Average Height for a 2 Year Old Boy (CDC Data)
The average (50th percentile) height for a 2-year-old boy is 2'11" (89 cm), based on CDC/NCHS 2000 growth charts. Half of boys this age are taller and half are shorter.
Average Height for a 2 Year Old Boy
Pediatricians use CDC growth charts to track whether a child is growing appropriately for their age and sex. At age 2, the median stature for boys—the 50th percentile—is 89 cm (2'11").
Growth rates and final adult height vary widely among children. Genetics account for roughly 60–80% of height, while nutrition, sleep, and overall health influence the rest. Comparing your child to the CDC reference helps identify whether growth is on track.
The table below shows CDC stature-for-age percentiles for 2-year-old boys, from the 5th percentile (shorter end of normal) to the 95th percentile (taller end of normal).
CDC Growth Chart Percentiles — 2 Year Old Boy (Stature)
| Percentile | Height (cm) | Height (ft-in) |
|---|---|---|
| 5th | 83 cm | 2'8" |
| 10th | 84 cm | 2'9" |
| 25th | 86 cm | 2'10" |
| 50th | 89 cm | 2'11" |
| 75th | 91 cm | 3'0" |
| 90th | 94 cm | 3'1" |
| 95th | 95 cm | 3'1" |
Source: CDC/NCHS 2000 growth charts, stature-for-age percentiles for boys. 50th percentile (median) highlighted.
Is My Child's Height Normal?
A common question from parents is whether their 2-year-old is "too short" or "too tall." CDC growth charts define normal as falling between roughly the 5th and 95th percentiles for age and sex—not exactly at the 50th.
If your child tracks consistently along the same percentile curve over time, that pattern is usually reassuring even if they are at the 10th or 90th percentile. What matters most is steady growth velocity, not hitting the exact average.
Sudden drops or jumps across percentile lines, or measurements below the 3rd or above the 97th percentile, are reasons to discuss growth with a pediatrician. A single measurement at age 2 should be interpreted in context of prior measurements.
For a 2-year-old boy, the CDC defines a typical range from the 5th percentile (83 cm / 2'8") to the 95th percentile (95 cm / 3'1"). 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?
Children do not grow at a constant rate. After rapid infant growth, boys ages 2–3 typically gain about 7–12 cm per year before the adolescent growth spurt.
At age 2, most boys are in steady childhood growth with predictable annual height gains before puberty accelerates growth.
Growth velocity at age 2 is typically about 10–12 cm per year. A boy at this age has roughly 85–90 cm of growth remaining to reach typical adult male height. Individual timing varies widely based on genetics and puberty onset.
Frequently Asked Questions
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