Calculate Your Daily Calorie Needs
Enter your details below to calculate your Total Daily Energy Expenditure and personalized nutrition goals.
This is the estimated number of calories you burn per day including all activities.
Calories at rest
Normal
Estimated muscle mass
Personalized Calorie Goals
Weight Loss
Maintain Weight
Muscle Gain
Macronutrient Breakdown for Your Goal
Based on your selected goal, here are your recommended daily macros:
What Is TDEE and Why Does It Matter?
Total Daily Energy Expenditure represents the complete picture of how many calories your body burns in a 24-hour period. Unlike simpler estimates that only consider your resting state, TDEE accounts for everything – from the energy needed to keep your heart beating to the calories burned during your morning jog.
Think of TDEE as your body’s daily energy budget. Just like managing money, knowing exactly how much you’re spending helps you make smarter decisions. Want to lose weight? Spend less than your budget. Looking to build muscle? Spend a bit more. It’s that straightforward.
The Four Components That Make Up Your TDEE
Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR) – 60-70% of your TDEE: This is your body’s baseline energy requirement. Even if you stayed in bed all day, your body would burn this many calories just keeping you alive. Your organs, brain, and cellular processes all require energy constantly.
Exercise Activity Thermogenesis (EAT) – 5-10% of your TDEE: The calories you burn during planned exercise sessions. Whether you’re hitting the gym, going for a run, or playing basketball, this is the energy cost of intentional physical activity.
Non-Exercise Activity Thermogenesis (NEAT) – 15-30% of your TDEE: Here’s where things get interesting. NEAT includes all the movement you do outside of formal exercise – walking to your car, fidgeting at your desk, doing household chores. Surprisingly, this can vary by over 2,000 calories between two people of similar size!
Thermic Effect of Food (TEF) – 10% of your TDEE: Believe it or not, your body burns calories just digesting food. Protein requires the most energy to process (20-30% of its calories), followed by carbohydrates (5-10%), and fats (0-3%). This is why high-protein diets often help with weight loss.
How to Actually Use Your TDEE Number
Now that you’ve calculated your TDEE, what do you do with it? Your approach depends entirely on your goals, and there’s no one-size-fits-all answer.
For Weight Loss That Actually Works
Start by eating 300-500 calories below your TDEE. This creates a moderate deficit that allows you to lose about 1 pound per week – a sustainable pace that preserves muscle mass and keeps your energy levels stable. Going more aggressive (500-750 below TDEE) can work for faster results, but it’s harder to stick with long-term.
Keep protein high during weight loss – aim for 0.8-1g per pound of body weight. This helps preserve muscle while you’re in a deficit. Muscle is metabolically expensive tissue, meaning it burns calories even at rest. Losing muscle makes future weight management harder.
For Maintaining Your Current Weight
Eat at your TDEE level, with a tolerance of about 100 calories up or down. Don’t stress over hitting the exact number daily – focus on weekly averages. Some days you’ll be over, some under, and that’s perfectly fine. Your body doesn’t reset at midnight.
For Building Muscle Mass
Add 200-400 calories to your TDEE. More isn’t better here – eating in a massive surplus just means gaining unnecessary fat alongside your muscle. A lean bulk approach (smaller surplus) keeps you looking good while steadily adding size. This requires patience, but the results are worth it.
Combine your surplus with progressive resistance training. You can’t build muscle without the stimulus to grow. Protein needs remain high at 0.7-1g per pound of body weight, and carbohydrates become crucial for fueling intense workouts.
Choosing the Right Activity Level (Most People Get This Wrong)
Here’s an uncomfortable truth: about 80% of people overestimate their activity level. They hit the gym four times a week and think they’re “very active,” but the other 160 hours of the week matter too.
| Activity Level | What It Really Means | Daily Step Count |
|---|---|---|
| Sedentary | Desk job with little to no intentional exercise. Most of your day is sitting or lying down. | Under 3,000 steps |
| Lightly Active | Light exercise or sports 1-3 days per week. Maybe some casual walking or yoga sessions. | 3,000-8,000 steps |
| Moderately Active | Exercise or sports 3-5 days per week with moderate intensity. You’re consistently active but not training for competition. | 8,000-12,000 steps |
| Very Active | Hard exercise or sports 6-7 days per week. You’re training seriously and moving throughout the day. | 12,000-20,000 steps |
| Extremely Active | Physical job plus daily training, or professional athlete-level activity. Think construction worker who also hits the gym. | 20,000+ steps |
When in doubt, go one level lower than you think. It’s easier to add calories later if you’re losing weight too fast than to figure out why you’re not losing despite “doing everything right.” Track your steps with a phone or fitness watch for a week to get an honest assessment.
Comparing the Three Calculation Formulas
Our calculator offers three different formulas, and each has its strengths depending on your situation.
Mifflin-St Jeor (Recommended for Most People)
Developed in 1990, this is currently considered the most accurate formula for the general population. It’s been validated through extensive research and tends to align closely with measured metabolic rates. If you’re not sure which formula to use, start here.
The formula accounts for your weight, height, age, and gender. It’s particularly accurate for people with average body compositions – not extremely lean or carrying significant excess weight.
Harris-Benedict Revised
The original Harris-Benedict equation dates back to 1919, but it was revised in 1984 to improve accuracy. It tends to slightly overestimate TDEE compared to Mifflin-St Jeor, usually by about 5%. Some people prefer using this formula and then creating a larger deficit to account for the overestimation.
Katch-McArdle (For Lean Individuals)
This formula is unique because it’s based on lean body mass rather than total body weight. If you know your body fat percentage and you’re relatively lean (under 25% body fat for men, under 35% for women), this gives the most accurate results.
The downside? You need an accurate body fat measurement. If you’re guessing, you might as well use Mifflin-St Jeor. DEXA scans, hydrostatic weighing, or quality body composition scales can provide this data.
Common Mistakes That Sabotage Your Results
Mistake #1: Forgetting to Recalculate
Your TDEE isn’t static. As you lose or gain weight, your caloric needs change. Recalculate every 10-15 pounds of change, or every 4-6 weeks during an active weight loss or gain phase. What worked at 200 pounds won’t work at 170 pounds.
Mistake #2: Double-Counting Exercise
If you selected “moderately active” because you work out 4 times per week, don’t also eat back your exercise calories from your fitness tracker. That exercise is already included in your activity multiplier. Either use a sedentary TDEE and add exercise calories, or include activity in your TDEE and ignore the tracker.
Mistake #3: Not Tracking Accurately Enough
Research shows most people underestimate their calorie intake by 20-40%. Those “small bites” while cooking, the cream in your coffee, the oil you cook with – they all add up fast. If you’re not seeing expected results, the issue is usually tracking, not your metabolism.
Invest in a food scale and use it for 2-3 weeks. You’ll be shocked by what an actual serving size looks like versus what you’ve been eating. Even if you don’t want to weigh food forever, doing it briefly teaches you portion awareness.
Mistake #4: Expecting Linear Progress
Your weight fluctuates daily based on water retention, food volume in your digestive system, sodium intake, menstrual cycle, and stress levels. A single weigh-in tells you almost nothing. Track daily and look at weekly averages to see the real trend.
Mistake #5: Ignoring Food Quality
TDEE is about quantity, but food quality matters for satiety, energy levels, and overall health. 2,000 calories of vegetables, lean protein, and whole grains will leave you feeling completely different than 2,000 calories of processed snacks, even though the calorie count is identical.
Follow an 80/20 approach: get 80% of your calories from whole, nutrient-dense foods, and use the remaining 20% for foods you enjoy. This makes your plan sustainable long-term without feeling like you’re on a restrictive diet.
Advanced Strategies for Better Results
Calorie Cycling for Performance and Adherence
Instead of eating the same calories every day, some people benefit from cycling their intake based on their training schedule. Eat at or slightly above TDEE on hard training days when you need the fuel, and eat below TDEE on rest days. The weekly average stays the same, but you have more energy when it matters most.
This approach can help with both performance and adherence. It’s psychologically easier to eat less on days when you’re not hungry from intense exercise, and you fuel your workouts properly when you need it.
Strategic Refeed Days During Long Diets
When you’re dieting for extended periods (8+ weeks), your metabolism starts adapting. Leptin levels drop, thyroid function decreases slightly, and you feel sluggish. A refeed day – where you eat at maintenance or slightly above, focusing on carbohydrates – can help reverse these adaptations temporarily.
Plan one refeed day per week if you’re lean (under 15% body fat for men, 25% for women) or every two weeks if you have more to lose. This isn’t a cheat day where you go wild – it’s a strategic tool to support hormone levels and give you a mental break.
Diet Breaks for Long-Term Success
For every 8-12 weeks of dieting, take a 1-2 week break at maintenance calories. This isn’t giving up – it’s strategic periodization. Diet breaks help restore hormones, give you a psychological break, and can actually improve long-term fat loss by preventing metabolic adaptation.
Research shows that people who take diet breaks lose just as much weight as those who diet continuously, but they find the process much more sustainable and are more likely to keep the weight off.
Reverse Dieting After Weight Loss
When you finish a diet, don’t immediately jump back to your old eating habits. Reverse diet by adding 50-100 calories per week while monitoring your weight. This allows your metabolism to recover and helps you find your new maintenance level without rapid fat regain.
Yes, this requires patience. But it’s the difference between keeping your weight off and regaining everything within months. Think of it as insurance for all the hard work you just put in.