Free Calorie Calculator

Free Calorie Calculator — Calculate Your Daily Calories Instantly – 2026

With Free Calorie Calculator: Find out how many calories you need each day to lose weight, maintain your current weight, or build muscle. This calculator uses three well-established formulas — Mifflin–St Jeor, Revised Harris-Benedict, and Katch-McArdle — so you can see your results from more than one angle instead of relying on a single estimate.

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Last updated: July 10, 2026 · Formulas reviewed against current clinical nutrition literature

Calories Calculator
Calories Calculator
BMI · BMR · TDEE · Calorie Targets · Hydration
Inputs
Metrics Report
Body Mass Index
1518.5253040
Basal Metabolic Rate
Calories burned at complete rest
kcal/day
Total Daily Energy Expenditure
BMR adjusted for activity level
kcal/day
Ideal Weight Range
Based on healthy BMI range (18.5–24.9)
Daily Water Intake
Recommended baseline hydration
L/day
Calorie Targets
Goal Daily Calories Weekly Rate
Lose weight −0.5 kg
Maintain weight 0 kg
Gain weight +0.5 kg
Calculations use the Mifflin–St Jeor equation for BMR and standard activity multipliers for TDEE. Calorie targets apply a ±500 kcal/day adjustment (≈0.5 kg/week). These figures are general estimates for informational purposes and are not a substitute for advice from a qualified healthcare professional.

Which BMR Formula Should You Use?

Not all calorie formulas are built the same way, and picking the right one for your situation makes a real difference in accuracy.

Mifflin–St Jeor is the formula this calculator uses by default, and it’s the one most frequently recommended in modern clinical practice for the general population. It was introduced as a validated predictive equation for resting energy expenditure, and later comparison studies have generally found it more reliable than older formulas across both non-obese and 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

Revised Harris-Benedict predates Mifflin–St Jeor by about a decade and is still in wide use, though later validation studies generally found it runs slightly higher than actual measured BMR for most people:

  • Men: BMR = 13.397 × weight(kg) + 4.799 × height(cm) − 5.677 × age + 88.362
  • Women: BMR = 9.247 × weight(kg) + 3.098 × height(cm) − 4.330 × age + 447.593

Katch-McArdle takes a different approach entirely — instead of using total body weight, it calculates Resting Daily Energy Expenditure (RDEE) from your lean body mass:

  • RDEE = 370 + 21.6 × (1 − body fat %) × weight(kg)

Because it accounts for muscle mass directly, Katch-McArdle tends to be the more accurate option if you’re lean and know your body fat percentage from a reliable method (DEXA scan, skinfold calipers, or bioelectrical impedance). If you don’t know your body fat percentage, Mifflin–St Jeor is the more practical default.

Turning BMR into a Daily Calorie Target With Free Calorie Calculator

BMR only tells you what your body burns at complete rest. To get your real-world number — your Total Daily Energy Expenditure (TDEE) — that figure gets multiplied by an activity factor, typically somewhere between 1.2 (sedentary) and 1.9 (very active, physically demanding job or twice-daily training).

From there, weight change comes down to a fairly simple relationship: one pound of body weight is roughly equivalent to 3,500 calories. So:

  • To lose about 1 lb/week: eat roughly 500 calories/day below your TDEE
  • To lose about 2 lb/week (the generally recommended upper limit): eat roughly 1,000 calories/day below your TDEE
  • To gain about 1 lb/week: eat roughly 500 calories/day above your TDEE

Cutting more aggressively than this isn’t recommended. Very low-calorie diets tend to cost you lean muscle mass alongside fat, which lowers your BMR over time and can make the weight harder to keep off. Harvard Health guidance generally advises against going below roughly 1,200 calories/day for women or 1,500 calories/day for men without medical supervision. see also their overview on calorie counting basics.

A Practical Framework for Counting Calories

If you’re new to tracking, here’s a straightforward way to start:

  1. Calculate your BMR and TDEE above — use Katch-McArdle if you know your body fat percentage, Mifflin–St Jeor if you don’t.
  2. Set a realistic target. Aim for a deficit or surplus you can sustain, not the most aggressive number the math allows.
  3. Pick a tracking method that fits your life. A phone app, a spreadsheet, or a notebook all work — consistency matters more than the tool.
  4. Weigh in on a schedule, not daily. Day-to-day weight swings are mostly water, so weekly averages give a much clearer picture of real progress.
  5. Reassess every few weeks. As you lose or gain weight, your BMR shifts too, so your target should be recalculated periodically rather than treated as fixed forever.

Calorie counting is one effective strategy among several — it works because it makes an otherwise invisible number (how much you’re actually eating) concrete and trackable. It isn’t the only path to sustainable weight management, and the best approach is generally the one that fits your lifestyle well enough that you’ll actually stick with it.

Zigzag Calorie Cycling With Free Calorie Calculator

One common issue with a flat daily calorie target is metabolic adaptation — over time, the body can adjust to a lower intake, which is part of why weight loss often plateaus. Zigzag cycling addresses this by varying calorie intake day to day while keeping the same weekly total.

Example: if your weekly target is 14,000 calories, instead of eating exactly 2,000 calories every day, you might eat 2,300 calories on three days and 1,775 calories on the other four. The weekly total is identical, but your body isn’t adapting to a single fixed number — and the higher-calorie days can be planned around social occasions, making the approach easier to sustain.

There’s no single required split; a difference of roughly 200–300 calories between “high” and “low” days is a common and reasonable starting point, adjusted up for more active people.

Not All Calories Behave the Same Way

The “calories in vs. calories out” model holds up as the fundamental driver of weight change, but the source and form of those calories still matters for health, hunger, and how easy the plan is to stick to:

  • Foods that require more chewing (vegetables, whole grains, lean meats) burn slightly more calories during digestion — the thermic effect of food — and tend to increase satiety, since eating them takes longer.
  • “Empty calories” — largely added sugars and heavily processed fats — provide energy with little nutritional value, and drinks are a major hidden source: sugary beverages alone can account for a large share of daily intake for some people.
  • Nutrition labels are an approximation, not an exact figure of what your body retains — factors like fiber content and food processing affect how many of the listed calories are actually absorbed.

None of this changes the underlying math, but it explains why two people eating the “same number of calories” from very different diets can have noticeably different experiences with hunger, energy, and long-term adherence.

Calories in Common Foods

Figures below are typical values consistent with USDA FoodData Central, the U.S. government’s public nutrition database — check it directly for exact figures by brand or preparation.

FoodServingCalories
Apple1 medium (~180 g)~95
Banana1 medium (~120 g)~105
Orange1 medium (~130 g)~65
Broccoli, cooked1 cup~55
Carrots, raw1 cup~50
Chicken breast, cooked3 oz~165
Salmon, cooked3 oz~175
Egg, large1~70
Tofu4 oz~90
White bread1 slice~75
Brown rice, cooked1 cup~215
Avocado1 medium~235
Almonds1 oz (~23 nuts)~165
Whole milk1 cup~150
Skim milk1 cup~85

Values are typical figures rounded for reference. Actual calorie content varies by brand, preparation, and portion — check nutrition labels for precise figures.

Sample Meal Plans

Meal~1,200 cal/day~1,500 cal/day~2,000 cal/day
BreakfastOatmeal + bananaGreek yogurt, granola, berriesEggs, toast, avocado
LunchGrilled chicken saladTurkey sandwich + side saladChicken burrito bowl
SnackApple + small handful almondsCottage cheese + fruitProtein shake + banana
DinnerBaked fish + steamed vegetablesStir-fry chicken + brown riceSalmon, sweet potato, greens

These are illustrative structures, not prescriptions — swap items freely as long as the totals land near your target and you’re covering protein, fiber, and micronutrient needs.

Calories Burned by Common Activities (per hour)

Activity125 lb (57 kg)155 lb (70 kg)185 lb (84 kg)
Walking (3.5 mph)~215~265~320
Cycling, moderate~450~560~670
Swimming, moderate~400~490~585
Running (9 min/mile)~620~770~920
Basketball~340~420~500
Yoga~180~225~265

Estimates vary with intensity, technique, and individual metabolism — treat these as ballpark figures, not exact measurements.

Energy Content by Macronutrient

ComponentCalories per gram
Fat9
Protein4
Carbohydrate4
Alcohol7
Fiber~2 (varies by type)

Frequently Asked Questions

How many calories should I eat a day? Most adults need somewhere between 1,600 and 3,000 calories daily, depending on age, sex, height, weight, and activity level. Enter your details in the calculator above for a number based on your actual stats rather than a general range.

What’s the difference between BMR and TDEE? BMR is what your body burns at complete rest. TDEE adds in the calories burned through daily activity and exercise, so it’s the number that actually reflects how much you can eat to maintain your current weight.

How fast is it safe to lose weight? Roughly 1–2 lbs (0.45–0.9 kg) per week is the range generally considered sustainable without excessive muscle loss or metabolic slowdown. Faster loss is possible but comes with real trade-offs.

Which formula is most accurate — Mifflin–St Jeor, Harris-Benedict, or Katch-McArdle? For the general population without a known body fat percentage, Mifflin–St Jeor is typically the most accurate of the three. If you know your body fat percentage and are relatively lean, Katch-McArdle often performs better, since it accounts for muscle mass directly.

Does the type of food I eat matter if the calories are the same? For weight change specifically, total calories matter most. But food quality still affects hunger, energy levels, and how easy a plan is to sustain — which indirectly affects whether you hit your calorie target consistently over time.

Is this calculator free? Yes — no subscription, no hidden fees, no email required.

About These Calculations

This tool applies three independently validated BMR formulas (Mifflin–St Jeor, Revised Harris-Benedict, Katch-McArdle), multiplies by a standard activity factor, and derives calorie targets using the widely used ~3,500-calorie-per-pound approximation. It’s intended for general informational use and isn’t a substitute for personalized advice from a registered dietitian or physician — particularly for anyone pregnant, breastfeeding, under 18, or managing a medical condition.

Related Tools

  • Daily Diet Calculator — the homepage tool for a quick daily calorie and macro estimate.
  • TDEE Calculator — a deeper breakdown of Total Daily Energy Expenditure, including the four components of TDEE (BMR, thermic effect of food, exercise, and non-exercise activity) and activity-multiplier tables.

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