BPD Gestational Age Calculator: Check Baby’s BPD by Week
A BPD gestational age calculator estimates pregnancy age from the fetal biparietal diameter (BPD), the ultrasound measurement taken across the baby’s head. Enter your BPD measurement to calculate gestational age in weeks and days, compare it with your actual pregnancy week, analyze head shape effects, and estimate fetal weight using advanced fetal biometry formulas. BPD dating is usually more useful during the second trimester..
Many parents see a scan result that measures ahead or behind and worry immediately. A larger BPD does not always mean a larger baby. A smaller BPD does not always mean a growth problem. Head shape can change the measurement more than many people realize. Research shows that round or narrow head shapes can affect BPD-based dating and may explain unexpected results.
This calculator helps you convert BPD to gestational age, check growth variance, evaluate cephalic index, and estimate fetal weight from ultrasound measurements. You will also learn what normal differences look like and when a result may need follow-up with your healthcare provider.
Quick Facts
- Converts BPD measurements into gestational age in weeks and days.
- Compares BPD age with actual gestational age.
- Flags whether growth appears appropriate, ahead, or behind.
- Calculates cephalic index using BPD and OFD measurements.
- Estimates fetal weight using Hadlock fetal biometry formulas.
- Supports millimeters and centimeters.
- Uses the Hadlock formula to estimate gestational age from BPD.
- Updated Jul 4, 2026
- Reviewed by 100Calc Research Team
Advanced Fetal Biometry Tool
BPD Gestational Age Calculator
Calculate your baby's exact age based on their Biparietal Diameter (BPD). Analyze head shape, check for normal growth variance, or enter your full report to estimate fetal weight.
Based on Hadlock Formula
Gestational Age
Your baby's head measures at this exact age.
Head Shape Analysis (Cephalic Index)
Analysis text goes here.
Estimated Fetal Weight (Hadlock IV)
Boy or Girl? (The BPD Myth)
Myth BustedMany parents hope a BPD measurement can predict gender. However, at -- weeks, male and female fetuses have nearly identical head widths.
While boys' heads are statistically a few millimeters larger at full term (40 weeks), the size overlap in the second and third trimesters makes it impossible to use BPD for gender prediction.
Why is my BPD measuring more than my gestational age?
Your dynamic answer will appear here.
How is this gestational age calculated?
Your static educational answer will appear here.
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Micro Insight
A BPD result is most useful when viewed alongside other ultrasound measurements. Small differences from expected gestational age are common. Growth trends across multiple scans often matter more than one isolated BPD measurement.
What Is Biparietal Diameter in Pregnancy?
BPD is one of the most common fetal biometry measurements. It becomes more useful after the first trimester when head growth follows predictable patterns. A larger measurement often points to a more advanced gestational age, while a smaller measurement may suggest a younger fetal age or normal variation.
Head shape also plays a role. Two babies at the same pregnancy week can have different BPD values because their head shapes differ. A round head may produce a larger BPD measurement. A longer, narrower head may produce a smaller one. This is why ultrasound specialists often review other measurements such as head circumference, abdominal circumference, and femur length alongside BPD.
On a full fetal biometry report, BPD is often reviewed with head circumference, abdominal circumference, femur length, and estimated fetal weight. These values help place the result into a fetal growth percentile and a wider growth scan context.
Growth assessment is about patterns, not a single number. Most pregnancy scans combine several measurements to build a clearer picture of fetal development and estimated size.
What Your BPD Gestational Age Result Means
Your result shows the gestational age predicted from your baby’s biparietal diameter measurement. This estimated age reflects how the fetal head width compares with typical growth patterns seen during pregnancy.
BPD dating is usually most reliable during the second trimester. One BPD result should not change your estimated due date by itself. Early dating with crown-rump length or an early ultrasound usually carries more weight than a later growth scan. Later in pregnancy, natural differences in growth and head shape can make BPD less precise when used alone.
Understanding Your Result
A result that closely matches your known gestational age suggests that fetal growth is tracking as expected based on head width.
Some scans show a difference between BPD age and actual pregnancy age. This is common. Head shape, family genetics, fetal position, and normal growth variation can all affect the measurement.
If your result includes a variance comparison, it may show:
- Appropriate for Gestational Age (AGA): BPD age is close to actual pregnancy age.
- Ahead of Gestational Age: BPD measures larger than expected.
- Behind Gestational Age: BPD measures smaller than expected.
A single measurement rarely tells the whole story. Ultrasound providers often review head circumference, abdominal circumference, and femur length together.
Is Your Result Good or Bad?
Most results are neither good nor bad. They are simply measurements that help track growth.
BPD matching gestational age
- Usually indicates expected growth.
- Often falls within normal variation.
BPD more than gestational age
- May reflect a naturally larger baby.
- Can occur with a rounder head shape.
- Often requires comparison with other ultrasound measurements.
BPD smaller than gestational age
- May reflect a longer, narrower head shape.
- Can occur in healthy pregnancies.
- Often benefits from review alongside head circumference and growth trends.
Small differences are common. Many providers focus on patterns across multiple scans rather than one result.

What You Should Do Next
Compare the estimated age with your known gestational age.
Review any variance shown by the result.
Check whether head shape analysis suggests brachycephaly or dolichocephaly.
Look at other fetal measurements if they are available.
Discuss unexpected differences with your healthcare provider.
Quick Example to Test
Input
- BPD: 62 mm
Result
- Estimated Gestational Age: 25 weeks + 1 day
Interpretation
This result falls within the expected range for late second-trimester growth. If the actual pregnancy age is close to this estimate, growth appears consistent with typical fetal development. If a larger difference exists, other measurements can help explain the variation.
How to Use the BPD Gestational Age Calculator
This BPD gestational age calculator converts a biparietal diameter measurement from an ultrasound into an estimated fetal age. It can also compare BPD and gestational age, check whether measurements are ahead or behind expectations, evaluate head shape effects, and estimate fetal weight when additional ultrasound values are available.
Enter the BPD Measurement
Find the Biparietal Diameter value on your ultrasound report and enter it into the calculator. BPD measures the width of the baby's head from one side to the other. Values can be entered in millimeters or centimeters. The system converts everything into a standard format before processing the result.
Select the Correct Unit and Standard
Choose the measurement unit that matches your ultrasound report. Hadlock is the default formula used by this calculator. The tool converts your BPD value into centimeters, then estimates gestational age in weeks and days.
Review the Estimated Gestational Age
After entering the BPD value, the calculator estimates fetal age in weeks and days. Internal conversions turn the measurement into a pregnancy age estimate. Results appear in an easy-to-read format that shows both complete weeks and any remaining days.
Compare Growth With Pregnancy Milestones
Add your actual gestational age if you want a comparison. The calculator checks whether the BPD measurement matches expected growth. Results may show Appropriate for Gestational Age, ahead of expected age, or behind expected age based on the difference between the two values.
Explore Head Shape and Weight Analysis
Extra measurements unlock deeper analysis. Enter OFD to calculate the cephalic index and assess head shape. Adding HC, AC, and FL allows fetal weight estimation. These measurements help explain why some BPD readings appear larger or smaller than expected.
Quick Example to Test
Inputs
- BPD: 62 mm
- Unit: Millimeters
- Standard: Hadlock
- Actual Gestational Age: 25 weeks
Result
Estimated Gestational Age: 25 weeks + 1 day
Growth Status: Appropriate for Gestational Age (AGA)
What Happened
The entered BPD was converted into a gestational age estimate. Because the difference from the actual pregnancy age stayed within the normal comparison range, the calculator classified the result as growth consistent with expectations.
How the BPD Gestational Age Calculator System Works
This BPD Gestational Age Calculator uses fetal biometry methods to estimate pregnancy age from ultrasound measurements. The system standardizes measurement units, applies the Hadlock formula, and compares the result with your selected pregnancy week. It can also show how head shape may affect a BPD-based estimate.
Key Features & Benefits
- Uses recognized fetal growth standards commonly applied in ultrasound practice.
- Converts BPD measurements into gestational age in weeks and days.
- Supports growth comparison against an entered pregnancy age.
- Evaluates head shape factors that may affect dating estimates.
- Works smoothly on desktop, tablet, and mobile devices.
Technical Process
Data Input
Accepts BPD measurements from ultrasound reports and validates values before analysis.
Growth Modeling
Processes fetal biometry data using established gestational age and growth models.
Result Analysis
Compares calculated results with expected benchmarks and highlights meaningful differences.
How the BPD Gestational Age Calculator Formula Works (Complete Breakdown)
The BPD Gestational Age Calculator uses your baby’s biparietal diameter to estimate pregnancy age in weeks and days. It converts the BPD measurement into centimeters, applies a Hadlock-based formula, then rounds the result into a simple week-and-day format you can compare with your ultrasound report
Formula
The calculator uses a BPD-based Hadlock formula to estimate gestational age. It works by converting the baby’s head width into centimeters, then matching that value to an estimated pregnancy age. The final result is shown in weeks and days, so it is easier to compare with your ultrasound report.
Gestational Age in Weeks = 9.54 + (1.482 × BPDcm) + (0.1676 × BPDcm²)
BPDcm = BPDmm ÷ 10
Total Days = Gestational Age in Weeks × 7
What These Formulas Do
This formula estimates the pregnancy age that matches the baby’s head width. It does not confirm your due date by itself. It gives a BPD-based age estimate, then the calculator turns that decimal age into weeks and days.
If your BPD is entered in millimeters, the calculator converts it to centimeters before using the formula. That keeps the result aligned with the Hadlock formula used inside the calculator.
Key Variables in the Formula
- BPD → Biparietal Diameter. This is the baby’s head width from one side of the skull to the other. It is the main value used to estimate gestational age in the basic mode.
- BPDmm → BPD measured in millimeters. Many ultrasound reports show BPD in mm. The calculator accepts this directly, then converts it into centimeters for the formula.
- BPDcm → BPD measured in centimeters. The formula uses centimeters, not millimeters. If your report says 54 mm, the calculator reads it as 5.4 cm.
- Gestational Age in Weeks → The estimated pregnancy age from BPD. This is a decimal number before rounding. For example, 22.43 weeks becomes 22 weeks and 3 days.
- Total Days → The decimal week result multiplied by 7. The calculator rounds this value, then splits it into weeks and extra days.
Head Shape Formula Used in Shape Mode
Cephalic Index = (BPDmm ÷ OFDmm) × 100
This formula checks head shape. It compares the head width with the front-to-back head length. A rounder head can make BPD look larger. A longer, narrower head can make BPD look smaller.
Head Shape Variables
- OFD → Occipitofrontal Diameter. This is the front-to-back length of the baby’s head. It is only used in head shape mode.
- Cephalic Index → A percentage that shows head shape. Above 85 suggests a rounder head. Below 74 suggests a longer, narrower head. Between 74 and 85 is treated as the average range in this calculator.
Fetal Weight Formula Used in Full Biometry Mode
Log10(Weight) = 1.3596 - (0.00386 × AC × FL) + (0.0064 × HC) + (0.00061 × BPD × AC) + (0.0424 × AC) + (0.174 × FL)
Weight in Grams = 10 ^ Log10(Weight)
This formula estimates fetal weight from the full ultrasound biometry set. It needs BPD, HC, AC, and FL. BPD alone is not enough for fetal weight.
Fetal Weight Variables
- HC → Head Circumference. This measures around the baby’s head. It adds more context than BPD alone because it is less affected by head shape.
- AC → Abdominal Circumference. This measures around the baby’s belly. It has a strong effect on estimated fetal weight because fetal size often shows clearly in the abdomen.
- FL → Femur Length. This measures the baby’s thigh bone. It helps estimate body size and supports a more complete weight calculation.
- Log10(Weight) → A middle step used by the fetal weight formula. The calculator does not show this value. It converts it into grams, kilograms, and pounds.
Another Example Calculation (Step-by-Step)
Here is a simple example using a real-style ultrasound value. This shows how the calculator changes a BPD measurement from millimeters into centimeters, applies the formula, and turns the final decimal result into weeks and days.
Given:
- BPD = 62 mm
- Unit = millimeters
- Mode = Basic Dating
Calculation:
BPDcm = 62 ÷ 10 = 6.2 cm
Gestational Age = 9.54 + (1.482 × 6.2) + (0.1676 × 6.2²)
Gestational Age = 9.54 + 9.1884 + 6.442544
Gestational Age = 25.170944 weeks
Total Days = 25.170944 × 7 = 176.196608 days
Result:
- Estimated Gestational Age = 25 weeks + 1 day
Meaning:
A BPD of 62 mm gives an estimated age of about 25 weeks and 1 day in this calculator. This is a BPD-based estimate only. It should be compared with HC, AC, FL, scan history, and your provider’s review.
What is a BPD gestational age chart by week in mm and cm?
A BPD gestational age chart shows the average biparietal diameter for each pregnancy week. It helps you compare your ultrasound BPD value in millimeters or centimeters with the estimated week it matches.
This chart supports the BPD Gestational Age Calculator by giving a quick week-by-week reference. Use it after calculating your result, not as a diagnosis.
How do I read a BPD chart by week?
Find your pregnancy week, then compare your ultrasound BPD value with the mm and cm values in the table. A small difference does not always mean a problem because head shape, scan angle, fetal position, and natural growth can affect BPD.
Use the chart this way:
- BPD in mm means millimeters, the most common unit on ultrasound reports.
- BPD in cm means centimeters, which the calculator uses inside the formula.
- Estimated value means an average reference value from the calculator logic.
- Different value means you should compare the full ultrasound report, not only BPD.
What is the BPD chart by week in mm and cm?
This BPD chart gives estimated average BPD values from 12 to 40 weeks. The values are rounded to make them easier to compare with a real ultrasound report.
| Gestational Week | Estimated BPD in mm | Estimated BPD in cm | Quick Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| 12 weeks | 14.3 mm | 1.43 cm | Early BPD estimate. CRL may still be more useful for dating. |
| 13 weeks | 19.2 mm | 1.92 cm | Head width is starting to become more useful on ultrasound. |
| 14 weeks | 23.7 mm | 2.37 cm | Early second-trimester comparison point. |
| 15 weeks | 28.0 mm | 2.80 cm | Compare with the full scan report if available. |
| 16 weeks | 32.0 mm | 3.20 cm | Small differences can reflect normal variation. |
| 17 weeks | 35.8 mm | 3.58 cm | About 36 mm is a common 17-week reference point. |
| 18 weeks | 39.5 mm | 3.95 cm | Useful for second-trimester BPD comparison. |
| 19 weeks | 43.0 mm | 4.30 cm | Review with HC, AC, and FL when possible. |
| 20 weeks | 46.3 mm | 4.63 cm | Often close to the anatomy scan period. |
| 21 weeks | 49.6 mm | 4.96 cm | BPD can vary with head shape and scan angle. |
| 22 weeks | 52.7 mm | 5.27 cm | Use as an average guide, not a diagnosis. |
| 23 weeks | 55.7 mm | 5.57 cm | Compare against your provider’s report notes. |
| 24 weeks | 58.6 mm | 5.86 cm | Full biometry gives better context than BPD alone. |
| 25 weeks | 61.5 mm | 6.15 cm | A BPD near 62 mm matches about 25 weeks. |
| 26 weeks | 64.2 mm | 6.42 cm | Look at growth trend if prior scans are available. |
| 27 weeks | 66.9 mm | 6.69 cm | Still useful, but full report matters more. |
| 28 weeks | 69.5 mm | 6.95 cm | After this point, BPD alone is less useful for dating. |
| 29 weeks | 72.0 mm | 7.20 cm | Natural fetal size differences become more noticeable. |
| 30 weeks | 74.5 mm | 7.45 cm | Use HC, AC, FL, and percentile for better context. |
| 31 weeks | 76.9 mm | 7.69 cm | One BPD value should not change the due date alone. |
| 32 weeks | 79.3 mm | 7.93 cm | Compare with the baby’s full growth pattern. |
| 33 weeks | 81.6 mm | 8.16 cm | Head shape may affect the BPD result. |
| 34 weeks | 84.0 mm | 8.40 cm | Provider review matters more than one number. |
| 35 weeks | 86.5 mm | 8.65 cm | Late-pregnancy BPD can vary more between babies. |
| 36 weeks | 89.0 mm | 8.90 cm | Best read with HC, AC, FL, and estimated weight. |
| 37 weeks | 91.2 mm | 9.12 cm | Near-term values can differ by baby size and genetics. |
| 38 weeks | 93.4 mm | 9.34 cm | Use as an average comparison point only. |
| 39 weeks | 95.5 mm | 9.55 cm | Full-term measurements should be reviewed as a full report. |
| 40 weeks | 97.7 mm | 9.77 cm | BPD alone cannot diagnose size or growth problems. |
Heads-up: These BPD values are average reference estimates. A higher or lower number does not diagnose a problem by itself. Compare BPD with HC, AC, FL, growth percentile, scan timing, and your healthcare provider’s review.
What is a normal BPD at 17 weeks?
A BPD around 35.8 mm, or 3.58 cm, matches about 17 weeks in this calculator. A nearby value may still reflect normal variation, especially if HC, AC, FL, and scan notes look consistent.
Quick check:
- 17 weeks BPD in mm: about 36 mm
- 17 weeks BPD in cm: about 3.6 cm
- Best next step: compare it with the full fetal biometry report
What if my BPD value is higher or lower than the chart?
A higher BPD means the head width matches an older average week. A lower BPD means the head width matches a younger average week.
This difference can happen because of:
- Rounder head shape
- Longer or narrower head shape
- Fetal position
- Scan angle
- Family growth pattern
- Normal measurement variation
BPD alone should not be used to judge fetal growth. A provider usually reviews BPD with HC, AC, FL, growth percentile, scan timing, and earlier ultrasound results.
Can this BPD chart diagnose a growth problem?
No, a BPD chart cannot diagnose fetal growth restriction, microcephaly, macrocephaly, or gestational diabetes. It only shows how one head-width measurement compares with an estimated average week.
Use this chart as a guide before reviewing the full report. If BPD is far ahead or behind, ask your healthcare provider how it compares with HC, AC, FL, percentile, and growth trend.
How do you calculate BPD gestational age?
A BPD gestational age calculator estimates pregnancy age from the fetal biparietal diameter (BPD), the width of the baby’s head measured during ultrasound. The calculator converts BPD into gestational age using a Hadlock-based formula, then compares the result with your selected pregnancy week.

What is the gestational age for a BPD of 36 mm?
This example reflects a common second-trimester ultrasound dating scenario.
Input:
- BPD: 36 mm
- Growth Standard: Hadlock
Process:
Convert BPD to centimeters: 3.6 cm
Apply the gestational age equation
Convert the result into weeks and days
Result:
- Estimated Gestational Age: Approximately 17 weeks
Meaning:
Growth appears consistent with average fetal development around the seventeenth week of pregnancy.
What happens when BPD measures ahead of gestational age?
Many parents search for answers after hearing that a baby is “measuring ahead” during an ultrasound.
Input:
- Actual Gestational Age: 28 weeks
- Measured BPD: Corresponds to about 29.5 weeks
Process:
Calculator estimates gestational age from BPD
Estimated age is compared with actual pregnancy age
Variance is calculated automatically
Result:
- Calculated Age: 29 weeks 4 days
- Variance: +1 week 4 days
- Status: Ahead of Gestational Age
Meaning:
A larger BPD may reflect normal family traits, a larger baby, or a rounder head shape. Clinical context helps determine whether the difference is significant.
Why is my BPD measuring behind gestational age?
This is one of the most common ultrasound questions during the third trimester.
Input:
- Actual Gestational Age: 31 weeks
- Measured BPD: Corresponds to about 29 weeks
Process:
BPD is converted into gestational age
Calculator compares estimated age with actual age
Growth variance is determined
Result:
- Calculated Age: 29 weeks 0 days
- Variance: -2 weeks
- Status: Behind Gestational Age
Meaning:
A smaller BPD does not always indicate a problem. Head shape, genetics, and normal biological variation can influence measurements. Follow-up growth assessment may be recommended.
Can head shape affect BPD dating results?
Many ultrasound reports show BPD values that seem different from other fetal measurements. Head shape is often the reason.
Input:
- BPD: 54 mm
- OFD: 60 mm
Process:
- Cephalic Index = (BPD ÷ OFD) × 100
- Cephalic Index = (54 ÷ 60) × 100
- Cephalic Index = 90
Result:
- Cephalic Index: 90%
- Classification: Brachycephaly
- Head Shape: Round Head
Meaning:
A round head can make BPD appear larger than expected and may slightly overestimate gestational age. This is why the calculator evaluates head shape separately.
Quick Rules to Remember
BPD measurements help estimate gestational age, but a single number never tells the whole story. Small differences between ultrasound age and actual pregnancy age are common. Head shape can influence BPD dating, and growth trends over multiple scans usually provide more useful information than one isolated measurement. Enter your own ultrasound values into the calculator to compare gestational age, growth variance, head shape findings, and fetal growth estimates in one place.
BPD Gestational Age Calculator Result Benchmarks Explained
BPD gestational age calculator benchmarks help you understand whether a fetal head measurement falls within an expected range for a specific pregnancy week. These ranges provide a quick reference for comparing ultrasound BPD values with average fetal growth patterns and identifying when measurements may need closer review.
| BPD Range | Label | USA Guideline | India Guideline | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 36 mm | Typical | Matches expected fetal growth around 17 weeks. | Consistent with common ultrasound dating ranges. | Usually reflects normal mid-pregnancy development. |
| 46–59 mm | Expected | Common range from about 20 to 24 weeks. | Used for routine second-trimester growth checks. | Compare with other fetal measurements for accuracy. |
| 71–81 mm | Later Growth | Often seen between 28 and 32 weeks. | Supports third-trimester fetal growth assessment. | Growth patterns matter more than one measurement. |
| 90–94 mm | Near Term | Common around 37 to 40 weeks. | Matches measurements near full-term pregnancy. | Final weeks require complete growth evaluation. |
| Outside Expected Range | Review | May need comparison with full ultrasound data. | Requires evaluation with other fetal indicators. | Head shape, genetics, and growth trends can affect BPD. |
Heads-up: BPD ranges are reference values based on fetal growth charts. A single measurement does not diagnose growth problems. Healthcare providers compare BPD with HC, AC, FL, and overall pregnancy history.
Understanding Your BPD Result Range
A BPD measurement within the expected range usually means the baby’s head width is similar to average fetal growth patterns for that stage of pregnancy. Results slightly above or below the range can happen because of normal variation, family traits, or differences in head shape.
A BPD value should always be viewed with other ultrasound measurements. The calculator helps estimate gestational age, but growth trends and complete fetal assessments provide the clearest picture.
Pro Tip
If your BPD result looks ahead or behind your pregnancy week, check whether other measurements such as head circumference, abdominal circumference, and femur length show a similar pattern. A complete growth profile is more useful than focusing on one number alone.
How to Improve Your BPD Gestational Age Calculator Result
A BPD gestational age calculator can help estimate fetal age from the baby’s biparietal diameter measurement. If the result shows ahead or behind, compare it with HC, AC, FL, growth percentile, scan timing, and provider guidance. One BPD value should not be used alone.
For Results Within the Expected Range (AGA)
A result within the expected range means the BPD measurement is close to the entered gestational age. This usually suggests that head growth is following the average pattern used by ultrasound reference charts.
Continue routine prenatal care and keep track of future ultrasound measurements. A single normal BPD result is helpful, but growth patterns over time provide more information.
Compare BPD with other fetal measurements when available, including head circumference (HC), abdominal circumference (AC), and femur length (FL). These measurements work together to assess overall fetal growth.
Keep your ultrasound reports available during appointments. Tracking changes between scans helps your provider see whether growth remains consistent.
For BPD Measuring Larger Than Expected
A larger BPD result does not always mean a problem. Some babies naturally have larger head measurements, and head shape can also affect how BPD estimates gestational age.
Check the cephalic index if both BPD and OFD measurements are available. A rounder head shape can increase BPD and make the baby appear slightly older than expected.
Compare the BPD result with HC, AC, and FL instead of focusing on one number alone. A balanced increase across measurements may simply reflect normal variation.
Ask your healthcare provider about percentile rankings if the measurement stays higher across multiple scans. Trends are more useful than a single ultrasound value.
For BPD Measuring Smaller Than Expected
A smaller BPD result means the head width measures below the average range for the entered pregnancy age. This can happen because of normal variation, head shape differences, or changes that need closer monitoring.
Review the full fetal growth picture with other measurements such as HC, AC, and FL. Head circumference may provide additional information when BPD is affected by a longer, narrower head shape.
Avoid making conclusions from one ultrasound measurement. Early pregnancy dating is usually more accurate, while BPD-based dating becomes less precise later in pregnancy.
Follow the recommended scan schedule if your provider suggests additional growth monitoring. Repeat measurements can show whether growth continues along a healthy pattern.
Pro Tip
Use the BPD gestational age calculator as a learning tool, not a diagnosis tool. The most reliable interpretation comes from combining BPD, ultrasound growth trends, fetal measurements, and your healthcare provider’s assessment. Tracking changes across multiple scans gives a much clearer view than any single result.
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Try calculatorCommon Mistakes When Using the BPD Gestational Age Calculator
Small input errors can change a BPD gestational age calculator result. Most problems come from incorrect ultrasound units, comparing different standards, or expecting one measurement to explain the entire pregnancy. Understanding these common mistakes helps users enter values correctly and interpret ultrasound results more accurately.
- Entering centimeters instead of millimeters when adding the BPD ultrasound measurement
- Using BPD alone to judge fetal health or overall growth status
- Comparing results from different ultrasound growth standards without adjustment
- Ignoring natural variation in ultrasound measurements between scans
- Worrying about small differences between estimated gestational age and actual pregnancy weeks

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
What is the normal BPD for gestational age?
Normal BPD depends on the pregnancy week and the fetal growth pattern. Around 20 weeks, average BPD is about 46 mm. Near full term, BPD commonly reaches around 90 to 94 mm. These values are averages, not strict limits.
How do you calculate BPD in pregnancy?
BPD is calculated from an ultrasound measurement of the baby’s head width between the two parietal bones. The measurement is entered into fetal biometry equations, such as Hadlock-based formulas, to estimate gestational age in weeks and days.
At what gestational age is BPD most accurate?
BPD is generally most useful for estimating gestational age during the second trimester, especially between about 14 and 26 weeks. Later in pregnancy, natural differences in fetal head shape and size can make BPD dating less precise.
What does BPD and gestational age mean?
BPD and gestational age show how the baby’s head width compares with expected growth for a specific pregnancy week. The BPD measurement helps estimate fetal age, while gestational age describes how far along the pregnancy is.
What if BPD is bigger than gestational age?
A BPD measurement larger than expected does not always mean a problem. It can happen because of normal genetic differences, a larger baby, a rounder head shape, or normal ultrasound variation. Other measurements help provide a clearer growth assessment.
What if BPD is smaller than gestational age?
A smaller BPD result means the baby’s head width measures below the average range for that pregnancy week. It may occur from normal variation or differences in head shape. Healthcare providers usually compare BPD with HC, AC, and FL measurements.
What is the normal BPD at 17 weeks?
The average BPD at 17 weeks is around 36 mm. Individual measurements can vary because fetal growth is not identical for every pregnancy. A small difference from the average does not automatically indicate abnormal development.
Is BPD more accurate than femur length?
BPD and femur length measure different parts of fetal growth, so one is not always more accurate than the other. Ultrasound providers usually combine BPD, HC, AC, and FL measurements to create a more complete growth assessment.
Can BPD ultrasound measurement predict the baby’s gender?
No, BPD cannot predict a baby’s gender. Biparietal diameter only measures head width and is affected by fetal growth and head shape. Ultrasound gender assessment uses anatomical markers, not BPD measurements or head size.
Why does my ultrasound BPD not match my due date?
A BPD result may differ from your due date because ultrasound measurements are based on averages, and babies grow at slightly different rates. Small differences are common. Doctors usually look at multiple measurements and pregnancy history before making conclusions.
Does head shape affect BPD gestational age results?
Yes, head shape can affect BPD-based gestational age estimates. A rounder head may increase BPD, while a longer, narrower head may reduce it. The cephalic index helps evaluate whether head shape may influence the measurement.
What is the difference between BPD and HC in pregnancy?
BPD measures the baby’s head width, while HC measures the full distance around the baby’s head. HC is often more useful when head shape makes BPD look larger or smaller than expected.
BPD can change with a round or narrow head shape. HC gives a broader view because it looks at the whole head, not only the side-to-side width.
Which is better, BPD or head circumference?
Head circumference is often better when the baby’s head shape is not average. BPD is still useful, but it can be affected more by a rounder or longer head shape.
Doctors usually do not rely on one number. They compare BPD with HC, AC, FL, percentile, and scan timing.
What is the BPD HC AC FL normal range by week?
BPD, HC, AC, and FL normal ranges depend on the pregnancy week. A result is usually checked against fetal biometry charts and percentiles for the same gestational age.
A single value outside the average range does not always mean a problem. The full scan report gives better context.
Can gestational age be calculated by BPD and FL?
Yes, gestational age can be estimated using BPD and FL, but your calculator uses BPD for age and FL for fetal weight mode. Full ultrasound dating usually becomes stronger when BPD, HC, AC, and FL are reviewed together.
BPD estimates age from head width. FL adds body-size context, especially when head shape may affect BPD.
Is BPD accurate after 28 weeks?
BPD can still be useful after 28 weeks, but it is less useful for dating when used alone. Later in pregnancy, babies vary more in size, head shape, and growth pattern.
After 28 weeks, BPD should be read with HC, AC, FL, percentile, and earlier scan history. One late BPD value should not reset the due date by itself.
When is BPD most accurate for gestational age?
BPD is usually more useful for gestational age in the second trimester. It gives a better estimate when fetal head growth follows a more predictable pattern.
Very early pregnancy usually uses CRL. Later pregnancy needs more caution because fetal size differences become more natural.
Can BPD change my due date?
One BPD measurement should not change your due date by itself. Providers usually use early ultrasound dating, full biometry, LMP history, and clinical review before changing the estimated due date.
A BPD result can measure ahead or behind without changing the pregnancy age. It may only show that the head width matches a different average week.
When should BPD not change my due date?
BPD should not change your due date when the difference is small, the scan is late in pregnancy, or other measurements match your current pregnancy week. A single head-width value is not enough to redate a pregnancy.
Due date changes need provider review. Your provider may look at earlier scans, HC, AC, FL, and the full growth pattern.
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