Average Height for a 11 Year Old Boy (CDC Data)
The average (50th percentile) height for a 11-year-old boy is 4'6" (136 cm), based on CDC/NCHS 2000 growth charts. Half of boys this age are taller and half are shorter.
Average Height for a 11 Year Old Boy
Pediatricians use CDC growth charts to track adolescent growth during puberty. At age 11, the median stature for boys—the 50th percentile—is 136 cm (4'6").
Teenage height varies enormously depending on puberty timing. Two 11-year-olds can differ by 6+ inches and both be normal if each is tracking consistently on their own percentile curve.
The table below shows CDC stature-for-age percentiles for 11-year-old boys. Use these alongside your pediatrician's growth charts at annual checkups.
CDC Growth Chart Percentiles — 11 Year Old Boy (Stature)
| Percentile | Height (cm) | Height (ft-in) |
|---|---|---|
| 5th | 123 cm | 4'0" |
| 10th | 126 cm | 4'2" |
| 25th | 131 cm | 4'3" |
| 50th | 136 cm | 4'6" |
| 75th | 142 cm | 4'8" |
| 90th | 147 cm | 4'10" |
| 95th | 150 cm | 4'11" |
Source: CDC/NCHS 2000 growth charts, stature-for-age percentiles for boys. 50th percentile (median) highlighted.
Is My Child's Height Normal?
During adolescence, temporary comparisons to the average can be misleading because puberty timing differs. A 11-year-old boy who has not yet started puberty may be shorter than peers who have—without any underlying problem.
What matters most is growth velocity and percentile tracking over time. A steady pattern along the 15th or 85th percentile is usually normal; crossing multiple percentile lines rapidly may warrant evaluation.
Heights below the 5th or above the 95th percentile at age 11 should be discussed with a pediatrician, especially if accompanied by other symptoms or a sudden change in growth rate.
For a 11-year-old boy, the CDC defines a typical range from the 5th percentile (123 cm / 4'0") to the 95th percentile (150 cm / 4'11"). Heights within this band are generally considered normal for age. Percentiles below the 5th or above the 95th warrant a conversation with your pediatrician—not necessarily a problem, but worth monitoring.
How Much Will They Grow From Here?
Adolescence is when the most dramatic height changes occur. Boys ages 11–14 experience wide variation in growth timing—early, average, and late bloomers can differ by several inches at the same age.
At age 11, many boys are entering or approaching puberty. Growth velocity often accelerates from the steady ~5 cm/year of childhood to 7–10 cm/year during the peak growth spurt (typically ages 13–15).
Growth velocity at age 11 is typically about 5–7 cm per year (puberty often begins). A boy at this age has about 35–40 cm of growth remaining; the adolescent growth spurt is approaching. Individual timing varies widely based on genetics and puberty onset.
Frequently Asked Questions
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