Diabetes Risk Calculator โ€“ Check Your Diabetes Risk Score | DietDekho
๐Ÿฉบ Free Health Tool

Free Diabetes Risk Calculator
Know Your Diabetes Risk Score

Answer 8 clinically validated questions to calculate your type 2 diabetes risk score using FINDRISC โ€” no blood test required. Get instant results and expert Indian diet advice, completely free.

8Risk Factors
2 minTo Complete
FINDRISCValidated Method
10-yrRisk Estimate

Your Diabetes Risk Score

FINDRISC ยท 8 questions ยท no blood test needed

Progress 0 / 8 answered
1
What is your age?
Age is a key non-modifiable risk factor for type 2 diabetes
2
What is your Body Mass Index (BMI)?
BMI = weight (kg) รท heightยฒ (mยฒ) ยท Indian healthy range: 18.5โ€“22.9
3
What is your waist circumference?
Measure at navel level. Abdominal fat is a key diabetes driver
4
How physically active are you daily?
Counts work activity + leisure exercise + walking
5
Do you eat vegetables, fruits or berries every day?
Dietary fibre from whole produce lowers diabetes risk significantly
6
Have you ever taken medication for high blood pressure (hypertension)?
Hypertension and type 2 diabetes frequently co-occur
7
Have you ever been told your blood glucose is high?
Includes prediabetes, gestational diabetes, or impaired fasting glucose
8
Do you have a family history of diabetes?
First-degree relatives: parent, sibling, child
Current Score
out of 26 points
0

Please answer all 8 questions for accurate results

Understanding Your Diabetes Risk Score

A diabetes risk score is a numerical estimate of your probability of developing type 2 diabetes within the next 10 years, based on key lifestyle and health factors. This calculator uses the FINDRISC (Finnish Diabetes Risk Score) โ€” one of the most widely used and clinically validated non-invasive diabetes screening tools in the world, developed by Jaana Lindstrรถm and Jaakko Tuomilehto at the Finnish National Institute for Health and Welfare.

FINDRISC requires no blood test. It uses 8 easily measurable factors โ€” age, BMI, waist circumference, physical activity, diet, blood pressure history, blood glucose history, and family history โ€” to generate a score from 0 to 26 that accurately stratifies your risk. It has been validated across multiple populations and is endorsed by the International Diabetes Federation (IDF) and the World Diabetes Day screening programme.

Score Interpretation

Diabetes Risk Score Interpretation Chart

ScoreRisk Category10-Year Diabetes RiskRecommended Action
0 โ€“ 7Low Risk~1%Healthy lifestyle โ€” recheck in 5 years
8 โ€“ 11Slightly Elevated~4%Lifestyle review โ€” annual blood test
12 โ€“ 14Moderate Risk~17%Consult doctor + fasting blood glucose test
15 โ€“ 20High Risk~33%Urgent โ€” HbA1c + OGTT + dietitian
Above 20Very High Risk~50%Immediate medical review โ€” likely prediabetes
Risk Factors

Key Diabetes Risk Factors in India

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Age

Risk rises significantly after 45. Indians are at risk even earlier โ€” studies show diabetes onset is 10 years earlier in South Asians compared to Western populations. Scores increase with each decade.

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BMI & Overweight

Being overweight (BMI 25โ€“30) increases diabetes risk. Obesity (BMI 30+) increases it significantly. For Indians, risk begins at BMI 23 โ€” lower than Western thresholds.

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Waist Circumference

Abdominal obesity โ€” excess fat around the waist โ€” is the strongest modifiable predictor of type 2 diabetes. Visceral fat around organs directly causes insulin resistance.

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Physical Inactivity

A sedentary lifestyle doubles diabetes risk. Even 30 minutes of moderate activity daily โ€” walking, yoga, household work โ€” significantly improves insulin sensitivity and reduces risk.

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Poor Diet

Diets low in fibre and high in refined carbohydrates (maida, white rice, sugary drinks) chronically elevate blood sugar and drive insulin resistance. Daily vegetables and whole foods are protective.

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Blood Pressure History

Hypertension and type 2 diabetes share the same underlying drivers โ€” insulin resistance and visceral fat. Having treated hypertension significantly raises your diabetes risk score.

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Previous High Blood Glucose

Prediabetes, gestational diabetes, or any previously elevated blood glucose reading is the strongest single predictor of future type 2 diabetes โ€” adding 5 points to the FINDRISC score.

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Family History

Having a parent or sibling with diabetes raises your lifetime risk by 40โ€“70%. Genetic predisposition combined with shared lifestyle factors makes family history a powerful independent risk factor.

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Indians & Diabetes Risk

India has the world's second-largest population of people with diabetes. South Asians develop type 2 diabetes at younger ages, lower BMI values, and with lower waist circumferences than Western populations due to genetic predisposition to visceral fat storage. Early screening is critical.

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Diabetes Is Preventable

The landmark Finnish Diabetes Prevention Study showed that targeted lifestyle change โ€” losing 5โ€“7% body weight and exercising 150 min/week โ€” reduced progression to diabetes by 58% in high-risk individuals. A high score is a warning, not a life sentence.

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When to Get Blood Tests

A FINDRISC score of 12 or above warrants a fasting blood glucose test and HbA1c. Fasting glucose above 100 mg/dL or HbA1c of 5.7โ€“6.4% indicates prediabetes. HbA1c 6.5%+ confirms diabetes. Early detection is key to reversal.

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Modifiable vs Fixed Factors

Age, family history, and past glucose history cannot be changed. But BMI, waist circumference, physical activity, and diet are fully modifiable โ€” and account for the majority of diabetes risk. Lifestyle change has outsized impact.

Prevention Tips

How to Reduce Your Diabetes Risk Score โ€” Indian Guide

  • 1
    Lose 5โ€“7% of body weight if overweight โ€” this is the single most impactful intervention for diabetes prevention. Losing just 4โ€“6 kg for most Indians significantly improves insulin sensitivity and is clinically proven to reduce the 10-year risk of developing type 2 diabetes by over 50%. A certified dietitian can help you reach this target safely and sustainably.
  • 2
    Walk at least 150 minutes per week โ€” daily walks after meals are best โ€” 30 minutes of brisk walking 5 days a week is the minimum clinically recommended for diabetes prevention. Post-meal walks of 15โ€“20 minutes specifically target post-meal blood glucose spikes. Exercise uses blood glucose without requiring insulin, directly improving insulin sensitivity within weeks.
  • 3
    Replace white rice and maida with millets and whole grains โ€” jowar (sorghum), bajra (pearl millet), and ragi (finger millet) have a significantly lower glycaemic index than white rice and maida. Even replacing one white rice meal per day with a millet-based meal measurably improves fasting blood glucose and HbA1c over 3 months in prediabetic Indians.
  • 4
    Eat dal at every main meal โ€” it is your best blood sugar weapon โ€” lentils and legumes are low glycaemic index, high protein, and high in soluble fibre, all of which blunt blood glucose spikes. Eating dal before rice at a meal has been shown to reduce post-meal glucose by 20โ€“30 mg/dL. Include moong, masoor, chana, or toor dal at lunch and dinner daily.
  • 5
    Reduce your waist circumference by at least 5 cm โ€” visceral abdominal fat is the key driver of insulin resistance. Reducing waist circumference through calorie control and daily walking directly lowers your FINDRISC score. For men, target below 90 cm (Indian standard); for women, below 80 cm. Monthly measurements track real progress beyond the scale.
  • 6
    Eliminate sugary drinks and packaged juices entirely โ€” cold drinks, packaged fruit juices, sweetened chai, and energy drinks cause rapid blood glucose spikes and contribute directly to visceral fat accumulation and insulin resistance. Replace with plain water, chach (buttermilk), or green tea. This single change can reduce HbA1c by 0.2โ€“0.5% over 3 months.
  • 7
    Include karela, methi, and amla in your weekly diet โ€” bitter gourd (karela) contains plant insulin analogues that improve glucose uptake. Fenugreek seeds (methi) contain galactomannan, a soluble fibre that slows carbohydrate absorption. Amla (Indian gooseberry) is rich in chromium that improves insulin sensitivity. These are the three most evidence-backed Indian foods for blood sugar management.

Common Questions About Diabetes Risk Score

Answers from DietDekho's registered dietitians on the most frequently asked questions about the diabetes risk score, FINDRISC, and how to reduce type 2 diabetes risk through diet.

What is a diabetes risk score and how is it calculated? +
A diabetes risk score is a numerical value estimating your probability of developing type 2 diabetes within the next 10 years. This calculator uses the FINDRISC method, which assigns points across 8 validated risk factors: age, BMI, waist circumference, physical activity, diet, blood pressure medication history, blood glucose history, and family history. The total score (0โ€“26) is then mapped to a risk category with corresponding 10-year diabetes probability โ€” from 1% (score 0โ€“7) to 50% (score above 20).
What FINDRISC diabetes risk score is considered high? +
A FINDRISC score of 12 or above is the clinical threshold for significant diabetes risk and warrants blood glucose testing. Specifically: 12โ€“14 indicates moderate risk (~17% over 10 years), 15โ€“20 indicates high risk (~33% over 10 years), and above 20 indicates very high risk (~50% over 10 years). Anyone scoring 12 or above should consult a doctor for fasting blood glucose and HbA1c testing, and see a certified dietitian for a personalised prevention plan.
Can a high diabetes risk score be reduced? +
Yes โ€” significantly. The majority of FINDRISC risk points come from modifiable factors (BMI, waist circumference, physical activity, diet) rather than fixed factors (age, family history). The Finnish Diabetes Prevention Study demonstrated that targeted lifestyle intervention โ€” losing 5โ€“7% body weight and exercising 150 min/week โ€” reduced progression to type 2 diabetes by 58% in high-risk individuals. Reassessing your FINDRISC score every 6โ€“12 months tracks your lifestyle improvement progress.
Why are Indians at higher diabetes risk at lower BMI? +
South Asians including Indians are genetically predisposed to storing more visceral fat (fat around abdominal organs) at the same BMI compared to Europeans. Visceral fat directly causes insulin resistance by releasing fatty acids and inflammatory compounds into the portal vein and liver. This means Indians can have diabetes risk at a BMI of 23 โ€” well below the Western obesity threshold of 30. It also means that waist circumference and FINDRISC score are especially important health metrics for Indians.
How often should I check my diabetes risk score? +
People with a low score (below 7) should recheck every 3โ€“5 years. A slightly elevated score (8โ€“11) warrants annual reassessment and a fasting blood glucose test. Anyone with a moderate-to-high score (12 or above) should seek medical consultation promptly for blood glucose testing (fasting glucose + HbA1c) and see a certified dietitian for a personalised prevention plan. After making lifestyle changes, reassess your FINDRISC score every 6โ€“12 months to track progress.
What is the difference between diabetes risk score and blood sugar testing? +
A diabetes risk score (FINDRISC) is a screening tool that estimates future risk without any blood test. Blood sugar testing (fasting glucose, post-meal glucose, HbA1c, OGTT) diagnoses current glucose status. The two tools serve different purposes: FINDRISC identifies who needs blood testing; blood tests confirm whether diabetes or prediabetes is present. A high FINDRISC score is a call to get blood tests done โ€” it is not a diagnosis in itself. Always confirm with laboratory blood tests and medical consultation.
Medical Disclaimer: The Diabetes Risk Calculator uses the FINDRISC (Finnish Diabetes Risk Score) method and is provided for general informational and educational purposes only. It is a screening tool, not a diagnostic test. Results do not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. A high score indicates elevated risk and should prompt consultation with a doctor for blood glucose testing, not self-diagnosis. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional or registered dietitian before making changes to your diet, exercise routine, or medical care.