Alright, so the other day I was just kinda scrolling around, maybe watching some clips online, and Joe Rogan popped up. And it got me thinking, you know, what are his actual stats? Like, how tall is the guy and what does he weigh?

So, I did what anyone does, right? I grabbed my phone and just started searching. Typed in “Joe Rogan height and weight”. Pretty simple.
My Little Search Adventure
First thing I noticed was, well, the numbers weren’t exactly the same everywhere. That happens a lot online, doesn’t it?
- Height: I saw 5 foot 8 inches pop up a bunch. Then, clicked another link, and it said 5 foot 7. Maybe even saw 5’7.5″ somewhere. It’s like, okay, which one is it? Guess it depends who’s measuring or reporting.
- Weight: This was even more all over the place. Makes sense, weight goes up and down. I saw figures mostly hovering around the 190 to 200 pounds mark, maybe a bit more sometimes. He looks pretty solid, definitely lifts weights and does martial arts, so that range seemed believable.
I spent maybe 10, 15 minutes clicking through different articles and forum posts. Some people were debating it pretty seriously in comment sections. It’s funny what people latch onto.
Thinking About It
This whole little exercise got me thinking. It’s tough to pin down exact numbers for people you don’t know personally. Height can be listed differently depending on shoes, posture, who’s asking. And weight? Man, my own weight can swing 5 pounds in a week depending on what I ate or how much water I drank.
It reminded me of back when I was really focused on my own gym numbers. Always checking the scale, measuring my arms, whatever. Obsessing over a pound here or half an inch there. But really, how I felt and performed mattered more than the exact number. Rogan seems like a guy focused on performance too, with all his kettlebell and workout talk.

So, yeah. My little “practice” of finding Joe Rogan’s weight and height didn’t give me one single, perfect answer. It mostly showed me that online info for this stuff is often a bit messy, a range rather than a fixed point. Which is probably closer to reality anyway. People change, numbers fluctuate. Just an observation from a quick search I did.