Height Prediction

If You're 6'6" at 16, How Tall Will You Be?

Estimated adult height based on CDC growth trajectory data. Results shown for both sexes — scroll down for the full breakdown.

Boys (Male)
6'7"
Range: 6'5"6'9"

6'6" at 16 is well above average for boys at 16 (roughly 90th–95th percentile).

Girls (Female)
6'7"
Range: 6'5"6'9"

6'6" at 16 is well above average for girls at 16 (roughly 90th–95th percentile).

These estimates use CDC 50th-percentile growth trajectory data. Individual results vary based on genetics, puberty timing, and nutrition. ±2 inches for ~80% of individuals.

Growth remaining

How much more will you grow at 16?

Boys

Boys at age 16 are very close to their final adult height — most will grow less than an inch more.

Girls

Girls at age 16 have essentially reached their adult height.

About this estimate

How we calculated this.

This prediction is based on CDC National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) growth chart data — specifically the 50th-percentile height trajectory for boys and girls from ages 10 to 20. By comparing the median adult height (age 20) to the median height at age 16, we estimate how many inches of growth remain for a typical person of that height and age.

For someone who is 6'6" at age 16: we calculate your expected remaining growth (boys: ~0–3 inches; girls: ~0–2 inches), add it to your current height, and display the result. A ±2 inch confidence range covers approximately 80% of real-world outcomes.

Important limitation: this estimate does not account for your parents' heights, which influence about 60–80% of adult height variation. A child of two tall parents who is 6'6" at 16 is likely to end up taller than predicted here; a child of shorter parents may end up shorter. For a more accurate prediction, use our full Khamis-Roche calculator — it incorporates parent heights and reduces the error to ±1.7–2.2 inches.

Puberty timing also matters significantly. Early developers at age 16 have already grown through part of their spurt; late developers still have that growth ahead. Our Growth Plate Status quiz can help estimate where you are in your development timeline.

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Frequently asked

Questions about height at 16.

Is 6'6" a good height for a 16-year-old boy?

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The CDC 50th percentile for 16-year-old boys is about 5'8". Most boys at 16 have slowed significantly — typically 1–1.5 inches of growth remaining on average. If 6'6" is below average, catching up significantly after 16 is possible but unlikely without late-puberty development.

Can you still grow taller at 16?

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Yes, especially for boys. The average 16-year-old boy has about 1.2 more inches to grow, but late bloomers can have 2–4 more inches. For girls at 16, growth is largely complete — CDC data shows about 0.4 inches remaining on average. Whether your growth plates are still open depends on your bone age, which only an X-ray can confirm definitively.

When do boys stop growing in height?

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Most boys reach their adult height between ages 17–19. The growth plates in the long bones (femur, tibia) typically fuse between 16–19 for males. After fusion, no further height increase is possible. Boys who experience late puberty may still be growing at 18–19.

Browse all height predictions by age → Will I Be Tall? Index