Free TDEE Calculator — Calories, Macros & BMI
Enter your stats to get your daily calorie needs, exact macro targets, BMR, BMI, and weeks-to-goal timeline.
Your stats
Macros — for selected goal
TDEE at different activity levels
| Activity level | Typical day | Calories/day |
|---|
⚠ Most people overestimate their activity level by 1–2 steps. When in doubt, choose lower — you can always eat more if weight drops too fast.
How many calories do I need per day?
Your calorie needs depend on your Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR) — the energy your body burns at rest — multiplied by an activity factor that accounts for how much you move. This total is your TDEE.
BMR is calculated using the Mifflin–St Jeor equation — the most validated formula for the general population (±10% accuracy). When you provide body fat %, the calculator switches to Katch–McArdle, which is more accurate for athletes and lean individuals.
Female: BMR = (10 × kg) + (6.25 × cm) − (5 × age) − 161
The three components of TDEE
Your TDEE is actually the sum of three distinct energy costs — not just BMR and exercise:
- BMR (60–70% of TDEE) — energy to keep you alive at rest: heart, brain, kidneys, liver, body temperature, cell repair. The largest single component.
- Physical activity — NEAT + exercise (20–30%) — every calorie burned through movement. This includes formal workouts and Non-Exercise Activity Thermogenesis (NEAT): fidgeting, walking to the kitchen, standing instead of sitting. NEAT varies by up to 400 kcal/day between similar-sized people — this is why two people eating identically can have very different results.
- Thermic Effect of Food — TEF (~10%) — energy your body spends digesting and processing meals. Protein has the highest TEF (~25–30% of its calories), carbohydrates around 7%, and fat only 2–3%. A high-protein diet quietly raises your TDEE.
The activity multiplier in this calculator captures both NEAT and exercise together. If you have a physically active job on top of gym sessions, choose a higher multiplier than you might expect.
Worked example — step by step
Here is exactly how the calculator arrives at a result, using a real set of inputs:
Example: Male, 32 years old, 80 kg, 178 cm, moderately active (×1.55)
Example: Female, 28 years old, 65 kg, 165 cm, lightly active (×1.375)
How to use your TDEE to lose weight or build muscle
Fat loss
Eat 300–500 kcal below your TDEE. A 500 kcal daily deficit produces approximately 1 lb (0.45 kg) of fat loss per week. Never eat below your BMR for extended periods — this causes muscle loss, hormonal disruption, and metabolic slowdown.
Muscle gain
Eat 200–350 kcal above TDEE (lean bulk). Hit your protein target every day to maximise muscle protein synthesis — use the protein calculator for exact daily targets.
Maintenance
Eat at TDEE. If weight drifts unexpectedly after 2 weeks, adjust by ±150 kcal and reassess. Hit your protein target first, then fill remaining calories with carbs and fat to preference.
Why your TDEE might look wrong — common mistakes
The 5 most common TDEE errors
Frequently asked questions
Related free calculators
Results are estimates based on validated formulas. Not medical advice.