TDEE Calculator
Total daily energy expenditure
About TDEE Calculator
What TDEE means and why it matters
TDEE = Total Daily Energy Expenditure. It's the total number of calories your body burns in a 24-hour period — at rest, in motion, digesting food, and maintaining temperature. It's the central number in any nutrition plan: eat less than TDEE and you lose weight; eat more and you gain. Get TDEE wrong and every other calculation is off.
TDEE has four components:
- BMR (Basal Metabolic Rate) — calories burned at complete rest, just to keep your organs running. ~60–75% of TDEE for most people.
- TEF (Thermic Effect of Food) — calories burned digesting and processing what you eat. Protein has the highest TEF (~25% of its calories go to digestion); fat the lowest (~3%). Roughly 10% of TDEE.
- NEAT (Non-Exercise Activity Thermogenesis) — fidgeting, walking, standing, daily movement that isn't a planned workout. Highly variable between individuals (200–600+ cal/day difference).
- EAT (Exercise Activity Thermogenesis) — your actual workouts. Smaller share of TDEE than people think — even an hour of running is only ~600 cal.
The Mifflin-St Jeor equation
The calculator uses the Mifflin-St Jeor equation (1990) for BMR, which independent research (the Frankenfield meta-analysis) found to be the most accurate predictive formula for non-obese adults:
Men: BMR = 10 × weight_kg + 6.25 × height_cm − 5 × age + 5
Women: BMR = 10 × weight_kg + 6.25 × height_cm − 5 × age − 161
Then multiply by an activity factor to get TDEE:
- Sedentary (desk job, little exercise): BMR × 1.2
- Lightly active (light exercise 1–3 days/week): BMR × 1.375
- Moderately active (3–5 days/week): BMR × 1.55
- Very active (6–7 days/week): BMR × 1.725
- Extremely active (twice-daily training, physical job): BMR × 1.9
How accurate is it?
For non-obese adults aged 19–82, Mifflin-St Jeor predicts BMR within 10% of measured values about 70% of the time. The biggest source of error in TDEE is the activity factor — most people overestimate. "Moderately active" really means structured exercise 3–5 days per week; if you just walk the dog twice, you're closer to lightly active.
For athletes, obese individuals, very lean individuals, and the elderly, Mifflin-St Jeor accuracy degrades. The Katch-McArdle formula (which uses lean body mass instead of total weight) is generally better for athletes — switch to it in the tool when known body fat % is available.
Using TDEE for goals
The calculator outputs three calorie targets based on your TDEE:
- Cut (lose fat): TDEE − 500. A 500 cal/day deficit produces roughly 0.5 kg (~1 lb) of fat loss per week. Going more aggressive than 25% below TDEE risks muscle loss, energy crashes, and rebound.
- Maintain: TDEE. Recomposition (gaining muscle while losing fat) is possible at maintenance for beginners and returning lifters; less effective for advanced athletes.
- Bulk (gain muscle): TDEE + 300. A small surplus minimises fat gain. "Dirty bulks" at +1000 produce far more fat than muscle.
Pair with the Macro Calculator for the protein/carb/fat breakdown of your target calories.
Frequently asked questions
BMR is just the resting baseline — what your body burns lying in bed all day. TDEE includes BMR plus everything else: digestion, fidgeting, walking, and workouts. TDEE is the more useful number for diet planning because it reflects your actual life.
The Mifflin-St Jeor equation was published in metric. The calculator accepts imperial too and converts internally — the result is identical either way.
Most likely you overestimated your activity factor. "Moderately active" in nutrition research means structured exercise 3–5 days/week of meaningful intensity — not "I walk the dog and occasionally do yoga." Be honest; the math depends on it.
As an approximation, yes. The "3500 calories = 1 lb of fat" rule oversimplifies metabolic adaptation (your TDEE drops as you lose weight, slowing further loss), but for the first few months of a cut it's a good starting estimate. Reassess TDEE every 4–6 weeks.
Mifflin-St Jeor uses total body weight, not lean body mass. For athletes or very lean people, Katch-McArdle (which uses lean mass and body fat %) is more accurate. The tool offers Katch-McArdle as an option when you can enter body fat %.
For high-volume endurance training, the standard activity multipliers under-predict. A marathon runner in peak training can be at 4000–5000 kcal/day. Track weight weekly; if you're losing more than 0.3 kg/week, eat more.
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