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    Is 6 Feet Tall for a Man?

    Yes — 6 feet is generally considered tall for a man. At 183 cm (6'0"), an adult US man falls at approximately the 85th percentile, meaning about 85% of adult men are shorter. Only roughly 1 in 7 US men reaches 6 feet or above.

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    How 6 Feet Compares to US Adult Men

    When Americans ask whether a height is "tall," they usually mean compared to other adult men. For US males aged 20 and older, height follows a bell-shaped distribution centered near 5'9" (175 cm), according to CDC/NCHS NHANES body-measure data.

    At 6'0" (183 cm), a man is clearly above average—the 85th percentile. Taller than roughly 85% of US adult men. Many people would describe this height as tall or tall-ish, especially compared to the average man at 5'9" (175 cm).

    What Percentile Is 6'0" for a Man?

    Using NHANES-based height distributions, 6'0" (183 cm) corresponds to approximately the 85th percentile for US adult males. A percentile tells you what share of the reference population is shorter than you.

    Heights at the 85th percentile and above are relatively uncommon. For perspective, the 50th percentile (median) is about 5'9" (175 cm), so 6'0" is about 3 inches above that midpoint.

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

    HeightCentimetersPercentile
    5'8"173 cm38th
    5'9"175 cm51st
    5'10"178 cm65th
    5'11"180 cm76th
    6'0"183 cm85th
    6'1"185 cm92nd
    6'2"188 cm96th
    6'3"191 cm98th
    6'4"193 cm99th
    6'5"196 cm>99th

    Percentiles estimated from CDC/NHANES adult male height distribution (mean ~175 cm, SD ~7.5 cm). Row highlighted for 6'0".

    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 6'0", a man sits above that central cluster. Percentiles give a clearer picture than subjective labels—being at the 85th percentile is a precise way to say you are taller than most US men.

    Social perceptions of "tall" often kick in around the 75th–85th percentile (roughly 5'11"–6'0"), though this varies by region and peer group. Statistical percentiles from CDC data provide a consistent, data-backed answer regardless of local norms.

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

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Yes. At 6'0" (183 cm), an adult US man falls at approximately the 85th percentile based on CDC/NHANES data. That means about 85% of adult men are shorter. In both statistical and everyday terms, this height is considered tall.

    About 15% of US adult men are 6'0" or taller. At the 85th percentile, this height is above the median of 5'9" but still reached by a meaningful share of the population.

    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). The 50th percentile—the median—is very close to this figure. Percentile rankings compare any specific height against this national reference population.

    Height is largely genetic and not a measure of worth or capability. At 6'0", you are taller than most US men, which some people prefer socially or athletically. Practical considerations—clothing fit, legroom, door frames—can differ at taller heights, but 6'0" is generally viewed positively in American culture.

    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 →