Know exactly how many calories you need — before you start
Generic advice like "eat 2,000 calories" ignores the fact that a 60 kg sedentary woman and a 90 kg active man have completely different needs. This calculator uses your real stats — height, weight, age, sex, and activity level — to give you a precise, personalized daily calorie target. Not a guess. Not a one-size-fits-all number.
What Is a Calorie Calculator?
A calorie calculator estimates how many calories your body needs each day based on your BMR (Basal Metabolic Rate) and TDEE (Total Daily Energy Expenditure). It then adjusts for your goal — whether you want to lose fat, maintain your weight, or build muscle.
Unlike generalized dietary guidelines, a personalized calorie calculator accounts for your individual body composition, age, sex, and activity level. The result is a daily calorie target that actually fits you — not an average person.
This calculator also provides your estimated macro split (carbohydrates, protein, fat), a weekly weight change forecast, a meal calorie distribution, and a BMI indicator — everything you need to start tracking with clarity.
How to Use This Calorie Calculator
- Choose unit system: Metric (kg/cm) or Imperial (lbs/ft&in) — pick whichever you're comfortable with.
- Select biological sex: The Mifflin-St Jeor formula uses different constants for males and females to account for physiological differences in metabolic rate.
- Enter age, height, and weight: All three are required to calculate your BMR accurately.
- Select activity level: Be honest — most people overestimate activity. When in doubt, choose "Lightly Active" and adjust after tracking for 2–3 weeks.
- Choose your goal: From aggressive weight loss to aggressive bulk. Each applies a specific calorie adjustment to your TDEE.
- Pick macro preference: Balanced (40/30/30), High-Protein (35/35/30), or Low-Carb (25/35/40) carb/protein/fat ratio.
- Set meals per day: The calculator will split your daily calories across your preferred number of meals.
- Read your results: Daily calorie target, macro grams, BMR, TDEE, BMI, weekly weight change, and personalized recommendations.
How the Calorie Calculator Works (Formulas & Method)
Step 1 — BMR (Mifflin-St Jeor)
Male: BMR = (10 × kg) + (6.25 × cm) − (5 × age) + 5
Female: BMR = (10 × kg) + (6.25 × cm) − (5 × age) − 161
BMR is the number of calories your body burns at complete rest — just to keep your heart beating, lungs breathing, and organs functioning. It forms the foundation of every calorie target.
Step 2 — TDEE (Activity Multiplier)
TDEE = BMR × Activity Factor
Activity factors: Sedentary 1.2 · Light 1.375 · Moderate 1.55 · Very Active 1.725 · Extra Active 1.9
TDEE represents your total daily calorie burn including all movement, exercise, and non-exercise activity thermogenesis (NEAT).
Step 3 — Goal-Adjusted Target
Target = TDEE × Goal Multiplier
Aggressive loss −25% | Moderate loss −15% | Mild loss −10% | Maintenance ±0% | Mild gain +5% | Lean gain +10% | Aggressive bulk +20%
More goals mean more precision. Instead of just "lose" or "gain", this calculator lets you dial in exactly how aggressive your approach should be.
Step 4 — Macro Calculation
Balanced: 40% carbs, 30% protein, 30% fat
High-Protein: 35% carbs, 35% protein, 30% fat
Low-Carb: 25% carbs, 35% protein, 40% fat
Carb grams = (kcal × carb%) ÷ 4 · Protein grams = (kcal × protein%) ÷ 4 · Fat grams = (kcal × fat%) ÷ 9
Calorie Deficit vs Surplus — How Weight Change Works
The energy balance equation is simple: eat fewer calories than you burn → lose weight; eat more → gain weight. But the real world adds nuance.
The 3,500-Calorie Rule
One pound of body fat contains approximately 3,500 kcal. One kilogram contains approximately 7,700 kcal. A sustained daily deficit of 500 kcal theoretically produces ~0.5 kg of fat loss per week. In practice, actual results vary due to metabolic adaptation, water retention, and muscle changes.
Minimum Safe Calories
Eating too few calories causes muscle loss, fatigue, nutrient deficiencies, hormonal disruption, and metabolic slowdown. General guidelines recommend staying above 1,200 kcal/day for women and 1,500 kcal/day for men without medical supervision.
Why Metabolism Adapts
After weeks in a significant deficit, your body reduces NEAT (fidgeting, spontaneous movement) and slightly lowers metabolic rate — known as adaptive thermogenesis. This is why a diet plateau occurs. Taking a 2-week "diet break" at maintenance calories can reset metabolic adaptation.
| Daily Deficit | Weekly Deficit | Estimated Fat Loss/Week | Sustainability |
|---|---|---|---|
| 250 kcal | 1,750 kcal | ~0.23 kg (0.5 lb) | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Very easy |
| 500 kcal | 3,500 kcal | ~0.45 kg (1 lb) | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Sustainable |
| 750 kcal | 5,250 kcal | ~0.68 kg (1.5 lb) | ⭐⭐⭐ Challenging |
| 1,000 kcal | 7,000 kcal | ~0.91 kg (2 lb) | ⭐⭐ Hard, muscle loss risk |
| 1,200+ kcal | 8,400+ kcal | ~1.1 kg+ | ⭐ Not recommended long-term |
Understanding Your Macros — Carbs, Protein & Fat
Carbohydrates (4 kcal/g)
Carbohydrates are your body's primary and preferred fuel source, especially for the brain and during high-intensity exercise. Prioritize complex carbs (oats, sweet potato, brown rice, legumes, vegetables) over refined carbs (white bread, sugary drinks) for sustained energy and better satiety.
Protein (4 kcal/g)
Protein builds and repairs muscle tissue, supports immune function, and is the most satiating macronutrient per calorie. In a calorie deficit, adequate protein (1.6–2.2g per kg of body weight) is essential to preserve lean muscle mass. Good sources: chicken, fish, eggs, Greek yogurt, legumes, tofu.
Fat (9 kcal/g)
Dietary fat supports hormone production, fat-soluble vitamin absorption (A, D, E, K), cell membrane integrity, and satiety. Prioritize unsaturated fats (olive oil, avocado, nuts, oily fish) and limit saturated fats from processed foods. Fat is not the enemy — the quality of fat matters most.
| Profile | Carbs | Protein | Fat | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ⚖️ Balanced | 40% | 30% | 30% | General health, maintenance, most people |
| 💪 High-Protein | 35% | 35% | 30% | Muscle building, weight loss (muscle preservation) |
| 🥦 Low-Carb | 25% | 35% | 40% | Fat loss, improved insulin sensitivity, low-GI eating |
| 🥑 Keto | 5% | 25% | 70% | Ketosis, therapeutic use — see our Keto Calculator |
Activity Level Guide — Choosing the Right Multiplier
The biggest source of error in calorie calculations is choosing the wrong activity level. Most people are more sedentary than they think, especially if their "exercise" is a 30-minute gym session while sitting at a desk the rest of the day.
| Activity Level | Multiplier | Who It Fits |
|---|---|---|
| Sedentary | × 1.20 | Desk job, no intentional exercise, mostly sitting |
| Lightly Active | × 1.375 | Desk job + walking/light exercise 1–3 days/week |
| Moderately Active | × 1.55 | Exercise 3–5 days/week at moderate intensity |
| Very Active | × 1.725 | Hard training 6–7 days/week or active job |
| Extra Active | × 1.90 | Very hard daily exercise + physically demanding job |
Pro tip: If you're not sure, choose one level below what you think you are, use that TDEE for 2–3 weeks, track your weight, then adjust up or down.