Body Surface Area Calculator (BSA)

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Body surface area (BSA) calculator for Singapore — enter height and weight to get BSA from the Mosteller, Du Bois and Haycock formulas, used in chemotherapy dosing, paediatric drug calculation and cardiac index. Educational reference; runs in your browser.

RT-MED-004 · Medical · Clinical Formulas

Body Surface Area Calculator (BSA)

Curriculum

Enter height and weight — the calculator returns body surface area in m² from three published formulas. The Mosteller result is shown as the headline.

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Tool information
Curriculum
English (Singapore) — Singapore Examinations and Assessment Board (SEAB)
Built against
Singapore clinical practice — chemotherapy & paediatric dosing (SingHealth / NUHS dosing references)
Unit system
SI primary; US/imperial readout below
First published
27 May 2026
Last updated
2 Jun 2026

How to Use the BSA Calculator

Enter height and weight

Type the patient’s height and weight, choosing cm or inches and kg or pounds. The calculator converts internally to centimetres and kilograms.

Read the BSA

The headline shows the Mosteller BSA in m² — the formula most used clinically in Singapore for chemotherapy dosing. Du Bois and Haycock values appear alongside.

Pick the right formula

Mosteller is the everyday default; Du Bois is the classic reference; Haycock is validated for paediatric patients. Use whichever your protocol specifies.

Check against your protocol

The Tool Information block lists the source formulas. This is an educational reference, not a substitute for your hospital’s dosing protocol or a pharmacist’s check.

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Body Surface Area in Clinical Dosing

Body Surface Area (Mosteller)

Example: A patient is 170 cm tall and weighs 70 kg. Find the body surface area using the Mosteller formula.

Using BSA = √(height × weight / 3600):

BSA = √(170 × 70 / 3600) = √3.306 ≈ 1.82 m²

Body surface area (BSA) is the total external area of the body, expressed in square metres. It is preferred over body weight alone for scaling many drug doses — especially cytotoxic chemotherapy, where doses are written in mg/m² — because BSA tracks metabolic rate, cardiac output and renal function more closely than weight does. A typical adult BSA is around 1.7 m², which is why 1.73 m² is the standard reference value used when indexing kidney function (eGFR) and cardiac index. Because BSA cannot be measured directly in routine practice, it is estimated from height and weight using validated formulas.

This calculator gives three of the most widely used estimates side by side. The Mosteller formula, BSA = √(height × weight / 3600), is the simplest and the one most clinicians reach for; it is shown as the headline result. The Du Bois formula from 1916 is the historical reference still cited in many texts, and the Haycock formula is validated down to small infants, making it the usual choice in paediatrics. The three usually agree to within a few percent for average adults but can diverge at the extremes of body size, which is why your local protocol specifies which formula to use. All calculation happens in your browser, so no patient data is uploaded and the tool works offline once loaded.

Chemotherapy is dosed in mg/m², not mg/kg — which is why an accurate body surface area matters so much in oncology.

10 Facts About Body Surface Area

01

BSA is the body’s total external area in .

02

Mosteller: BSA = √(height × weight / 3600).

03

A typical adult BSA is about 1.7 m².

04

Chemotherapy doses are written in mg/m².

05

eGFR is indexed to 1.73 m².

06

Du Bois dates from 1916.

07

Haycock (1978) is validated for infants.

08

BSA tracks metabolic rate better than weight.

09

Cardiac index = cardiac output ÷ BSA.

10

This tool runs in your browser — no patient data is uploaded.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • Body surface area (BSA) is the total external area of a person’s body, expressed in square metres. It is widely used in medicine to scale drug doses and to index physiological measurements such as cardiac output and kidney function, because it correlates better with metabolic processes than body weight alone.
  • The Mosteller formula is the everyday clinical default and is shown as the headline here. Du Bois is the classic 1916 reference still quoted in many textbooks, and Haycock is validated for paediatric patients, including small infants. For average adults all three agree closely; at the extremes of body size they diverge, so follow whichever your hospital protocol specifies.
  • Mosteller’s 1987 formula is BSA = √(height in cm × weight in kg / 3600). Its appeal is that it can be done on a simple calculator and is accurate enough for routine dosing. For a 170 cm, 70 kg adult it gives about 1.82 m².
  • Cytotoxic drugs have a narrow therapeutic window, and BSA tracks the parameters that govern drug handling — metabolic rate, blood volume and organ function — more closely than weight. Writing doses in mg/m² gives a more consistent exposure across patients of different sizes, which is why oncology protocols are built around BSA.
  • A typical adult has a BSA of roughly 1.6–2.0 m², with about 1.7 m² often quoted as average. The value 1.73 m² is the conventional reference used when indexing estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) and cardiac index, so results are comparable between people of different sizes.
  • Yes. Choose pounds or kilograms for weight and inches or centimetres for height — the calculator converts to kilograms and centimetres before applying each formula, so you get the same BSA regardless of which units you enter.
  • These formulas estimate BSA from height and weight; they are not direct measurements. For average-sized adults they are accurate to within a few percent of each other. Accuracy falls at the extremes of body habitus, in oedema, and in very small children, which is why protocols often specify a particular formula and sometimes cap the dose.
  • No. It is an educational and reference aid for checking a calculation. Actual prescribing and dose verification must follow your institution’s protocol and be checked by a qualified clinician or pharmacist. Nothing here constitutes medical advice.
  • No. Every calculation runs entirely in your browser; the height and weight you enter are never uploaded. The tool works offline once the page has loaded.
  • Completely free, with no account or usage limit. It runs entirely in your browser, collects no data, and works offline once loaded.

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