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What Is Body Composition? (And Why It Matters More Than Weight)

Updated 2026 06  ·  Based on peer-reviewed research  ·  8 min read

Two people can weigh exactly the same but have dramatically different health profiles, fitness levels, and physical appearance — because their body composition is different. Body composition refers to the proportions of fat mass, muscle mass, bone, and water that make up total body weight. Understanding it reveals why "losing weight" and "losing fat" are not the same thing.

Why it matters: A 70kg person with 15% body fat is lean, fit, and metabolically healthy. A 70kg person with 35% body fat has significantly higher risk of metabolic disease, poorer functional capacity, and a much harder time maintaining weight — despite identical numbers on the scale.

Components of Body Composition

Component% of Body Weight (avg)Function
Fat mass15–30% (healthy range)Energy storage, hormone production, insulation
Skeletal muscle30–40%Movement, metabolism, glucose storage
Bone12–15%Structure, mineral storage
Water50–65%All metabolic processes
Organs/other~5%Vital functions

Healthy body fat percentage ranges by sex and age

Men 20–39 8–19% healthy Men 40–59 11–21% healthy Men 60+ 13–24% healthy Women 20–39 21–32% healthy Women 40–59 23–33% healthy ACE body fat guidelines — women naturally carry 5–8% more fat than men at same BMI

How to Measure Body Composition

DEXA scan (most accurate)

Dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry provides the most accurate body composition measurement available, distinguishing fat, lean mass, and bone density by body region. Available at specialist clinics and some gyms. Cost: $50–150 per scan. Useful for tracking changes over 3–6 month periods.

Hydrostatic weighing

Underwater weighing — considered a gold standard alongside DEXA. Less widely available but highly accurate. Uses the principle that fat is less dense than water.

Skinfold calipers

A trained assessor measures skin fold thickness at 3–7 body sites and calculates body fat percentage. Accurate within ±3–4% when done correctly. Inexpensive and widely available at gyms and fitness centres.

Bioelectrical impedance (smart scales)

Consumer smart scales estimate body fat via electrical resistance. Convenient and cheap but can vary ±5–8% based on hydration, time of day, and recent meals. Useful for tracking trends rather than absolute values.

Waist circumference (practical proxy)

Not a direct body composition measure, but waist circumference above 80cm (women) or 94cm (men) reliably indicates excess visceral fat — the most metabolically dangerous type.

How to Improve Body Composition

Improving body composition means reducing fat mass and increasing (or maintaining) muscle mass. The three key levers are:

⚠️ The scale is an incomplete picture of body composition progress. Someone starting resistance training may lose 2kg of fat, gain 1kg of muscle, and see only a 1kg change on the scale — while dramatically improving their body composition and metabolic health.

Frequently Asked Questions

Body composition refers to the proportions of fat mass versus lean mass (muscle, bone, organs, water) in your body. It matters because two people at the same weight can have radically different health risks and physical appearances depending on how much of their weight is fat versus muscle. Scale weight alone does not capture this distinction.
Body recomposition — gaining muscle while losing fat simultaneously — is possible and produces dramatic appearance changes with minimal scale movement. It requires adequate protein (2.0–2.4g/kg/day), progressive resistance training, a modest calorie deficit or maintenance intake, and sufficient sleep. It is most achievable in beginners and those returning from a training break.
For men, 10–20% body fat is healthy (athletic: 6–13%). For women, 18–28% is healthy (athletic: 14–20%). Body fat naturally increases slightly with age. Below the essential fat level (3–5% for men, 10–13% for women) carries serious health risks. Above the obese threshold (25%+ for men, 32%+ for women) is associated with elevated metabolic disease risk.
Body fat percentage provides more specific and actionable information for people who exercise, as it shows whether changes are from fat or muscle. BMI is simpler to calculate and useful for initial screening. Using both together — plus waist circumference — gives the most complete picture. Progress photos and clothing fit are also valuable, free tools.
Yes — this is the classic case of an athlete or resistance-trained individual. High muscle mass elevates BMI into the overweight range despite very low body fat. A body fat measurement quickly resolves this. The reverse is also true: normal BMI with poor body composition (low muscle, high fat) is a real and underrecognised pattern.

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📚 Sources & Editorial Standards Content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice.