Boys Head chart in inches for babies 10 week old baby

10-week-old-baby-babies-head-boys-chart
General Summary: 10 week old baby boys head
In most cases, head measurements for 10 week old baby boys will be in the range between 14 and 16 inches. The average head for 10 week old baby boys is 15 inches, according to the CDC and anonymized data from Lifemeasure.com users.
Gender
Date of Birth
Date Measured
Head Circumference
(75.5 inches)
Unit of Measure

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Head circumference chart for 10-Week-Old boys

Reading the head circumference chart for baby boys at 10-Week-Old.

Head circumference percentiles for 10-Week-Old boys

The CDC growth charts provide the following head circumference percentiles for baby boys at 10-Week-Old:

  • 5th percentile: 15.0 in

  • 25th percentile: 15.6 in

  • 50th percentile (median): 16.0 in

  • 75th percentile: 16.4 in

  • 95th percentile: 16.9 in

The percentile values on this page are displayed in inches.

A percentile ranking tells you where your child's measurement falls among baby boys of the same age. The 50th percentile is the statistical midpoint of the population.

Growth and development at 10-Week-Old

Ten-week-old babies demonstrate a striking increase in awareness compared to the newborn period. Head circumference growth tracks the brain development underpinning this transformation.

How to measure accurately

Head circumference is measured at the widest point - just above the eyebrows at the front and around the most prominent part at the back of the skull. Use a flexible, non-stretch tape measure. Two people make the task easier: one to hold the baby's head still, one to take the reading. Healthcare professionals use a purpose-built infantometer for length; for head, a standard tape is the clinical norm.

What to watch for

The fontanelle - the soft spot at the top of the head - should feel soft and slightly sunken when the baby is calm and upright. A bulging fontanelle when the baby is not crying may warrant prompt medical attention. A persistently sunken fontanelle can indicate dehydration. Keep a record of every head measurement with the date, as trends are far more informative than a single reading.

When to seek advice

Alert your GP or health visitor if the head circumference crosses two percentile lines upward or downward over a period of weeks, if the fontanelle closes very early (before 9 months) or remains widely open after 18 months, or if you notice unusual head shape that is not resolving on its own.

Frequently asked questions

What is a normal head circumference for this age?

The percentile table on this page shows the full range of typical head circumferences. All values from the 5th to the 95th percentile are within normal limits. As with all growth measurements, the pattern of growth over time is more informative than any single reading - a baby growing consistently at the 15th percentile is growing normally.

How fast does head circumference grow in the first year?

Head circumference grows approximately 10-12 cm in the first year of life - roughly 2 cm per month in the first 3 months, slowing to about 1 cm per month from 3-6 months, and 0.5 cm per month from 6-12 months. By 12 months, the average head circumference has grown from approximately 34-35 cm at birth to around 46-47 cm.

What is the fontanelle and when does it close?

The fontanelle is the soft spot on the top of a baby's head where the skull bones have not yet fused. There are two fontanelles: the larger anterior (front) fontanelle, which typically closes between 9 and 18 months, and the smaller posterior (back) fontanelle, which usually closes by 2-3 months. Both allow the skull to expand rapidly as the brain grows during the first years of life.

Data sources and methodology

The percentile ranges on this page are drawn from CDC growth chart data from the National Center for Health Statistics and WHO Child Growth Standards (for children under 5). CDC data published May 30, 2000, with 2022 extended BMI tables. Percentiles are modelled using the LMS method (Box-Cox transformation), which accounts for the skewed distribution of measurements at each age. All measurements are given in metric units with imperial equivalents.

These percentile ranges provide a population-level reference. A paediatrician or family doctor can give context specific to the individual's own growth trajectory.

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