Calorie Intake Calculator
Find out exactly how many calories to eat each day based on your age, size, activity level, and whether you want to lose fat, maintain weight, or build muscle.
๐ฅ What is a Calorie Intake Calculator?
A calorie intake calculator tells you exactly how many calories to eat per day based on your body stats, activity level, and specific goal. The core method is the Mifflin-St Jeor equation: a research-validated formula that estimates your Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR), the number of calories your body burns at complete rest just to maintain basic functions like breathing, circulation, and cell repair. Your BMR is then multiplied by an activity factor (1.2 to 1.9, depending on how physically active you are) to produce your TDEE (Total Daily Energy Expenditure), the number of calories you actually burn in a typical day. From there, your goal determines the adjustment: subtract 500 kcal for fat loss, add 300 kcal for muscle gain, or eat at TDEE for weight maintenance.
The three most common goals each require a different calorie target. For fat loss, a 500 kcal daily deficit from your maintenance level produces approximately 0.5 kg of fat loss per week, the rate most consistently recommended by sports dietitians for preserving muscle mass. For muscle building (lean bulk), a 250 to 500 kcal surplus above maintenance provides the energy needed for new tissue synthesis without excessive fat gain. For maintenance, eating at TDEE keeps body weight stable over time and is the correct baseline target for anyone primarily focused on body composition rather than scale weight. This calculator also outputs a macros breakdown (protein, carbohydrates, and fat in grams) and a per-meal estimate, making it easier to plan actual food choices around the calorie target.
A frequent misconception is that lower calories are always better for fat loss. Below approximately 1,200 kcal per day, the body starts catabolising muscle for energy, micronutrient deficiency becomes difficult to avoid, and the hormonal response to severe restriction can impair fat loss. Another common error is overestimating activity level, which inflates the TDEE estimate and causes a "deficit" that is actually maintenance. The activity multipliers in this calculator are based on self-reported activity categories, which most people apply too generously. If weight is not changing at the calculated intake, reducing the activity level one step and recalculating is usually the right first move.
This calculator uses NDB.format for consistent number presentation and enforces a 1,200 kcal minimum to prevent unrealistic targets. Use the Maintain goal to establish your baseline TDEE first, then switch to Lose or Gain to see the adjusted target. Recalculate every 4 to 6 weeks or after every 3 to 5 kg of weight change, since BMR changes as body composition shifts.