Calorie Calculator
Pick a goal and get your daily calorie target. Six goal levels from losing 1 kg/week to gaining 0.5 kg/week, backed by the Mifflin-St Jeor equation and the standard 7,700 kcal/kg conversion.
Your daily calorie target
Maintenance (TDEE): — kcal · Delta: — kcal
All six goals
| Goal | Daily kcal | vs. TDEE |
|---|
Targets below 1,200 kcal/day are capped at 1,200 kcal as a safety floor for most adults. If a more aggressive deficit is appropriate for your situation, work with a registered dietitian.
This calculator is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice. Consult a qualified healthcare provider before making changes to your diet, exercise, or health regimen.
What is a calorie calculator and why does it matter?
A calorie calculator answers one of the most common nutrition questions in the world: "How many calories should I eat per day to reach my goal?" It takes the physics of energy balance — calories in versus calories out — and turns it into a single, actionable daily target. Whether you want to lose fat, hold your weight steady, or add muscle, the first step is knowing the number you are aiming at.
This tool differs from a plain TDEE calculator in one important way: instead of giving you a single maintenance figure and leaving you to do the math, it asks you to pick the exact weight-change rate you want — lose 0.25, 0.5, or 1 kg per week, maintain, or gain 0.25 or 0.5 kg per week — and returns the daily calorie target that produces that result. No guessing, no "what should my deficit be?"
How this calculator works
Under the hood the calculator runs in two stages. First, it estimates your Total Daily Energy Expenditure (TDEE) using the Mifflin-St Jeor equation (1990), which is the formula most dietitians and researchers use as their default. TDEE equals your Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR) multiplied by an activity factor from the FAO/WHO/UNU tables:
- Men: BMR = (10 × kg) + (6.25 × cm) − (5 × age) + 5
- Women: BMR = (10 × kg) + (6.25 × cm) − (5 × age) − 161
- TDEE: BMR × activity multiplier (1.2 sedentary → 1.9 extra active)
Second, the calculator converts your chosen weekly weight-change rate into a daily calorie delta using the standard 7,700 kcal per kilogram figure (Wishnofsky 1958). One kilogram of body fat stores roughly 7,700 kcal, so to lose 1 kg in a week you need a deficit of 7,700 ÷ 7 ≈ 1,100 kcal per day. To lose 0.5 kg/week, the deficit is ≈ 550 kcal/day. The result is your daily target.
A safety floor of 1,200 kcal/day is applied: if your chosen goal would push the target below that, the calculator clamps it. Very-low-calorie diets should only be run under medical supervision, so the tool refuses to produce them.
Worked example
Take a 30-year-old man, 80 kg, 180 cm tall, moderately active (trains three to five days a week), who wants to lose 0.5 kg per week.
- BMR = (10 × 80) + (6.25 × 180) − (5 × 30) + 5 = 800 + 1,125 − 150 + 5 = 1,780 kcal/day
- TDEE = 1,780 × 1.55 = 2,759 kcal/day (maintenance)
- Daily deficit for 0.5 kg/week = (0.5 × 7,700) / 7 ≈ −550 kcal/day
- Target = 2,759 − 550 ≈ 2,209 kcal/day
Eating roughly 2,200 kcal per day, this person should lose about 0.5 kg (1.1 lb) per week. If after two weeks the scale has only dropped 0.3 kg/week, the real TDEE is a bit lower than the estimate and he can shave another 100–150 kcal off his target. If it has dropped 0.8 kg/week he can add 100 kcal back.
How to interpret the result
The number the calculator returns is a starting estimate, not a law of nature. Population equations like Mifflin-St Jeor are accurate to within about ±10% for most healthy adults — which means your real TDEE might be 200 kcal higher or lower than the math predicts. The right way to use the result is:
- Eat the target consistently for 10–14 days.
- Weigh yourself daily at the same time, under the same conditions.
- Take the 7-day rolling average of the weight.
- Compare the actual rate of change against your goal.
- Adjust the target by 100–200 kcal if needed and repeat.
After one or two adjustment cycles, your real-world maintenance is much better calibrated than any equation could be. Trust the trend line, not a single morning's weight.
Common mistakes
- Picking too aggressive a goal. A 1 kg/week deficit is a big bite and rarely sustainable for more than a few weeks. Most people do better with 0.25–0.5 kg/week.
- Overestimating activity level. If you sit at a desk all day and train three times a week, you are moderately active, not very active. The difference is 200–400 kcal.
- Not tracking food accurately. Self-reported intake is famously underestimated by 20–40%. If the math says you should be losing weight but you are not, start weighing food on a kitchen scale for a week.
- Chasing the scale day-to-day. Water weight can swing 1–2 kg in 24 hours. Only the weekly average tells you anything.
- Forgetting to recalculate. As you lose weight your TDEE drops. Rerun the calculator every 2–4 kg of change and update your target.
- Eating back exercise calories twice. If you picked "moderately active" the exercise is already in your TDEE. Do not add more just because your watch said so.
When to consult a professional
This calculator is a general educational tool and is not a substitute for individualised medical or nutritional advice. Talk to a doctor or registered dietitian before changing your calorie intake if you have diabetes, thyroid disease, cardiovascular disease, kidney disease, a history of eating disorders, are pregnant or breastfeeding, are under 18, are over 65, take medications that affect appetite or metabolism, or need to lose more than 15% of your body weight. For serious fat loss, a qualified professional can also run indirect calorimetry, which measures your BMR directly rather than estimating it, and can tailor the plan to your lab work, training, and lifestyle in a way no calculator can.