Peak Height Velocity Calculator

Peak Height Velocity Calculator

Estimate maturity offset, age at peak height velocity, and growth-spurt status from age, sex, standing height, sitting height, and body mass.

Peak height velocity is the fastest point of adolescent growth

A peak height velocity calculator estimates how far a young athlete may be from the age when height is increasing fastest. The result is called maturity offset: negative values are before PHV, values near zero are around PHV, and positive values are after PHV.

Inputs matter: The estimate uses chronological age, sex, standing height, sitting height, leg length, and body mass. Small measurement errors can change the result.

Important: This is a sports-science planning estimate, not a medical diagnosis or a substitute for pediatric growth assessment.

Enter age in decimal years, such as 13.5 for 13 years 6 months.

Measure standing height in centimeters.

Measure seated height from sitting surface to top of head.

Enter body mass in kilograms.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Choose sex: The maturity-offset equations are sex-specific.
  2. Enter age in decimal years: For example, 12 years 9 months is 12.75 years.
  3. Measure standing height: Use a stadiometer or consistent wall measurement with shoes off.
  4. Measure sitting height: Measure from the sitting surface to the top of the head, then the calculator estimates leg length.
  5. Enter body mass: Use the same measurement session when possible because body mass and height ratio affect the estimate.

Peak Height Velocity Formula

Calculate peak height velocity (PHV) directly by measuring the maximum annual growth rate during puberty. Use the formula: PHV = change in height / time period. For example, if height increases 9 centimeters over 12 months, peak height velocity equals 9 cm/year. PHV typically occurs between ages 11-12 in girls and 13-14 in boys.

This calculator estimates timing relative to PHV from one measurement session. It uses sex-specific maturity-offset equations based on chronological age, standing height, sitting height, leg length, and body mass.

Direct PHV = change in height / time period

Maturity offset = estimated years from PHV

Age at PHV = chronological age - maturity offset

Leg length = standing height - sitting height

Mass-height ratio = body mass / standing height x 100

A negative maturity offset means the athlete is estimated to be before PHV. A positive maturity offset means the athlete is estimated to be after PHV.

The equations were developed for group-level maturity estimation in youth and are most useful when measurements are taken carefully and interpreted cautiously.

Maturity Offset Status Guide

Swipe table to view details
Status Maturity Offset Meaning Planning Note

Step-by-Step Method

The calculator converts all measurements to centimeters and kilograms, estimates leg length, applies the sex-specific equation, then subtracts maturity offset from chronological age.

1. Convert Measurements

Metric values are used internally because the published equations use centimeters and kilograms.

2. Estimate Offset

The maturity offset equation estimates years before or after peak height velocity.

3. Interpret Cautiously

Use the result to support training conversations, not to label an athlete permanently.

Measurement Tips for Better Estimates

PHV estimates are sensitive to anthropometric measurements. A few centimeters of sitting-height error can shift maturity offset enough to change the practical interpretation.

Measure barefoot: Standing height should be measured without shoes, with posture controlled and the head level.

Control sitting height: Use a flat sitting surface, keep the athlete upright, and measure to the top of the head.

Repeat measurements: Take two or three measurements and use the average if values differ.

Where This Calculator Is Useful

A peak height velocity calculator is most useful for broad planning in youth sport, school physical education, and growth-aware coaching environments.

Youth Athlete Monitoring

Track maturity timing alongside training load, soreness, coordination, and performance changes.

Bio-Banding Discussions

Support conversations about grouping athletes by maturity status rather than age alone.

Growth-Spurt Awareness

Flag periods when rapid height changes may affect coordination, mobility, and training response.

Limitations and Responsible Use

PHV prediction equations are estimates. They can be useful for teams and groups, but they can be less accurate for individual athletes, early or late maturers, and ages far outside the original validation range.

Individual error exists: Two athletes with the same estimate can mature differently in real life.

Health questions need professionals: Concerns about growth, puberty, pain, nutrition, or delayed development should be discussed with a qualified clinician.

Use multiple signals: Combine PHV estimates with growth history, training history, coach observation, and athlete feedback.

PHV Result Finder

Use this quick lookup table after calculating. It turns the result into the most likely question a coach, parent, or athlete is trying to answer.

Calculator Output Plain-English Meaning Information to Retrieve Next Useful Search Phrase
Pre-PHV The athlete is estimated to be before the fastest growth-spurt period. Recent height changes, training load, coordination changes, and family growth history. before peak height velocity youth athlete
Circa-PHV The athlete may be near the period of fastest height velocity. Monthly or quarterly growth rate, soreness, sleep, nutrition, and movement quality. training during peak height velocity
Post-PHV The athlete is estimated to be past the fastest height-growth point. Strength progression, recovery response, sport demands, and continued growth history. after peak height velocity maturation

Growth Tracking Data Template

PHV is easier to understand when single calculator estimates are paired with repeated measurements. This template shows the exact data points to record so future results are easier to retrieve, compare, and explain.

Field Why It Matters Recommended Format Retrieval Tip
Measurement date Links height changes to a time period. YYYY-MM-DD Sort records by date before calculating growth rate.
Decimal age Required for maturity-offset equations. 13.50 years Store birthday separately so age can be recalculated.
Standing height Used for stature, growth rate, and leg length. cm or in Keep raw values and unit labels together.
Sitting height Used to estimate body proportions and leg length. cm or in Record the chair or sitting box setup for consistency.
Growth velocity Direct PHV tracking needs height change over time. (height change / months) x 12 Compare 3-month, 6-month, and 12-month rates.

PHV Glossary and Search Map

The same concept can appear under different names in coaching, pediatrics, and sports-science research. This glossary helps users retrieve the right information even when the wording changes.

Peak Height Velocity

Also searched as PHV, height velocity, growth velocity, adolescent growth spurt, or fastest growth rate.

Maturity Offset

Also searched as years from PHV, biological maturity estimate, maturity timing, or age from peak height velocity.

Anthropometry

Search with body measurement, sitting height, leg length, stature, body mass, and youth growth assessment.

Bio-Banding

Search with maturity grouping, youth athlete development, biological age in sport, and maturation status.

Method Sources

The equations and limitations are based on published maturity-offset research. Use these links to understand the method and validation concerns.

Interesting Fact

Peak height velocity often occurs earlier in girls than boys, but individual timing varies widely. That variation is one reason coaches may consider biological maturity in addition to chronological age.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does a peak height velocity calculator do?

It estimates maturity offset and predicted age at peak height velocity from sex, chronological age, stature, sitting height, leg length, and weight. The calculator output helps a coach, parent, or sport staff member describe whether a youth athlete is estimated to be before, near, or after the adolescent growth-spurt peak.

What is maturity offset?

Maturity offset is the estimated number of years from PHV and is one way to describe biological age during puberty. A value of -1.0 means about one year before PHV, 0 means around PHV, and +1.0 means about one year after PHV.

How accurate is a PHV prediction model for one athlete?

It should be treated as an estimate, not a precise date. The prediction model can be helpful for group monitoring, but individual error is meaningful, especially for very early or late maturation. Use the result alongside growth rate, training history, and repeated body measurements.

Why does sitting height matter?

Sitting height helps estimate body proportions through anthropometry. Leg length is calculated as standing height minus sitting height, and the relationship between age, leg length, sitting height, stature, and body mass is part of the maturity-offset equation.

Can this diagnose puberty stage or growth problems?

No. This calculator is not a diagnostic tool and does not determine puberty stage. If there are concerns about growth, maturation, delayed development, pain, nutrition, or health, a parent should contact a pediatrician, sports medicine clinician, or other qualified healthcare professional.

How should coaches use PHV estimates?

Use them as one maturity signal among many. Around peak height velocity, some youth athletes may experience rapid height changes, temporary coordination changes, soreness, or training-load sensitivity, so monitoring and individualization matter more than a single calculator result.

How is PHV different from a growth chart?

A growth chart compares height and weight with reference percentiles across age. PHV focuses on growth velocity, meaning how quickly height is changing over time. A pediatrician may use growth charts, medical history, and examination findings when judging development.

Can parents track peak height velocity at home?

Parents can track height every few months and calculate growth rate, but measurements should be consistent: same wall or stadiometer, shoes off, similar time of day, and careful posture. A clear growth spurt pattern is more reliable than one isolated body measurement.

What ages are best for this calculator?

The original method was developed for adolescent youth and is most relevant around the puberty growth-spurt years. Results for much younger children or older teens far past PHV should be interpreted with extra caution because maturation timing and growth velocity vary widely.

Disclaimer: This peak height velocity calculator provides a non-diagnostic sports-science estimate only. It is not medical advice and should not be used to diagnose growth, puberty, nutrition, endocrine, orthopedic, or health concerns. Consult qualified healthcare professionals for clinical interpretation.

Last updated: May 8, 2026