Calorie Calculator
Daily calorie targets for your goal
kg
cm
yrs
Daily Calorie Target
BMR
Maintenance (TDEE)
Protein (30%)
Carbs (45%)

What is the calorie calculator?

A calorie calculator estimates how many calories you should eat each day based on your body size, age, sex, activity level, and goal. Generic calorie advice like '2,000 kcal/day' ignores individual differences — this calculator gives you a number based on your actual physiology.

Formula used

Step 1 — BMR (Mifflin-St Jeor): Male: BMR = 10W + 6.25H − 5A + 5 Female: BMR = 10W + 6.25H − 5A − 161 Step 2 — TDEE = BMR × Activity level multiplier Step 3 — Adjust for goal: Lose weight: TDEE − 500 kcal/day (~0.5 kg/week) Maintain: TDEE Gain muscle: TDEE + 300 kcal/day

How to use this calculator

  1. Enter weight (kg), height (cm), and age
  2. Select your sex
  3. Select activity level
  4. Select your goal (lose / maintain / gain)
  5. Click Calculate — see daily calorie target with protein and carb targets

Example

Example 1 — Weight loss:
Divya: 68 kg, 162 cm, 32 years, female, lightly active, goal: lose weight
BMR = 10×68 + 6.25×162 − 5×32 − 161 = 1,440 kcal
TDEE = 1,440 × 1.375 = 1,980 kcal
Weight loss target = 1,980 − 500 = 1,480 kcal/day → lose ~0.5 kg/week

Example 2 — Muscle gain:
Arjun: 72 kg, 176 cm, 24 years, male, very active, goal: gain
BMR = 10×72 + 6.25×176 − 5×24 + 5 = 1,825 kcal
TDEE = 1,825 × 1.725 = 3,148 kcal
Muscle gain target = 3,148 + 300 = 3,448 kcal/day

Daily macronutrient targets (at 2,000 kcal):

Macro% of caloriesGrams at 2000 kcal
Protein (4 kcal/g)30%150g
Carbohydrates (4 kcal/g)45%225g
Fats (9 kcal/g)25%56g

Frequently asked questions

A 500 kcal daily deficit = approximately 0.5 kg fat loss per week (1 kg fat ≈ 7,700 kcal). This is considered a safe, sustainable rate. Faster weight loss risks muscle loss and metabolic slowdown.
Recalculate your TDEE — most people overestimate their activity level. Also note that food labels have up to 20% error. Try reducing by another 100–200 kcal and reassess after 2 weeks.
If you selected an accurate activity level that includes your exercise, no. If you exercise significantly more than usual on a specific day, eating back 50% of the extra calories burned is a reasonable approach.