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    Is 5'2 Short for a Man?

    Yes — 5'2" is short for a man. At 157 cm (5'2"), an adult US man falls at approximately the 1st percentile, meaning about 99% of adult men are taller. This height is well below the US average of 5'9".

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    How 5'2 Compares to US Adult Men

    For US males aged 20 and older, adult height follows a roughly bell-shaped distribution centered near 5'9" (175 cm), according to CDC/NCHS NHANES body-measure data. Comparing any specific height to this reference population gives a clear, data-backed answer.

    At 5'2" (157 cm), a man sits well below the population mean—at the 1st percentile. That means roughly 99% of US adult men are taller. In everyday language, 5'2" is considered short, not average and certainly not tall.

    The 5th percentile for US men is approximately 5'4" (163 cm). Heights at or below this level fall on the short side of the adult range. At 5'2", a man is below even that threshold—statistically short compared to peers.

    What Percentile Is 5'2" for a Man?

    Using NHANES-based height distributions, 5'2" (157 cm) corresponds to approximately the 1st percentile for US adult males. At this level, only about 1% of men are shorter and 99% are taller.

    The US median adult male height is about 5'9" (175 cm)—roughly 7–8 inches taller than 5'2". Percentile rankings make this gap concrete: being at the 1st percentile means short stature relative to the national reference population, not a subjective judgment.

    Male Height vs. Percentile (US Adults, CDC/NHANES)

    HeightCentimetersPercentile
    4'10"147 cm<0.1th
    4'11"150 cm<0.1th
    5'0"152 cm0.1st
    5'1"155 cm0.4th
    5'2"157 cm1st
    5'3"160 cm2nd
    5'4"163 cm5th
    5'5"165 cm9th
    5'6"168 cm16th
    5'7"170 cm26th

    Percentiles estimated from CDC/NHANES adult male height distribution (mean ~175 cm, SD ~7.5 cm). Row highlighted for 5'2".

    What "Above or Below Average" Really Means

    "Average" adult male height in the US is about 5'9", but average is not the same as typical range. Most men cluster within a few inches of the mean—roughly 5'6" to 6'0" covers a large share of the population (approximately the 16th to 84th percentiles).

    At 5'2", a man sits below that central cluster. Being short in percentile terms describes where you fall on the population curve—it does not define your abilities, health, or worth. Many men at 5'2" live entirely normal lives; the percentile simply answers a statistical question.

    Clinicians sometimes use the 5th and 95th percentiles as outer bounds of "normal" adult height. At the 1st percentile, 5'2" is at or below the lower boundary. Context from a healthcare provider matters if height raises medical concerns.

    Data source: CDC/NCHS NHANES Body Measures (adults ≥20 years). Methodology aligns with our percentile calculator methodology.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Yes. At 5'2" (157 cm), an adult US man falls at approximately the 1st percentile based on CDC/NHANES data. That means about 99% of adult men are taller. In both statistical and everyday terms, 5'2" is considered short for an adult male in the United States.

    About 99% of US adult men are 5'2" or taller. Because 5'2" sits at the 1st percentile, the vast majority of men exceed this height. Only roughly 1% of US adult males are 5'2" or shorter.

    The average (mean) height for US adult men is approximately 5 feet 9 inches (175 cm), based on CDC/NCHS NHANES survey data from recent cycles (2017–2020). Compared to that average, 5'2" through 5'4" heights fall on the short side of the distribution.

    "Too short" is subjective. Statistically, 5'2" is at the 1st percentile—short relative to US peers but within the natural range of adult male heights. It does not automatically indicate a medical problem. If short stature was unexpected based on family height or childhood growth, a doctor can evaluate whether further assessment is needed.

    Find Your Exact Height Percentile

    Enter your height in our free calculator to see your precise percentile ranking among US adults, with charts and comparisons powered by CDC/NHANES data.

    Try the Height Percentile Calculator →