TDEE Calculator – Daily Calorie Needs

Find your total daily calorie needs based on activity level

Daily Calories (TDEE)
0

Estimate only — individual metabolism varies ±15%

kg
cm
yr

What Is TDEE?

Total Daily Energy Expenditure (TDEE) is the total number of calories your body burns in a day, accounting for your basal metabolic rate, physical activity, and the energy used to digest food. It is the single most important number for anyone trying to manage their weight — eat below it to lose, at it to maintain, or above it to gain.

How TDEE Is Calculated

This calculator uses the Mifflin-St Jeor equation for BMR, then multiplies by an activity factor:

Activity levelDescriptionMultiplierExample TDEE (70kg, 175cm, 30yr male)
SedentaryDesk job, no exercise× 1.2~1,998 cal
Lightly activeExercise 1–3×/week× 1.375~2,290 cal
Moderately activeExercise 3–5×/week× 1.55~2,581 cal
Very activeHard exercise 6–7×/week× 1.725~2,873 cal
Extremely activePhysical job + daily training× 1.9~3,164 cal

Calorie Targets by Goal

Once you know your TDEE, adjust your intake based on your goal:

GoalDaily caloriesExpected result
Aggressive fat lossTDEE − 500~0.5 kg / week loss
Moderate fat lossTDEE − 300~0.3 kg / week loss
MaintenanceTDEEWeight stable
Lean bulkTDEE + 200Slow muscle gain, minimal fat
Aggressive bulkTDEE + 500Faster muscle gain, some fat

Why TDEE Matters More Than BMR

BMR is often misused as a calorie target. Eating at your BMR means eating as if you never get out of bed — a severe deficit for almost everyone. TDEE is what you actually burn. For a moderately active person, TDEE is typically 55–65% higher than BMR. Using BMR as a food target leads to extreme restriction, metabolic adaptation, and unsustainable results.

TDEE Is an Estimate — Here Is How to Refine It

Activity multipliers are averages and individual variation is significant. The most accurate approach: track your food intake and weight for 2–3 weeks at a consistent calorie level. If weight stays stable, that intake is your actual TDEE. If you lose, you are below TDEE; if you gain, you are above. This real-world calibration beats any formula.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many calories should I eat to lose weight?

Subtract 300–500 calories from your TDEE. A 500 calorie daily deficit creates approximately 0.5 kg (1 lb) of fat loss per week — a safe and sustainable rate. Larger deficits accelerate fat loss but increase muscle loss and metabolic adaptation. Deficits below 1,200 calories for women and 1,500 for men are generally not recommended without medical supervision.

Why does my TDEE change over time?

As you lose weight, your TDEE decreases because a lighter body requires fewer calories to maintain. This is why weight loss often plateaus — the original deficit disappears as you get smaller. Recalculate your TDEE every 5–10 kg of weight change and adjust your intake accordingly.

Is exercise included in TDEE?

Yes — the activity multiplier accounts for your typical weekly exercise. If you are inconsistent, use the lower activity level and add exercise calories separately when you do work out.

How accurate are activity multipliers?

They are estimates with ±15% accuracy for most people. Highly active individuals and those with physical jobs may find their actual TDEE is higher than calculated. People who overestimate their activity level often find they are eating above their actual TDEE without realising it.

What should I eat at my TDEE — macros?

Calories are the primary lever for weight management. Beyond that: aim for 1.6–2.2g of protein per kg of body weight (to preserve muscle), fill remaining calories with carbohydrates and fats in whatever ratio you find sustainable. No macronutrient ratio produces better results than another when total calories and protein are matched.

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