Home/Countries/United States/Overweight, Children Under 5 (%)

United StatesOverweight, Children Under 5 (%)

Category: HealthSource: World Bank World Development IndicatorsGlobal Rank: #9 of 71Updated April 2026
Latest Value
9.5%
2022
YoY Change
+1.1%
20182022
Global Rank
#9
of 71 countries
Maximum
9.5%
2022
Minimum
6.4%
2012
CAGR
+0.6%
11 years
Last
9.5%
Previous
9.4%
Highest
9.5%
Lowest
6.4%
Source
World Bank World Development Indicators

United States's overweight, children under 5 (%) was 9.5% in 2022, ranking #9 out of 71 countries. This represents a +1.1% change from 2018. Over the past 11 years, the highest recorded value was 9.5% (2022) and the lowest was 6.4% (2012). Data sourced from the World Bank World Development Indicators.

Source: World Bank World Development Indicators

Historical Data

YearValueChange
20229.5%+1.1%
20189.4%+0.0%
20169.4%+14.6%
20148.2%+28.1%
20126.4%-28.9%
20109.0%+21.6%
20087.4%-7.5%
20068.0%-14.9%
20049.4%+23.7%
20027.6%-8.4%
20008.3%

Top Countries — Overweight, Children Under 5 (%)

#CountryValueYear
1Turks and Caicos Islands18.2%2020
2Mongolia12.8%2023
3Saudi Arabia11.6%2020
4Thailand10.9%2022
5Egypt, Arab Rep.10.1%2021
6Malta10.1%2022
7Qatar10.0%2023
8Eswatini9.8%2021
9United States9.5%2022
10Viet Nam9.4%2023
View all 71 countries →

About This Indicator

Definition

Prevalence of overweight children is the percentage of children under age 5 whose weight for height is more than two standard deviations above the median for the international reference population of the corresponding age as established by the WHO's 2006 Child Growth Standards.

Methodology

Data compiled by UNICEF, WHO, World Bank: Joint child Malnutrition Estimates (JME). Aggregation is based on UNICEF, WHO, and the World Bank harmonized dataset (adjusted, comparable data) and methodology., UN Children's Fund (UNICEF), note: Aggregation is based on UNICEF, WHO, and the World Bank harmonized dataset (adjusted, comparable data) and methodology; World Health Organization (WHO), note: Joint child Malnutrition Estimates (JME); Aggregation is based on UNICEF, WHO, and the World Bank harmonized dataset (adjusted, comparable data) and methodology; World Bank (WB), note: Joint child Malnutrition Estimates (JME); Aggregation is based on UNICEF, WHO, and the World Bank harmonized dataset (adjusted, comparable data) and methodology.

Source: World Bank - World Development IndicatorsCoverage: 20002024View original source →