Fitness for Busy Men 35+

Lean Body Mass Calculator

Find out how much of your bodyweight is lean mass versus fat — and rate your muscularity with FFMI, a height-fair alternative to BMI. Most accurate when you know your body fat.

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Most accurate — uses your actual composition

Lean body mass: the number that ages you well

Your bodyweight is two numbers pretending to be one: fat mass and lean body mass. Lean body mass — your muscle, bone, organs, and water — is the part that makes you strong, keeps your metabolism humming, and protects you against the frailty that creeps in with age. For a man over 35, protecting and building lean mass is arguably the most important physical goal there is.

This calculator estimates how much of you is lean versus fat, and rates your muscularity with FFMI — a height-fair alternative to BMI that actually rewards muscle instead of penalising it.

Infographic: bodyweight split into lean body mass vs fat mass

How lean body mass is calculated

There are two routes, and this calculator uses the best one available to you:

From body fat (most accurate)

If you know your body-fat percentage, lean mass is simply weight × (1 − body fat%). A 80 kg man at 18% body fat has about 65.6 kg of lean mass. Get your body fat from the Body Fat Calculator for the truest result.

From formulas (no measurements needed)

Without body fat, validated equations — Boer, James, and Hume — estimate lean mass from your height, weight, and sex. They agree closely for average builds and diverge for outliers, which is why we show all three so you can see the range.

See your lean mass and FFMI

Enter your details above — add body fat for the most accurate result.

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Understanding FFMI (your muscle score)

BMI famously punishes muscle. FFMI fixes that by measuring only your lean mass relative to height. We report the adjusted FFMI, normalised to a 1.8 m reference so it is fair across heights. A rough guide for men:

  • ~18–19: average, untrained.
  • 20–22: clearly fit and trained.
  • 22–23: advanced — years of consistent lifting.
  • 23–25: excellent, approaching the natural drug-free ceiling.
  • 25+: rare naturally.

Most men will never need to chase the top of that scale. Moving from 19 to 21 over a couple of years is a transformation you will see and feel.

Why lean mass matters more with age

From your 30s onward, muscle is lost by default — a process called sarcopenia — unless you actively fight it. That loss quietly lowers your metabolism, weakens you, and raises injury and disease risk. The good news: resistance training and enough protein don’t just slow the decline, they reverse it. Tracking lean mass, not just scale weight, keeps your eye on the thing that matters.

How to use your lean mass number

  1. Feed the muscle with protein. Base your target on lean mass with the Protein Calculator.
  2. Set calories to build or preserve. Use the TDEE Calculator — a small surplus to grow, maintenance-plus-protein to recomp.
  3. Lift consistently. Two or three focused strength sessions a week is enough to build and protect lean mass.
  4. Re-measure every 8–12 weeks. Lean mass moves slowly; give it time to show.

What to expect

Building lean mass is a patient game — a beginner might add a few kilos of muscle in the first year, an experienced lifter far less. But every kilo compounds: more strength, a higher metabolism, and a body that stays capable for decades. That long-game, minimal-time approach is exactly what our free 3-day plan is built for.

Frequently asked questions

What is lean body mass?

Lean body mass (LBM) is everything in your body that is not fat: muscle, bone, organs, water, and connective tissue. It typically makes up 70–90% of bodyweight. It is the part of you that drives your metabolism, strength, and healthy ageing — so keeping it high is a core goal, especially after 35.

How is lean body mass calculated?

The most accurate way is from your body-fat percentage: lean mass = weight × (1 − body fat%). If you do not know your body fat, validated formulas (Boer, James, Hume) estimate lean mass from your height, weight, and sex. This calculator uses your body fat if provided, and otherwise shows all three formula estimates.

What is FFMI and why does it matter?

Fat-Free Mass Index (FFMI) is your lean mass scaled to your height — like a BMI for muscle. An adjusted FFMI around 19 is average, 20–22 is fit, 22–23 is advanced, and the low-to-mid 20s approaches the natural limit for most drug-free men (roughly 25). It is a useful, height-fair way to gauge how muscular you are.

Can I increase my lean body mass?

Yes — that is exactly what resistance training plus adequate protein and calories does. Building lean mass is slower than losing fat (think months to years), but every bit you add raises your metabolism, strength, and resilience. It is the single best investment for staying capable as you age.

Why base protein on lean mass instead of total weight?

Fat tissue needs little protein; muscle drives the requirement. For people carrying more body fat, calculating protein from lean mass avoids over-shooting the target. That is why lean mass feeds directly into a more accurate protein and calorie estimate.

How accurate are lean mass formulas?

Formula estimates are reasonable for average builds but drift for very muscular or very lean people, since they infer composition from height and weight alone. For a true number, measure your body fat and let the calculator use it directly.

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