Women Weight chart in kgs for Late Middle Aged Adults 58 years old

General Summary: 58 year old women weight
In most cases, weight measurements for 58 year old women will be in the range between 54 and 95 kgs. The average weight for 58 year old women is 74 kgs, according to the CDC and anonymized data from users.
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Weight chart for 58-Year-Old women
What does healthy weight look like for a 58-Year-Old?
Weight percentiles for 58-Year-Old women
The weight distribution for women at 58-Year-Old, based on CDC growth standards:
5th percentile: 49.2 kg
25th percentile: 63.7 kg
50th percentile (median): 74.6 kg
75th percentile: 90.1 kg
95th percentile: 121.2 kg
The percentile values on this page are displayed in kg.
Growth percentiles place your measurement on a scale from 1 to 99 relative to women. The 50th percentile represents the middle of the typical range.
Weight and development for women
For women at 58, the perimenopause and menopause transition is often associated with changes in weight and fat distribution. Oestrogen decline contributes to increased abdominal fat accumulation even without significant overall weight change. Prioritising resistance exercise, adequate dietary protein, and limiting refined carbohydrates supports healthy weight management through this transition.
Adapting to metabolic changes in midlife
In the fifties, metabolic rate slows and maintaining weight requires either reducing caloric intake or increasing activity compared with earlier decades. Resistance training is particularly important at this age to preserve the lean muscle mass that keeps metabolism higher. Even two sessions per week produces measurable improvements in body composition.
Protein and muscle maintenance
Adequate dietary protein (at least 1.0-1.2 g per kg of body weight per day) supports muscle maintenance in midlife. Distributing protein intake across three meals - rather than concentrating it in one large meal - maximises the muscle-building signal. Good sources include lean meat, fish, eggs, dairy, and legumes.
Frequently asked questions
What is a healthy weight for adults at this age?
The percentile table on this page shows the distribution of weight in the reference population. However, weight alone is less informative than BMI (which accounts for height) or waist circumference (which reflects central fat distribution). For most adults, a BMI between 18.5-24.9 combined with a waist circumference below 94 cm (men) or 80 cm (women) is associated with the lowest health risk.
Why does weight tend to increase with age?
Weight gain in adulthood is driven by a gradual decline in lean muscle mass (which begins in the thirties), a corresponding fall in resting metabolic rate, and often a reduction in physical activity. Each decade of adult life, resting metabolism declines by approximately 2-3%. Compensating through regular strength training and maintaining dietary quality is more effective than caloric restriction alone.
How accurate are the weight percentiles on this page?
The weight percentile data is derived from CDC NHANES population surveys, which represent a large cross-sectional sample of adults in the United States. These figures describe what is typical in the reference population, not what is ideal from a health standpoint. The population median weight in many age groups falls in the overweight BMI range, reflecting population-level trends rather than optimal health targets.
Data sources and methodology
The percentile ranges on this page are drawn from CDC National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) data, Vital and Health Statistics Series 3 Number 46 (2021-2023 release), and CDC Body Measurements FastStats. 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.
Individual variation is normal and expected. A healthcare provider can help interpret these measurements in context with overall health and development.
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