[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":415},["ShallowReactive",2],{"/en/guides/child-growth/what-is-a-growth-percentile":3},{"id":4,"title":5,"body":6,"category":387,"description":388,"extension":389,"faq":390,"meta":406,"navigation":409,"path":410,"publishedAt":407,"relatedCalculator":325,"seo":411,"stem":412,"updatedAt":413,"__hash__":414},"guides_en/en/guides/child-growth/what-is-a-growth-percentile.md","What Is a Growth Percentile? A Plain-English Guide for Parents",{"type":7,"value":8,"toc":374},"minimark",[9,13,17,22,25,32,92,98,102,109,112,125,128,132,137,140,143,147,150,212,227,230,234,241,244,248,251,283,292,296,299,313,316,320,328,332,366,369],[10,11,5],"h1",{"id":12},"what-is-a-growth-percentile-a-plain-english-guide-for-parents",[14,15,16],"p",{},"If you have taken your child to a health check, you have probably heard a number like \"your child is on the 25th percentile for weight.\" What does that actually mean — and when should you be concerned?",[18,19,21],"h2",{"id":20},"the-simple-explanation","The Simple Explanation",[14,23,24],{},"A growth percentile tells you how your child's measurement (height, weight, head circumference, or BMI) compares to a large reference population of children the same age and sex.",[14,26,27,31],{},[28,29,30],"strong",{},"The 50th percentile is the middle point."," Half of children in the reference group are above this measurement, and half are below.",[33,34,35,48],"table",{},[36,37,38],"thead",{},[39,40,41,45],"tr",{},[42,43,44],"th",{},"Percentile",[42,46,47],{},"What It Means",[49,50,51,60,68,76,84],"tbody",{},[39,52,53,57],{},[54,55,56],"td",{},"97th",[54,58,59],{},"Your child's measurement is larger than 97% of children the same age and sex",[39,61,62,65],{},[54,63,64],{},"75th",[54,66,67],{},"Larger than 75% of children the same age and sex",[39,69,70,73],{},[54,71,72],{},"50th",[54,74,75],{},"Exactly average — right in the middle",[39,77,78,81],{},[54,79,80],{},"25th",[54,82,83],{},"Smaller than 75% of children the same age and sex",[39,85,86,89],{},[54,87,88],{},"3rd",[54,90,91],{},"Smaller than 97% of children the same age and sex",[14,93,94,97],{},[28,95,96],{},"Important:"," A percentile is not a score out of 100. It is a rank within a comparison group. A child on the 10th percentile for height is not failing — they are simply shorter than 90% of children their age in the reference population.",[18,99,101],{"id":100},"what-makes-a-percentile-normal","What Makes a Percentile \"Normal\"?",[14,103,104,105,108],{},"Clinically, the range between the ",[28,106,107],{},"3rd and 97th percentile"," is broadly considered the typical range. Most healthy children fall within this band.",[14,110,111],{},"But there is no single \"best\" percentile. A child consistently in the 5th percentile may be completely healthy if:",[113,114,115,119,122],"ul",{},[116,117,118],"li",{},"They are following the curve (not dropping significantly over time)",[116,120,121],{},"Their parents are also shorter or lighter than average",[116,123,124],{},"They are thriving in terms of energy, development, and health",[14,126,127],{},"A child in the 85th percentile for weight is not automatically overweight — context, height, activity level, and the full picture matter.",[18,129,131],{"id":130},"the-curve-matters-more-than-the-number","The Curve Matters More Than the Number",[14,133,134],{},[28,135,136],{},"The most clinically useful information is not the percentile itself, but whether your child is following a consistent growth curve.",[14,138,139],{},"A child who stays near the 10th percentile from infancy through childhood is typically growing normally for their body type. A child who drops from the 60th to the 10th percentile over 6 months is showing a pattern worth investigating — regardless of where they end up on the chart.",[14,141,142],{},"This is why health professionals plot measurements over time, not just take a single reading.",[18,144,146],{"id":145},"different-charts-for-different-ages-and-countries","Different Charts for Different Ages and Countries",[14,148,149],{},"Not all growth charts are the same. The two most widely used international charts are:",[33,151,152,168],{},[36,153,154],{},[39,155,156,159,162,165],{},[42,157,158],{},"Chart",[42,160,161],{},"Created by",[42,163,164],{},"Age Range",[42,166,167],{},"Based on",[49,169,170,184,198],{},[39,171,172,175,178,181],{},[54,173,174],{},"WHO Child Growth Standards",[54,176,177],{},"World Health Organization",[54,179,180],{},"0–5 years (primary), extended to 19",[54,182,183],{},"Children raised in optimal conditions across 6 countries",[39,185,186,189,192,195],{},[54,187,188],{},"CDC Growth Charts",[54,190,191],{},"US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention",[54,193,194],{},"0–20 years",[54,196,197],{},"Representative US sample",[39,199,200,203,206,209],{},[54,201,202],{},"UK-WHO Growth Charts",[54,204,205],{},"Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health",[54,207,208],{},"0–18 years",[54,210,211],{},"Adapted WHO + UK data",[14,213,214,217,218,222,223,226],{},[28,215,216],{},"The key difference:"," WHO charts are based on children raised in optimal feeding and care conditions, and are intended to show how children ",[219,220,221],"em",{},"should"," grow. CDC charts are based on how US children ",[219,224,225],{},"did"," grow in the late 20th century. For children under 2, many health guidelines (including AAP in the USA) recommend the WHO charts.",[14,228,229],{},"Your child's health professional will use the chart appropriate to their country and age.",[18,231,233],{"id":232},"uk-growth-charts","UK Growth Charts",[14,235,236,237,240],{},"In the UK, the ",[28,238,239],{},"UK-WHO growth charts"," are used for all children from birth to 18. These are printed in your child's Personal Child Health Record (the red book). UK health visitors plot measurements at key review points — birth, 6–8 weeks, 1 year, and 2–2½ years.",[14,242,243],{},"The UK charts include nine centile lines: 0.4th, 2nd, 9th, 25th, 50th, 75th, 91st, 98th, and 99.6th. Crossing two or more centile lines upward or downward is a reason for further assessment.",[18,245,247],{"id":246},"what-should-prompt-a-conversation-with-your-doctor","What Should Prompt a Conversation With Your Doctor?",[14,249,250],{},"You do not need to contact your doctor every time you see your child's percentile. But the following situations are worth discussing:",[113,252,253,259,265,271,277],{},[116,254,255,258],{},[28,256,257],{},"Your child's measurement falls below the 0.4th percentile"," (UK) or below the 3rd percentile (CDC/WHO)",[116,260,261,264],{},[28,262,263],{},"Your child crosses two or more major centile lines downward"," over a period of months",[116,266,267,270],{},[28,268,269],{},"Growth has visibly slowed or stopped"," compared to previous measurements",[116,272,273,276],{},[28,274,275],{},"Significant weight loss"," without an obvious cause (e.g. illness)",[116,278,279,282],{},[28,280,281],{},"You feel worried"," — your instinct as a parent is clinically relevant",[14,284,285,286,291],{},"See our guide ",[287,288,290],"a",{"href":289},"/guides/child-growth/when-to-see-a-pediatrician-about-growth","When to See a Paediatrician About Your Child's Growth"," for more detail.",[18,293,295],{"id":294},"what-growth-percentiles-do-not-tell-you","What Growth Percentiles Do Not Tell You",[14,297,298],{},"Growth charts and percentiles are useful tools, but they do not:",[113,300,301,304,307,310],{},[116,302,303],{},"Diagnose any condition",[116,305,306],{},"Predict adult height or weight",[116,308,309],{},"Tell you whether your child's diet is adequate",[116,311,312],{},"Replace a clinical assessment by a qualified health professional",[14,314,315],{},"A child can have a healthy growth percentile and still have nutritional needs worth addressing — and vice versa.",[18,317,319],{"id":318},"using-the-child-growth-calculator","Using the Child Growth Calculator",[14,321,322,323,327],{},"Our ",[287,324,326],{"href":325},"/child-growth-calculator","Child Growth Calculator"," gives you an estimated growth assessment for your child's height and weight based on their age and sex. It uses simplified reference ranges and is designed for general awareness only — not as a substitute for a professional growth assessment.",[18,329,331],{"id":330},"related-guides","Related Guides",[113,333,334,339,346,353,359],{},[116,335,336,338],{},[287,337,326],{"href":325}," — quick growth reference by age and sex",[116,340,341,345],{},[287,342,344],{"href":343},"/guides/child-growth/understanding-growth-charts-for-parents","Understanding Child Growth Charts for Parents"," — how to read a growth chart",[116,347,348,352],{},[287,349,351],{"href":350},"/guides/child-growth/who-vs-cdc-growth-charts","WHO vs CDC Growth Charts"," — which chart applies to your child",[116,354,355,358],{},[287,356,357],{"href":289},"When to See a Paediatrician About Growth"," — when to seek professional review",[116,360,361,365],{},[287,362,364],{"href":363},"/guides/child-growth/bmi-for-age-children-explained","BMI-for-Age in Children Explained"," — how BMI is interpreted differently for children",[367,368],"hr",{},[14,370,371],{},[219,372,373],{},"This guide is for general information only. Percentile ranges and chart recommendations are based on CDC and WHO published guidance. Always discuss your child's growth with their healthcare provider.",{"title":375,"searchDepth":376,"depth":376,"links":377},"",2,[378,379,380,381,382,383,384,385,386],{"id":20,"depth":376,"text":21},{"id":100,"depth":376,"text":101},{"id":130,"depth":376,"text":131},{"id":145,"depth":376,"text":146},{"id":232,"depth":376,"text":233},{"id":246,"depth":376,"text":247},{"id":294,"depth":376,"text":295},{"id":318,"depth":376,"text":319},{"id":330,"depth":376,"text":331},"child-growth","A clear explanation of child growth percentiles — what they mean, what the 50th percentile really represents, and when a low or high percentile actually matters.","md",[391,394,397,400,403],{"question":392,"answer":393},"What does the 50th percentile mean for a child?","The 50th percentile means your child's measurement (height, weight, or head circumference) is exactly at the midpoint of the reference population — half of children the same age and sex are larger, and half are smaller. It is the statistical average, not a target.",{"question":395,"answer":396},"Is a low growth percentile bad?","Not necessarily. A child consistently in the 10th percentile for height may simply be smaller than average — particularly if their parents are shorter. What matters most is whether the child is following a consistent curve over time, not the absolute percentile rank.",{"question":398,"answer":399},"Should I be worried if my child drops percentiles?","A significant drop across two or more major percentile lines (e.g. from the 50th to below the 15th) over a short period is worth discussing with your paediatrician. A single measurement or a minor fluctuation is usually not clinically significant.",{"question":401,"answer":402},"What growth charts are used in the UK?","The UK uses the UK-WHO growth charts, which are based on WHO Child Growth Standards for children aged 0–4, and UK reference data for older children. Your child's red book (Personal Child Health Record) contains these charts.",{"question":404,"answer":405},"What growth charts does the USA use?","US paediatricians primarily use the CDC growth charts, which are based on a representative US sample from 1963–1994. The WHO growth charts are recommended for children under 2 in many US guidelines.",{"lastVerified":407,"sourceFamily":408},"2026-04-02","CDC, WHO",true,"/en/guides/child-growth/what-is-a-growth-percentile",{"title":5,"description":388},"en/guides/child-growth/what-is-a-growth-percentile",null,"-3BhAeRVTBgGZNsPImTmYbIX6UdPYekSpoVQq784Jz4",1775557776823]