Girls Head chart for babies 8 month old baby

8-month-old-baby-babies-head-girls-chart
General Summary: 8 month old baby girls head
In most cases, head measurements for 8 month old baby girls will be in the range between 40 and 45 cms. The average head for 8 month old baby girls is 43 cms, according to the CDC and anonymized data from Lifemeasure.com users.
Gender
Date of Birth
Date Measured
Head Circumference
(75.5 cms)
Unit of Measure

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Other measurements for 8-month-old-baby girls

Body Comparisons

Head circumference chart for 8-Month-Old girls

How does your child's head circumference sit on the chart for baby girls?

Head circumference percentiles for 8-Month-Old girls

The head circumference distribution for baby girls at 8-Month-Old, based on CDC growth standards:

  • 5th percentile: 41.2 cm (16.2 in)

  • 25th percentile: 42.4 cm (16.7 in)

  • 50th percentile (median): 43.2 cm (17.0 in)

  • 75th percentile: 44.1 cm (17.4 in)

  • 95th percentile: 45.5 cm (17.9 in)

Growth percentiles place your child's measurement on a scale from 1 to 99 relative to baby girls. The 50th percentile represents the middle of the typical range.

What to expect at 8-Month-Old

By eight months, the rapid early gains in head circumference have settled into a steadier pace. Brain development continues intensely, but the explosive early phase of head growth has passed.

Recording measurements over time

Continue recording head measurements at every health check and plotting them on the percentile chart. A sudden change in the rate of head circumference growth - either faster or slower than expected - warrants review. Trust your instincts: you are with your baby every day and are well placed to notice changes that a periodic check-up might not immediately capture.

Developmental milestones alongside head growth

As your baby becomes more mobile - sitting, crawling, pulling to stand - they naturally vary their head position throughout the day, which supports balanced skull shape. Ongoing brain development at this age is reflected in rapidly increasing social engagement, babbling, and purposeful hand use. If head circumference measurement concerns arise at a check-up, a paediatrician can assess the full developmental picture.

Frequently asked questions

What is the fontanelle and when does it close?

The fontanelle is the soft spot on the top of a baby's head where the skull bones have not yet fused. There are two fontanelles: the larger anterior (front) fontanelle, which typically closes between 9 and 18 months, and the smaller posterior (back) fontanelle, which usually closes by 2-3 months. Both allow the skull to expand rapidly as the brain grows during the first years of life.

What is a normal head circumference for this age?

The percentile table on this page shows the full range of typical head circumferences. All values from the 5th to the 95th percentile are within normal limits. As with all growth measurements, the pattern of growth over time is more informative than any single reading - a baby growing consistently at the 15th percentile is growing normally.

How fast does head circumference grow in the first year?

Head circumference grows approximately 10-12 cm in the first year of life - roughly 2 cm per month in the first 3 months, slowing to about 1 cm per month from 3-6 months, and 0.5 cm per month from 6-12 months. By 12 months, the average head circumference has grown from approximately 34-35 cm at birth to around 46-47 cm.

Data sources and methodology

The percentile ranges on this page are drawn from CDC growth chart data from the National Center for Health Statistics and WHO Child Growth Standards (for children under 5). CDC data published May 30, 2000, with 2022 extended BMI tables. Percentiles are modelled using the LMS method (Box-Cox transformation), which accounts for the skewed distribution of measurements at each age. All measurements are given in metric units with imperial equivalents.

These reference ranges are for general information only. A healthcare professional can provide personalised assessment based on the individual's growth pattern.

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