Calories Calculator
Calories Calculator — Daily Calorie Needs (TDEE)
Why Your Calorie Number Is Unique to You
Sarah eats 2,200 calories a day and stays lean. Her friend eats the same amount and gains weight. This is not a mystery — it comes down to biology and lifestyle.
Calories measure the energy in food. Your body burns a certain number of calories each day just to survive. It burns even more when you move. That total is called your TDEE — Total Daily Energy Expenditure.
When you eat more than your TDEE, you gain weight. When you eat less, you lose it. When they match, your weight stays the same. Knowing your TDEE is the first step to any nutrition plan.
This calculator uses the Mifflin-St Jeor formula — the most accurate equation for most healthy adults. You will get your BMR, your TDEE, a calorie target for your goal, and suggested macros.
What Is TDEE and Why Does It Matter?
TDEE stands for Total Daily Energy Expenditure. It is the total number of calories your body burns in a 24-hour period, including rest, digestion, and movement.
Your TDEE has four components. Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR) is the largest part — around 60–70% of total burn. It is what your body uses just to breathe, pump blood, and keep organs running.
The rest comes from digesting food (about 10%), planned exercise (15–30%), and non-exercise movement like walking or fidgeting (5–15%). Your activity multiplier in this calculator accounts for all of these.
Most people underestimate how much they need. Studies show the average adult underreports calorie intake by 12–40%. Knowing your actual TDEE removes the guesswork and helps you hit your goals faster.
The Mifflin-St Jeor Formula — Explained Simply
The Mifflin-St Jeor equation was published in 1990. Research shows it is the most accurate BMR formula for most healthy adults. Here is how it works.
For Men:
BMR = (10 × weight in kg) + (6.25 × height in cm) − (5 × age) + 5
For Women:
BMR = (10 × weight in kg) + (6.25 × height in cm) − (5 × age) − 161
Then:
TDEE = BMR × Activity Factor
| Variable | Meaning | Unit |
|---|---|---|
| Weight | Your body mass | kilograms (kg) |
| Height | Your stature | centimeters (cm) |
| Age | Years old | years |
| Activity Factor | Lifestyle multiplier | 1.2 – 1.9 |
| BMR | Calories at rest | kcal/day |
| TDEE | Total daily calories burned | kcal/day |
How to Use This Calculator in 6 Simple Steps
This tool gives you a complete calorie profile in under a minute. Follow these steps for the most accurate result.
Step 1: Enter your age. Use your current age in years. The formula adjusts for the natural slowdown in metabolism as you get older.
Step 2: Select your gender. Men and women have different hormonal profiles. This shifts the BMR by a fixed offset in the formula.
Step 3: Enter your weight. Use kg or lb — the calculator converts automatically. Weigh yourself in the morning before eating for best accuracy.
Step 4: Enter your height. Use cm or inches. Height is a strong predictor of lean body mass and therefore BMR.
Step 5: Choose your activity level. Be honest here — most people are more sedentary than they think. Choose “Lightly Active” if you exercise 1–3 times a week casually.
Step 6: Select your goal. Choose whether you want to lose, maintain, or gain weight. The calculator adjusts your calorie target by 500–1,000 kcal based on your selection.
Press Calculate. Your results show your goal calories, BMR, TDEE, and recommended daily macros — protein, carbohydrates, and fat.
Calorie Needs by Age, Gender, and Activity Level
These ranges come from the CDC Healthy Weight guidelines. They give a useful benchmark but your calculator result will be more precise.
| Age Group | Gender | Sedentary | Moderately Active | Active |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 19–30 | Male | 2,400 | 2,600–2,800 | 3,000 |
| 19–30 | Female | 1,800–2,000 | 2,000–2,200 | 2,400 |
| 31–50 | Male | 2,200–2,400 | 2,400–2,600 | 2,800–3,000 |
| 31–50 | Female | 1,800 | 2,000 | 2,200 |
| 51–70 | Male | 2,000–2,200 | 2,200–2,400 | 2,400–2,800 |
| 51–70 | Female | 1,600 | 1,800 | 2,000–2,200 |
| 71+ | Male | 2,000 | 2,200 | 2,400 |
| 71+ | Female | 1,600 | 1,800 | 2,000 |
Real-World Examples — Full Calculator Output
Here are two realistic scenarios showing exactly what the calculator produces for each person.
5 Proven Ways to Reach Your Calorie Goal
Knowing your number is step one. Here is how to actually hit it every day without obsessing over food.
1. Track for just two weeks. You do not need to count calories forever. Tracking for 14 days builds awareness of portion sizes. Most people discover they were eating 300–500 calories more than they thought. Free apps like MyFitnessPal or Cronometer make this easy.
2. Eat protein at every meal. Protein keeps you full longer than carbs or fat. It also costs more energy to digest — about 20–30% of its calories are burned during digestion. Aim for your calculator’s protein target spread across three meals.
3. Add 10 minutes of walking daily. Non-exercise movement (NEAT) can add 200–400 calories of burn per day for active people. A 10-minute walk after each meal costs almost no effort but moves your TDEE significantly.
4. Drink water before meals. A 2016 study found that drinking 500 ml of water 30 minutes before eating reduced calorie intake by 13% in overweight adults. This is one of the easiest strategies available.
5. Reassess every 4–6 weeks. As your weight changes, your calorie needs change too. Recalculate your TDEE every month. A 5 kg weight loss means your maintenance calories drop by roughly 100–150 kcal/day — update your targets accordingly.
What Most Calorie Guides Get Wrong
Most calorie calculators stop at TDEE. They give you a number and leave you to figure out the rest. Here is what they miss.
The activity multiplier is the biggest source of error. Most people choose “Moderately Active” out of optimism. But the multiplier of 1.55 assumes you exercise 3–5 days per week at moderate intensity. If you work out 3 days but sit for 10 hours otherwise, “Lightly Active” (1.375) is more accurate. A wrong activity choice can put your estimate off by 200–400 kcal.
Calorie needs change faster than most people expect. A 10 kg weight loss reduces your BMR by approximately 100 kcal. People hit a plateau and blame their willpower. The real cause is a lower TDEE. Recalculating every 4 weeks fixes this.
Muscle mass matters more than weight. Two people with the same body weight can have BMRs that differ by 300+ calories if one has significantly more muscle. The Mifflin formula does not account for body composition — it uses body weight as a proxy. If you are athletic, your true BMR may be higher than the formula predicts. The WHO Healthy Diet guidelines recommend pairing calorie awareness with diet quality, not just quantity.
A 500-calorie deficit is not always the right choice. Very tall or very muscular people can sustain a larger deficit safely. Smaller individuals, especially women under 55 kg, should not drop below 1,200 kcal regardless of the calculated deficit. Always keep a floor on your intake.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many calories do I need to lose 1 kg per week? +
One kilogram of body fat contains roughly 7,700 calories. To lose 1 kg per week, you need a deficit of about 1,100 calories per day. For most people, this means eating at TDEE minus 1,000 kcal. This is aggressive — a 500 kcal deficit (0.5 kg/week) is safer and more sustainable long term.
Is 1,200 calories a day enough? +
For most adults, 1,200 calories is the bare minimum. Going below this can cause muscle loss, nutrient deficiencies, and a drop in metabolic rate. Very short or very small adults may be close to this threshold on a deficit. Always consult a healthcare provider before going below 1,200 kcal/day.
Why is my calculator result different from other tools? +
Different tools use different formulas. The Harris-Benedict equation (1919) is older and less accurate. The Mifflin-St Jeor (1990) is the current gold standard for most adults. The Katch-McArdle formula uses lean body mass and is most accurate for athletes but requires body fat percentage data.
How often should I recalculate my calories? +
Recalculate every 4–6 weeks or any time your weight changes by more than 3–5 kg. Your BMR changes with your weight, so your calorie targets become less accurate over time. Regular recalculation keeps you on track and avoids the plateau that frustrates many dieters.
Do calories matter more than food quality? +
Both matter. Calories control body weight — you cannot out-eat a large surplus on any “clean” diet. But food quality affects hunger hormones, nutrient status, energy levels, and long-term health. The best strategy is to hit your calorie and protein targets using mostly whole, minimally processed foods. This gives you control of both.

Tushar is the founder of CalculateGuru, a platform dedicated to creating simple, accurate, and user-friendly online calculators. He focuses on building helpful tools across finance, health, math, cooking, and lifestyle to make everyday calculations faster and easier for everyone.
