Lean body mass chart
Lean Body Mass at 150 Pounds (Female)
Lean mass chart for a 150 lb (68.0 kg) woman: Boer, James, and Hume estimates across heights from 4'10" to 6'6".
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How to read this female chart
This chart shows how much of a 150 lb (68.0 kg) body weight is estimated to be lean mass for women, depending on height. Height matters because at the same weight, a taller person carries more bone and muscle and less fat on average — so every row below gives a different answer.
As a reference point, a 150 lb woman at 5'8" has an estimated lean body mass of about 111.4 lb (50.5 kg) by the Boer equation — roughly 74% of body weight.
If you know your body fat percentage, you do not need this table: lean mass at 150 lb is simply 150 × (1 − body fat ÷ 100). At 20% body fat that is 120.0 lb (54.4 kg); at 30% it is 105.0 lb (47.6 kg).
Want your exact number? Use the lean mass calculator with your own height, weight, and body fat percentage.
Estimated lean body mass for women weighing 150 lb (68.0 kg) by height
| Height | Boer LBM | James LBM | Hume LBM | Lean mass % (Boer) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4'10" (147 cm) | 84.9 lb (38.5 kg) | 90.9 lb (41.2 kg) | 84.7 lb (38.4 kg) | 57% |
| 5'0" (152 cm) | 90.2 lb (40.9 kg) | 95.5 lb (43.3 kg) | 89.4 lb (40.5 kg) | 60% |
| 5'2" (157 cm) | 95.5 lb (43.3 kg) | 99.6 lb (45.2 kg) | 94.1 lb (42.7 kg) | 64% |
| 5'4" (163 cm) | 100.8 lb (45.7 kg) | 103.3 lb (46.9 kg) | 98.8 lb (44.8 kg) | 67% |
| 5'6" (168 cm) | 106.1 lb (48.1 kg) | 106.8 lb (48.4 kg) | 103.4 lb (46.9 kg) | 71% |
| 5'8" (173 cm) | 111.4 lb (50.5 kg) | 109.9 lb (49.8 kg) | 108.1 lb (49.0 kg) | 74% |
| 5'10" (178 cm) | 116.7 lb (52.9 kg) | 112.7 lb (51.1 kg) | 112.8 lb (51.2 kg) | 78% |
| 6'0" (183 cm) | 122.0 lb (55.3 kg) | 115.3 lb (52.3 kg) | 117.5 lb (53.3 kg) | 81% |
| 6'2" (188 cm) | 127.3 lb (57.8 kg) | 117.7 lb (53.4 kg) | 122.2 lb (55.4 kg) | 85% |
| 6'4" (193 cm) | 132.6 lb (60.2 kg) | 120.0 lb (54.4 kg) | 126.9 lb (57.5 kg) | 88% |
| 6'6" (198 cm) | 137.9 lb (62.6 kg) | 122.0 lb (55.3 kg) | 131.5 lb (59.7 kg) | 92% |
Limitations of these female estimates
Boer, James, and Hume estimate lean body mass from height, weight, and sex alone. They describe population averages, so a very muscular or very lean person will be underestimated and a person with above-average body fat will be overestimated.
If you know your body fat percentage from a DEXA scan, calipers, or a consistent smart scale, skip the formulas: lean mass = weight × (1 − body fat ÷ 100). That direct method is more accurate than any height-weight equation.
The lean mass percentage column uses the Boer estimate, the most widely validated equation for healthy adults. Values are estimates for tracking and nutrition planning, not a medical diagnosis.
FAQs: Lean Body Mass at 150 Pounds (Female)
How much lean mass does a 150 lb woman have?
It depends on height. By the Boer equation, estimates range from about 84.9 lb (38.5 kg) at 4'10" to about 137.9 lb (62.6 kg) at 6'6".
Is 150 lb a healthy weight?
That depends on height and body composition, not weight alone. 150 lb spans a healthy BMI for some heights in this chart and not for others — and a muscular woman can be perfectly healthy at a BMI that looks high on paper. Body fat percentage is the better check.
Why do the three formulas disagree?
Boer, James, and Hume were each fit on different study populations. James in particular drifts at higher body weights, which is why this site defaults to Boer. Large disagreement is a cue to measure body fat and use the direct method.