Maintenance Calorie Calculator
Find exactly how many calories your body needs each day to stay at its current weight, with a full macros breakdown and per-meal guide.
๐ฅ What is a Maintenance Calorie Calculator?
Maintenance calories are the total number of calories your body needs each day to keep your current weight perfectly stable. Eating exactly at this level means no fat is gained and no fat is burned: the energy in equals the energy out. Your maintenance calorie level is also called your Total Daily Energy Expenditure (TDEE), and it is the single most important number in any nutrition plan.
This calculator finds your maintenance calories in two steps. First, it calculates your Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR) using the Mifflin-St Jeor equation, which estimates the calories your body burns at complete rest to keep your heart beating, lungs breathing, and organs functioning. Then it multiplies your BMR by an activity factor that accounts for everything you do on top of resting: walking, exercising, standing at work, and all other daily movement. The product of BMR and the activity factor is your TDEE, or maintenance calorie level.
Knowing your maintenance calories is the foundation of every nutrition goal. To lose fat, you eat below your TDEE and create a calorie deficit. To gain muscle, you eat above your TDEE and create a calorie surplus. To simply maintain your current weight, you match your intake to your TDEE. Without this number, any diet plan is built on guesswork. A person who needs 2,400 kcal per day and eats 2,000 kcal thinking it is maintenance will slowly lose weight. A person eating 2,800 kcal will slowly gain fat without understanding why.
The Mifflin-St Jeor formula, developed in 1990, is the most widely validated BMR equation for general adults and is the current recommendation of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics. It accounts for body weight, height, age, and biological sex. The result is a personalised estimate accurate to within plus or minus 10 percent for most adults, making it the best available formula for population-level calorie planning without a metabolic lab test. This calculator also breaks your maintenance calories into a recommended macronutrient split, per-meal guide, and weekly calorie budget to help you turn the number into a practical eating plan.
๐ Formula
The Mifflin-St Jeor equation (1990) is cited in: Mifflin MD et al., "A new predictive equation for resting energy expenditure in healthy individuals," American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 1990. The activity multipliers are standard Harris-Benedict activity factors as published and validated for use with any BMR formula.
To convert TDEE into macros at maintenance: protein at 25% of calories divided by 4 kcal/g, carbohydrates at 45% divided by 4 kcal/g, and fat at 30% divided by 9 kcal/g. These proportions align with USDA Dietary Guidelines for Americans for a balanced maintenance diet.