Insulin Dose Calculator
Bolus insulin from carbs + correction.
Your BMI is 25.8, which falls in the "Overweight" category. BMI is a screening tool, not a diagnostic measure.
Why This Calculation Matters
The Insulin Dose Calculator turns a well-known health formula into an instant lookup. It's most useful when you're tracking a number over time or comparing yourself against published reference ranges from bodies like the CDC, NIH, or WHO. Use it as one data point among many, not a diagnosis.
How to Use This Calculator
- Enter your values in the input fields, each one has a label and help text explaining what to type.
- Results appear instantly as you type; there's no "calculate" button to press.
- Change any input to compare scenarios side by side.
All math happens in your browser. Nothing you type is sent to a server, saved, or shared.
Reading Your Result
A single number tells you less than a trend. Track this value over weeks or months rather than obsessing over day-to-day variation. Hydration, sleep, and timing can all shift short-term readings without reflecting any real change.
How to Use
Enter values in the fields on the left. Results update as you type, no submit button needed.
Understanding Results
Each output shows the calculated figure plus a breakdown of contributing inputs. Compare scenarios by editing any value.
Accuracy Notes
Every Insulin Dose Calculator on CalcIntel uses a documented formula. Results are estimates, real outcomes depend on assumptions and market conditions not captured in a simplified calculation.
Formula
Metric: BMI = kg / m². Imperial: BMI = (lb / in²) × 703. WHO categories: underweight <18.5, normal 18.5-24.9, overweight 25-29.9, obese ≥30.
Worked Example
A 5'10" (178 cm), 170 lb (77 kg) adult.
- Weight
- 77 kg
- Height
- 178 cm
- Result
- 24.3 (Normal weight)
BMI between 18.5 and 24.9 is classified as normal weight per WHO thresholds.
When to Use This Calculator
- Track personal health metrics over time alongside guidance from your clinician.
- Understand how lifestyle changes may influence a given health number.
- Compare values against recognized reference ranges from CDC, NIH, or WHO.
Limitations & Common Mistakes
- Not a substitute for medical advice. Always consult a qualified clinician for anything that affects your care.
- Population-level formulas don't account for individual medical history, medications, or body composition nuances.
- Reference ranges evolve, use current CDC/NIH/WHO values when accuracy matters.
Frequently Asked Questions
How does the Insulin Dose Calculator work?
The Insulin Dose Calculator uses a standard, documented formula to convert your inputs into a result. Computation runs entirely in your browser, no data leaves your device.
Are these results accurate?
Results are accurate within the assumptions of the formula. For legal, tax, medical, or investment decisions, always consult a qualified professional.
Can I change the inputs?
Yes. Every input accepts your own values. Results recalculate instantly as you type.
Is this calculator free?
Every CalcIntel calculator is free forever. No signup, no paywall, no tracking of your inputs.
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Related guides
- TDEE: The Only Calorie Number That Actually Drives Weight ChangeBMR tells you the baseline. Calorie intake tells you the input. TDEE is the number that decides whether you lose, maintain, or gain, and it is the one most people miscalculate.
- BMI vs. Body Fat Percentage: Which Number Actually Measures HealthBMI is free and fast. Body fat percentage is more accurate. Waist-to-hip ratio predicts cardiovascular risk better than either. Here is when to use which, and what the CDC and WHO actually recommend.