eGFR Kidney Function Calculator

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Overview: What This eGFR Calculator Does

This calculator estimates your estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR), a common measure of how well your kidneys filter waste products from the blood. The default adult calculation uses the 2021 CKD-EPI race-free creatinine equation with age in years, serum creatinine in mg/dL, and sex.

The result is expressed in milliliters per minute per 1.73 square meters (mL/min/1.73 m²), which is a standard way of comparing kidney function across people of different body sizes. This tool is intended for adult users and for educational purposes only. It cannot diagnose disease or replace professional medical advice, testing, or treatment.

If your result is outside the range you expect, or if you have symptoms or risk factors for kidney disease (such as diabetes, high blood pressure, or a family history of kidney problems), discuss your numbers with a qualified health professional.

Introduction: What Is eGFR and Why It Matters

Your kidneys continuously filter your blood, removing waste products, drugs, and excess fluid. The glomerular filtration rate (GFR) is the amount of blood filtered per minute by tiny filtering units in the kidneys called glomeruli. Because directly measuring GFR is complex and invasive, laboratories usually report an estimated GFR (eGFR) based on blood tests.

eGFR helps clinicians:

A persistently reduced eGFR (typically below 60 mL/min/1.73 m² for at least three months) is one of the criteria used to define chronic kidney disease. However, a single low result, especially from an online calculator, is not enough to make a diagnosis.

How the CKD-EPI Equation Works

This calculator uses the 2021 CKD-EPI creatinine-based equation. It relies on a blood test called serum creatinine, a waste product generated by muscle metabolism and cleared by the kidneys.

Plain-text formula: eGFR = 142 * min(Scr/k, 1)^alpha * max(Scr/k, 1)^-1.200 * 0.9938^Age * 1.012 if female. This 2021 equation does not include a race coefficient.

Where:

The min and max functions in the equation handle how creatinine values above or below a threshold affect the final estimate. The result is normalized to a body surface area of 1.73 m², a historical “average” adult size used in kidney research.

This equation was validated in large research cohorts, but like any model, it provides an estimate, not a direct measurement of true GFR.

How to Use the Calculator

To use this tool:

  1. Enter your age in years. The calculator is designed for adults (typically 18 years and older).
  2. Enter your most recent serum creatinine in mg/dL, as reported by your laboratory. Many adults have values that fall roughly between 0.6 and 1.3 mg/dL, but normal ranges vary.
  3. Select your sex assigned at birth, because this affects typical muscle mass and creatinine generation.
  4. Submit the form to see your estimated GFR in mL/min/1.73 m².

For the most meaningful comparison, try to use values from the same laboratory over time, because testing methods and reference ranges can differ.

Interpreting Your eGFR Result

Healthy kidney function depends on many factors, including age. eGFR tends to decline gradually with aging, even in people without kidney disease. The table below summarizes commonly used eGFR ranges and how they are often described in clinical practice. These stages are usually applied only when reduced values are persistent and interpreted together with urine tests, imaging, and medical history.

eGFR range (mL/min/1.73 m²) Typical CKD stage name* General interpretation
>= 90 Stage 1 (if kidney damage present) Usually normal kidney filtration. If other signs of kidney damage (such as protein in the urine) are present, early CKD may be diagnosed.
60–89 Stage 2 (if kidney damage present) May be normal for many older adults. In younger people, can suggest early loss of function when combined with other abnormalities.
45–59 Stage 3a Mild to moderately decreased kidney function. Often prompts closer monitoring and management of risk factors.
30–44 Stage 3b Moderately to severely decreased function. Evaluation by a kidney specialist (nephrologist) is commonly recommended.
15–29 Stage 4 Severely decreased function. High risk of complications; preparation for possible kidney replacement therapy may begin.
< 15 Stage 5 Kidney failure (end-stage kidney disease). Dialysis or kidney transplant is often needed; emergency care may be required if symptoms are severe.

*Stage labels are simplified and for general education. Only a clinician can formally diagnose chronic kidney disease.

Points to keep in mind when viewing your result:

Worked Example

The following example shows how the CKD-EPI equation might be applied in practice. Your calculator result will be computed automatically; you do not need to perform these steps yourself.

Example person:

Stepwise application:

  1. Set κ = 0.7 and α = -0.241 (for females).
  2. Compute Scr/κ = 1.1 / 0.7 ≈ 1.57.
  3. Determine min(Scr/κ, 1) = min(1.57, 1) = 1.
  4. Determine max(Scr/κ, 1) = max(1.57, 1) = 1.57.
  5. Calculate the creatinine terms:
    • [min(Scr/κ, 1)]α = 1-0.241 = 1.
    • [max(Scr/κ, 1)]-1.200 ≈ 1.57-1.200 (a value < 1 that lowers the eGFR).
  6. Calculate the age term: 0.9938Age = 0.993855, which is also less than 1 and slightly reduces the estimate.
  7. Apply the female coefficient of 1.012. No race coefficient is applied in the default 2021 equation.

When all the steps are combined numerically, the eGFR might be, for example, around 58–60 mL/min/1.73 m² (exact value depends on rounding). This would often fall into the mildly to moderately decreased range and would usually prompt discussion with a clinician, especially if persistent on repeat testing.

Your own result may differ even with similar inputs because of differences in lab methods, rounding, or use of updated equations.

Limitations and Assumptions of This Calculator

While eGFR is widely used and very helpful, it has important limitations:

Formula: Model Version and Source Metadata

Source: National Kidney Foundation / CKD-EPI 2021 creatinine equation. Effective model year: 2021. Last updated on AgentCalc: May 13, 2026.

The legacy 2009 CKD-EPI equation included a race coefficient and is not the default race-free equation. This page does not display a race-based result as the primary estimate.

Assumptions Behind the Equation

The CKD-EPI formula assumes:

If these assumptions are not met (for example, in severe liver disease, during pregnancy, or with very unusual body size), the eGFR may be less accurate. In such situations, clinicians may rely more heavily on other tests or direct measurements.

Maintaining Kidney Health

Protecting your kidneys can reduce the risk of chronic kidney disease or slow its progression. General strategies often recommended by clinicians include:

Any changes to medications, diet, or lifestyle should be discussed with a healthcare professional who knows your full medical history.

Important Safety Notes

Your healthcare provider can explain how your eGFR fits with other test results and what, if anything, you should do next.

Enter your data to estimate eGFR.

Arcade Mini-Game: eGFR Kidney Function Calculator Calibration Run

Use this quick arcade run to practice separating useful scenario inputs from common planning mistakes before you rely on the calculator output.

Score: 0 Timer: 30s Best: 0

Start the game, then use your pointer or arrow keys to catch useful inputs and avoid bad assumptions.

Status messages will appear here.