Average Head Circumference for a 6-Month-Old Boy
The average (50th-percentile) head circumference for a 6-month-old boy is 43.3 cm (17.1 in), based on the WHO Child Growth Standards. Across the healthy range, most boys this age have a head circumference between 41.0 cm (16.2 in) and 45.6 cm (18.0 in). (measured around the largest part of the head)
| Percentile | Metric | Imperial |
|---|---|---|
| 3rd | 41.0 cm | 16.2 in |
| 15th | 42.1 cm | 16.6 in |
| 50th | 43.3 cm | 17.1 in |
| 85th | 44.6 cm | 17.6 in |
| 97th | 45.6 cm | 18.0 in |
What's typical at this age
Head growth slows to roughly 0.5 cm a month. By now the brain has nearly doubled its birth size, and head circumference is checked at every routine well-child visit. Between month 6 and month 7, the median boy's head circumference grows about 0.6 cm.
A percentile compares your boy to other boys the same age — the 50th is simply the middle. Being above or below it is usually completely normal; a baby who has always tracked the 15th or 85th percentile is typically growing exactly as they should. What pediatricians watch for is a sudden change in the pattern, not the number itself.
See your own baby's percentile
Enter your child's exact weight and height for their personal WHO percentile and growth curve.
Open the Growth Calculator →Percentiles calculated from the WHO Child Growth Standards (2006). For information only — not medical advice. If you're concerned about your child's growth, speak to your pediatrician or health visitor. Full disclaimer.