Population aging is one of the biggest contemporary public health challenges due to the incidence of diseases typical of old age. Among these, osteoarthrosis or osteoarthritis is a chronic degenerative joint disease that affects the synovial joints and is characterized by changes in the articular cartilage, giving rise to areas of fibrillation and fissuring. Changes in the proximal geometry of the femur are biomechanical factors that trigger hip arthrosis. In this sense, the objective was to perform proximal morphometry of the femur to verify whether the data obtained are within the national standard and to make sure that hip prostheses are suitable for the population of Três Lagoas. The method used was to measure 500 femurs, 250 right and 250 left from the Três Lagoas microregion, analyzing the following measurements: femoral shaft length (CEF), femoral neck length (CCF), femoral neck width (LCF) and cervicodiaphyseal angle (CDA). After that, the femurs were separated into right and left and, later, between male and female. It was observed that the CEF, CCF and ACD measurements did not present a significant difference between the right and left sides. There was a predominance of coxa valga (ACD > 125º) on the right and left sides. Male femurs had higher mean values for CEF, CCF and LCF than female femurs, but the ACD remained constant. Several studies suggest that changes in the proximal geometry of the femur may increase the incidence of femur fractures or the development of hip osteoarthritis. It was concluded that the CEF, CCF, LCF, and ACD measurements are within normal limits relative to the Brazilian average and that the local population is suitable for osteosynthesis and hip bone implants.