Calorie Needs and TDEE Calculator

Use this daily calorie needs calculator to estimate how many calories you may need each day for maintenance, weight loss, or weight gain. This calorie intake calculator uses age, sex, height, weight, activity level, and goal to estimate BMR, TDEE, maintenance calories, and practical calorie targets for planning.

Enter Your Details

Estimate BMR, TDEE, maintenance calories, and calorie targets for weight goals

Use metric or imperial measurements. The calculator converts values automatically.
Sex is used in the calorie estimation formula. This tool provides general estimates for adults.
This calculator is intended for adults age 18 and older.
Enter your height in centimeters.
Enter your current body weight in kilograms.
If you are not sure, choose the option that best matches your usual week. You can also compare your activity habits with a Workout Calorie Burn Calculator or Step Counter / Walking Calories Calculator.
Goal-based calorie targets are estimates only. For a longer-term planning tool, compare with a Weight Loss / Gain Calculator.
This adds a short note linking your result to related tools such as the BMR Calculator, Macro Calculator, and Water Intake Calculator.

Formula basis: This calculator estimates resting calorie needs using the Mifflin-St Jeor equation, then applies an activity factor to estimate total daily calorie needs.

Your Calorie Results Will Appear Here

Enter your details, choose your activity level and goal, then click calculate to estimate your BMR, TDEE, maintenance calories, and goal-based daily calorie targets.

Important Calorie Needs Guidance

This page is designed to help adults estimate daily calorie needs clearly and responsibly for maintenance, weight loss, or weight gain planning.

  • Uses a recognized resting energy equation for adult calorie estimation
  • Shows both BMR and total daily calorie needs
  • Includes goal-based calorie ranges for practical planning
  • Explains that results are estimates, not medical or nutrition therapy advice

Results are for educational and planning use only. People with medical conditions, pregnancy, breastfeeding, eating disorder history, or specialized nutrition needs should seek individualized guidance from a qualified healthcare professional.

How This Calculator Estimates Daily Calories

Step What Happens Why It Matters
Step 1 Estimate BMR from age, sex, height, and weight BMR estimates calories your body uses at rest for basic functions
Step 2 Apply an activity factor This estimates total daily energy expenditure, often called TDEE or maintenance calories
Step 3 Adjust calories for weight goals This creates practical calorie targets for mild, moderate, or more aggressive changes

Activity Multipliers Used

Activity Level Multiplier Typical Meaning
Sedentary 1.20 Little or no purposeful exercise
Lightly active 1.375 Light exercise or light activity 1 to 3 days per week
Moderately active 1.55 Moderate exercise 3 to 5 days per week
Very active 1.725 Hard exercise 6 to 7 days per week
Extra active 1.90 Very hard training, highly active lifestyle, or physically demanding job

Goal Adjustments Shown

Goal Adjustment Planning Note
Maintenance No change Use estimated TDEE as a starting point
Mild weight loss About 250 calories below maintenance More gradual and often easier to sustain
Moderate weight loss About 500 calories below maintenance Common planning estimate for gradual fat loss
Aggressive weight loss About 750 calories below maintenance More restrictive and not appropriate for everyone
Mild weight gain About 250 calories above maintenance Often used for gradual leaner weight gain planning
Moderate weight gain About 500 calories above maintenance May be useful for faster weight gain planning depending on context

What Is a Calorie Needs Calculator and How Does It Work?

A Calorie Needs Calculator estimates how many calories your body may need each day based on factors such as your age, sex, height, weight, and activity level. It is commonly used to determine your daily energy requirements for maintaining, losing, or gaining weight.

Many people use this type of tool as a maintenance calories calculator, calories per day calculator, or Total Daily Energy Expenditure (TDEE) calculator when planning their nutrition and fitness goals.

The calculator typically works by first estimating your Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR), which represents the calories your body needs at rest, and then adjusting that number based on your activity level to estimate your total daily calorie needs.

While the results provide a useful starting point, actual calorie needs may vary based on metabolism, body composition, and lifestyle factors. It is best used as a guide for planning and adjusting your diet over time.

BMR: An estimate of calories your body uses at rest for basic life functions.

TDEE: An estimate of total daily calories after adding movement, exercise, and routine activity.

Step 1: Estimate Resting Energy Needs

The calculator estimates your BMR from age, sex, height, and weight. If you want a dedicated resting-energy tool, you can also compare your result with our BMR Calculator.

Step 2: Account for Activity Level

Daily calories needed by activity level can differ a lot. Someone who is sedentary often needs fewer calories than someone who trains regularly or has a physically active job.

Step 3: Estimate Maintenance Calories

After activity is added, the calculator estimates maintenance calories, which is the amount often used as a starting point for keeping body weight relatively stable.

Step 4: Adjust for Weight Goals

This page also shows calories for weight loss and calories for weight gain. These are planning estimates, not guaranteed outcomes, because real-world results vary.

Step 5: Pair Calories with Practical Habits

Calorie planning works best when combined with other tools such as a Macro Calculator, Water Intake Calculator, Workout Calorie Burn Calculator, BMI Calculator, or Body Fat Percentage Calculator.

This tool is for educational and planning purposes only. It does not diagnose disease or replace individualized advice from a doctor or registered dietitian.

Why Calorie Needs Vary from Person to Person

There is no single calorie number that fits everyone. Two adults with the same weight can still have different calorie needs based on age, body composition, movement, and other health factors.

Common factors that affect calorie needs:

  • Age
  • Sex
  • Height and body weight
  • Muscle mass and body composition
  • Activity level and exercise routine
  • Weight goals and health status

If you want more body metric context, compare your result with an Ideal Weight Calculator, BMI Calculator, Waist-to-Hip Ratio Calculator, or Body Fat Percentage Calculator.

Healthy Calorie Planning Tips

A helpful calorie target should support consistency, nutrient quality, and realistic habits rather than extreme restriction. For many people, gradual changes are easier to maintain than aggressive approaches.

Practical calorie planning ideas:

If you are mainly focused on changing body weight over time, our Weight Loss / Gain Calculator can help you plan more intentionally.

Important Disclaimer

This daily calorie needs calculator is designed for general adult wellness education and planning. It does not account for every factor that can change energy needs, and it should not be treated as medical nutrition advice or a personalized prescription.

Estimate Only

Your result is based on entered information and standard calorie estimation logic for adults.

Not Medical Advice

People with medical conditions, pregnancy, breastfeeding, or eating disorder history should seek qualified professional guidance.

Use Context

Changes in body composition, medication use, training volume, and health status can meaningfully affect calorie needs.

Why This Calculator Is Reliable

This calorie needs calculator uses a recognized resting energy equation and a standard activity-based approach to estimate daily calorie needs for adults in a clear, easy-to-understand format.

This page is designed to help you understand:

  • How BMR and daily calorie needs differ
  • What maintenance calories mean
  • How activity level changes calorie needs
  • How calorie targets for weight loss and weight gain are commonly estimated
  • Why results should be treated as a starting point rather than an exact prescription

It is also written to support real-world planning by linking calorie estimates to related tools such as a Macro Calculator, Water Intake Calculator, and Weight Loss / Gain Calculator.

Results are estimates and should be adjusted based on progress, appetite, energy levels, and guidance from a qualified professional when needed.

Frequently Asked Questions

Daily calorie needs vary based on age, sex, height, weight, activity level, body composition, and goal. This calorie needs calculator estimates maintenance calories and goal-based calorie targets using those common inputs.

A calorie needs calculator is a tool that estimates how many calories you may need each day. It is often used as a daily calorie needs calculator, calorie intake calculator, or calories per day calculator for maintenance, weight loss, or weight gain planning.

Yes, very similar. A TDEE calculator estimates total daily energy expenditure, which many people also call maintenance calories. This page shows both BMR and TDEE so you can see how the estimate is built.

Many people start with a small to moderate calorie deficit below estimated maintenance calories. This page shows mild, moderate, and more aggressive calorie deficit estimates, but more aggressive approaches are not appropriate for everyone and may be limited by minimum calorie safeguards in the calculator.

Weight gain planning often starts by eating above maintenance calories. This calculator shows mild and moderate weight gain targets as a practical starting point.

BMR is an estimate of the calories your body uses at rest. Daily calorie needs are higher because they include movement, exercise, and daily activity. You can compare your resting result more closely with our BMR Calculator.

Yes. Activity level can meaningfully change total daily calorie needs. Someone with regular exercise or a physically demanding job often needs more calories than someone who is mostly sedentary.

They are useful estimates, not exact measurements. Actual calorie needs may differ based on metabolism, body composition, medications, health conditions, sleep, stress, and many other real-world factors.

In standard adult prediction equations, sex is one of the variables used when estimating resting calorie needs. That is why this calculator asks you to choose male or female before calculating.

No. This tool is for general planning only. If you are pregnant, breastfeeding, managing a medical condition, recovering from illness, or have a history of disordered eating, speak with a qualified healthcare professional or registered dietitian.

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