5 free calculators · No sign-up · Clinically grounded

Free TDEE Calculator
Not just a number — a complete plan.

Most calculators hand you one number and walk away. Ours runs all four BMR formulas with a realistic accuracy range, calculates your calorie deficit, builds your macro split, and maps a week-by-week weight-loss timeline — free, no sign-up.

All 4 BMR formulas compared ±15% accuracy range shown Week-by-week weight timeline Clinical context on every result Metric & Imperial

Choose a calculator

Which tool is right for you?

Td

TDEE Calculator

Your total daily energy expenditure — all calories burned in a day. We run all 4 major BMR formulas at once and show the realistic accuracy range, because no single formula fits everyone.

✦ All 4 BMR formulas + ±15% accuracy range — most show only one
kcal / day
Your daily energy
Resting (BMR)
Activity + digestion
Realistic range (±15%)

Your stats

yrs
cm
kg
%

Enables Katch-McArdle — more accurate for lean individuals.

Activity & goal

Most people overestimate — when unsure, pick one level lower.

Mifflin-St Jeor is the most widely validated in research.

※ TDEE is an estimate, not a precise measurement. Results vary with genetics, hormones, sleep, and stress. Use as a starting point and adjust from real-world results over 2–3 weeks.

Df

Calorie Deficit Calculator

Find your daily calorie target for fat loss, see your weekly projection, and check whether your chosen rate is safe — including a minimum-threshold warning.

✦ Checks the minimum safe threshold + shows time-to-goal
Daily target
Weekly loss
Time to goal

Your stats

kg
kg
kcal

Use the TDEE tab to find your number.

Deficit plan

※ 1 kg of body fat ≈ 7,700 kcal. Weekly loss varies with water, glycogen, hormones, and sodium. Track weekly averages, not daily numbers.

Mc

Macro Calculator

Calculate your protein, carb, and fat targets. Compare 5 dietary approaches side by side and check whether your protein meets clinical guidelines for your goal.

✦ 5 approaches compared at once + protein adequacy check
Protein
Carbohydrates
Fat

Your numbers

kcal

Use your TDEE or deficit target.

kg

Checks protein adequacy per kg body weight.

Diet style

The table below shows all 5 approaches at once.

※ No macro split is universally optimal. Research shows adherence is the strongest predictor of outcome — choose an approach you can maintain.

Sp

Calorie Surplus Calculator

Find your optimal surplus for muscle gain. Eating too large a surplus stores most of the excess as fat — we show the estimated muscle-to-fat ratio.

✦ Shows estimated muscle vs. fat gain ratio
Daily target
Monthly gain
Muscle ratio

Your stats

kcal

Surplus approach

Lean bulking (5–15%) maximizes the muscle-to-fat ratio.

※ Natural max muscle gain: beginners ~1.0–1.5 kg/mo, intermediate ~0.5–1.0, advanced ~0.25–0.5. Progressive training is essential — calories alone won't build muscle.

Tl

Weight-Loss Timeline Calculator

Week-by-week projection including metabolic adaptation — as you lose weight your calorie needs fall, slowing loss over time. Most calculators ignore this.

✦ Includes metabolic adaptation — not naive linear math
Start weight
Goal weight
Est. time

Your stats

kg
kg

Your plan

kcal

Your body burns fewer calories as you lose weight.

※ Real weight fluctuates ±1–2 kg week to week from water, sodium, hormones, and digestion. Track weekly averages over 3–4 weeks. A 2-week plateau is normal.

Learn

Common questions about TDEE & calorie targets

01

What is TDEE?

Total Daily Energy Expenditure is the total calories your body burns in 24 hours — resting metabolism (BMR), activity, and the thermic effect of food. It's the foundation for any body-composition goal.

02

Why do calculators differ?

Different formulas (Mifflin-St Jeor, Harris-Benedict, Schofield, Katch-McArdle) use different equations. Individual errors of 300–500+ kcal/day are common — we show all four so you see the range.

03

How accurate is TDEE?

Studies show calculators land within 100 kcal for only ~20% of people, and ~20% have errors over 500 kcal. Treat your TDEE as a starting estimate and adjust after 2–3 weeks of tracking.

04

What is a safe deficit?

Around 500 kcal/day supports ~0.5 kg/week loss. Beyond 1,000 kcal/day raises muscle-loss and hormonal risks. Minimum safe intakes are generally 1,200 kcal (women) / 1,500 kcal (men).

Learn

Common questions about calorie deficits & fat loss

01

What is a calorie deficit?

A deficit means consuming fewer calories than you burn. Your body makes up the difference by drawing on stored energy — primarily body fat — which leads to weight loss over time.

02

How fast should I lose weight?

Research supports 0.5–1% of body weight per week as a sustainable rate. Faster loss increasingly draws from muscle rather than fat, and raises the risk of fatigue, hormone disruption, and nutrient deficiency.

03

What's the minimum safe calorie intake?

General guidelines suggest 1,200 kcal/day for women and 1,500 kcal/day for men as a floor. Going below makes it very hard to meet essential nutrient needs and typically accelerates muscle loss.

04

Why did my weight loss slow down?

As you lose weight, your body adapts by burning fewer calories (metabolic adaptation). Periodic reassessment of your TDEE every 4–6 weeks is normal — reduce intake by 100–200 kcal or add light activity to restart progress.

Learn

Common questions about macros & dietary approaches

01

What are macros?

Macronutrients — protein, carbohydrates, and fat — are the three main calorie sources. Protein and carbs provide 4 kcal/g; fat provides 9 kcal/g. Tracking them helps control body composition beyond just total calories.

02

How much protein do I need?

Research consistently shows 1.6–2.2 g of protein per kg of body weight per day supports muscle retention during fat loss and growth during a bulk. Higher intakes (up to 2.4 g/kg) add no harm but show diminishing returns.

03

Does the carb-to-fat ratio matter?

For most goals, the evidence is weak. Total calories and protein adequacy have far stronger effects on body composition than the carb/fat split. Choose the ratio you can sustain long-term.

04

Which macro split is best?

There is no universally optimal split. Adherence is the strongest predictor of results. We compare 5 approaches — balanced, high-protein, low-carb, keto, and high-carb — so you can find what fits your lifestyle.

Learn

Common questions about calorie surplus & muscle gain

01

What is a calorie surplus?

A surplus means consuming more calories than you burn. The excess provides energy for muscle protein synthesis. Without resistance training, most of the surplus goes to fat storage rather than muscle.

02

How much muscle can I gain naturally?

Rough upper limits: beginners ~1.0–1.5 kg/month, intermediates ~0.5–1.0 kg/month, advanced lifters ~0.25–0.5 kg/month. Actual gains depend on training quality, sleep, protein intake, and genetics.

03

What is a lean bulk?

A lean bulk targets a small surplus (5–15% above TDEE) to maximize the muscle-to-fat ratio of weight gained. It's slower than a traditional bulk but produces less fat that needs to be cut later.

04

Should I track protein during a bulk?

Yes. Adequate protein (1.6–2.2 g/kg) is essential — calorie surplus alone does not build muscle. Progressive resistance training creates the stimulus; protein provides the building blocks; the surplus provides the energy.

Learn

Common questions about weight loss timelines & adaptation

01

What is metabolic adaptation?

As you lose weight, your body adapts by burning fewer calories than a simple weight-based calculation would predict — by up to 5–15%. This is why progress slows beyond what the math says, even with consistent adherence.

02

Why has my weight loss stalled?

A true plateau (3+ weeks with no movement despite consistent deficit) is a sign that your TDEE has adapted. Common responses: reduce intake by 100–200 kcal, add light exercise, or take a 1–2 week diet break.

03

What's a healthy rate of weight loss?

Most research supports 0.5–1% of body weight per week as the range that preserves lean muscle while losing mostly fat. Faster rates increase muscle loss, fatigue, and hormonal disruption.

04

How long will it actually take?

Our timeline uses metabolic adaptation to give a realistic estimate. Most people take 20–40% longer than naive linear math suggests. Building in that buffer prevents discouragement when progress naturally slows.