classic
(Tanner 1970)
±8.5 cm range
Refined Range
(sex-specific)
Research-Adjusted
(2024 data)
avg. child ran +2.7 cm taller
Classic Estimate vs. Real-World Adjustment
Classic formula centerWhere real children in the 2024 study landed, on average
Before you read too much into this: this formula explains roughly a third of the variation in how tall a child actually ends up. It's a reasonable starting compass, not a forecast — see "How Accurate Is This, Really?" below before treating this number as more precise than it is.
Father's height
Mother's height
Child's sex
Formula used

What Is Mid-Parental Height?

Mid-parental height (MPH) is a simple genetic estimate of a child's adult height, based entirely on the two biological parents' heights. It was developed in 1970 by British researchers James Tanner, Herbert Goldstein, and R.H. Whitehouse as a way to build parent-aware growth charts, so a short child with two short parents wouldn't be flagged the same way as a short child with two tall parents.

The formula adjusts for the average height difference between men and women — about 13 cm — before averaging the two parents:

Boys: (Father's height + Mother's height + 13 cm) ÷ 2
Girls: (Father's height + Mother's height – 13 cm) ÷ 2

The result is treated as the center of a range, not a single predicted number. Tanner's original work put that range at ±8.5 cm — meaning roughly 94% of children (the 3rd to 97th percentile) end up somewhere inside mid-parental height plus or minus 8.5 cm. In later work, Tanner refined this slightly to ±9 cm for girls and ±10 cm for boys, though the simpler ±8.5 cm figure is what most calculators — including the one above — still use for simplicity.

How to Use the Calculator

Step 1
Use accurate parent heights
Measured heights work better than remembered or estimated ones — self-reported height is commonly overestimated, which skews the result. See our guide on measuring height accurately if you're not sure of the numbers.
Step 2
Use biological parents
This formula is a genetic estimate, so it only makes sense with biological parent heights — not step-parents, adoptive parents, or guardians.
Step 3
Treat the range as the answer, not the midpoint
The single number is easy to fixate on, but the entire ±8.5 cm band is the actual estimate. A child anywhere in that range is tracking normally by this method.
Step 4
Recheck it against actual growth
Mid-parental height is most useful compared against a child's own growth chart trajectory over time — not used alone. See the accuracy section below for why.

How Accurate Is This, Really?

This is the part most calculator pages skip entirely, and it matters more than the formula itself. A 2024 study published in the journal Children tracked height data across 23 very large families — an average of 11 adult children each — and compared their actual adult heights to what the standard Tanner formula predicted.

The results were more humbling than most parents expect: mid-parental height explained only 36% of the variation in children's final adult height, even though the underlying heritability of height itself is around 74%. On average, children ended up 2.7 cm taller than their mid-parental height predicted — largely because each generation has trended taller than the one before it, an effect the original 1970 formula has no way to account for.

Why "regression to the mean" matters: Children of very tall parents tend to land a bit shorter than the simple average predicts, and children of very short parents tend to land a bit taller. This is a well-known statistical pattern, not a flaw in any one family — extreme parental heights partly reflect random genetic luck that doesn't fully pass down. A simple average overcorrects for both ends.

Population and Era Matter Too

The original formula was built from British children measured in the 1960s. Height has risen across most populations since then — a pattern demographers call the "secular trend" — and the formula was never updated to account for it. A comprehensive 2025 review pulled together studies testing Tanner's formula outside its original British population and found it consistently underestimates adult height elsewhere: by roughly 2.3 cm in Taiwanese children, similarly in Korean and Asian Indian cohorts, and by as much as 4–6 cm in one small Spanish cohort. In every case, the gap ran in the same direction — real children ended up taller than the 1970 formula predicted.

Better Options When More Precision Matters

MethodTypical AccuracyWhat It Adds
Mid-parental height±8.5–10 cmJust two parent heights — fast, but explains only about a third of the real variation
Khamis-Roche method±4–6 cmAdds the child's own current height, weight, and age — no X-ray needed, more accurate than MPH alone
Bone age (Bayley-Pinneau / TW methods)±3–5 cmUses a hand-and-wrist X-ray to estimate skeletal maturity — the clinical gold standard, especially for early or late maturers

None of these require a specialist visit to try informally — except bone age, which does require an X-ray and a clinician to interpret it. If a family genuinely needs a precise prediction (for a suspected growth disorder, for instance), a pediatric endocrinologist is the right next step, not a more elaborate home calculation.

What This Number Can (and Can't) Tell You

✓ What It's Good For
A rough starting expectation for a child's genetic height range
Context for whether a child's current percentile is consistent with their family
A talking point for a pediatrician, not a replacement for one
Flagging when a big gap from the estimate might warrant a closer look
⚠ What It Can't Do
Predict an exact adult height — it explains roughly a third of the variance
Account for nutrition, sleep, illness, or activity during growing years
Diagnose a growth problem on its own
Fully apply outside the population it was built from, without some underestimation

The practical takeaway: Use mid-parental height as one rough data point, not the final word. A child tracking well outside the ±8.5 cm range — especially combined with a slowing growth rate — is a better reason to talk to a pediatrician than the single MPH number by itself. Genetics sets a wide lane, not a fixed line.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is mid-parental height the same as target height?

Yes, these terms are used interchangeably in most clinical literature. "Mid-parental height" refers to the calculation itself, while "target height" usually refers to that number plus its ±8.5 to ±10 cm range — the full expected band, not just the midpoint.

Why does the formula add or subtract 13 cm?

13 cm approximates the average adult height difference between men and women. Adding it to a girl's mid-parental calculation (or subtracting it for boys, depending on which version you use) puts both parents' heights on the same sex-adjusted scale before averaging. It's worth noting this is a fixed constant rather than a percentage — a detail that later researchers have flagged as one of the formula's simplifications.

My child is already outside the predicted range — should I worry?

Not automatically. Given that the formula explains only about a third of real height variation, being somewhat outside the range is common and not inherently a red flag. What matters more is whether your child's own growth rate and percentile tracking are stable over time — see our guide on telling if a child is growing normally for the more reliable signals to watch.

Does this work for adopted children or if I don't know a biological parent's height?

No — mid-parental height is a genetic estimate, so it requires biological parent heights to mean anything. If one or both biological parents' heights are unknown, this calculation isn't applicable, and growth should be assessed using standard percentile tracking instead.

References

1
Standards for children's height at ages 2–9 years allowing for heights of parents Tanner JM, Goldstein H, Whitehouse RH. Archives of Disease in Childhood. 1970;45(244):755–762 pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/5491878
2
Accurate Prediction of Children's Target Height from Their Mid-Parental Height Zeevi D, Ben Yehuda A, Nathan D, Zangen D, Kruglyak L. Children (Basel). 2024;11(8):916 pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39201851
3
How accurate is Tanner's formula in estimating target height? Ciancia S, Ribes Cajas P, Cools M. BMC Pediatrics. 2025;26:30 pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12797921

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