Daily Calorie Calculator
Quick estimation based on Mifflin–St Jeor.
How this daily calorie estimate is calculated
This tool uses the Mifflin–St Jeor equation, a widely used way to estimate resting energy needs (BMR), and then applies a simple activity multiplier.
- Step 1 – Estimate BMR. Your age, height, weight, and sex are used to estimate how many calories your body would burn at rest.
- Step 2 – Apply an activity factor. The calculator multiplies BMR by
1.5, which roughly matches a moderately active day for many people. - Step 3 – Round the result. The final number is rounded to the nearest whole calorie to keep things easy to read.
Think of this as a baseline estimate for a typical day—not a precise measurement. Real needs can be higher or lower depending on movement, sleep, stress, and health conditions.
What to do with your estimated maintenance calories
Once you see your estimated maintenance calories, you can treat it as a reference point rather than a strict target.
- Notice how it compares to your usual intake. If you already have a rough idea of how you eat, this number may confirm or gently challenge those assumptions.
- Adjust for your real activity. If most days are lighter than “moderate,” your true needs might be a bit lower; if you train hard or move all day, they might be higher.
- Pair it with how you feel. Energy, focus, mood, and recovery are just as important as the raw calorie estimate.
If you ever receive medical or nutrition guidance from a professional, their recommendations should always take priority over this general estimate.
How to get the clearest possible estimate
- Use current measurements. Enter your present-day weight, height, and age rather than older numbers.
- Stay within realistic ranges. Very small or very large values can distort the estimate, so double-check anything that looks unusual.
- Revisit over time. If your body size or routine changes, run a new estimate so the number stays relevant.
And remember: this tool is here to support learning and planning, not to judge your choices.
Two quick examples of how to read your result
These made-up examples show how someone might interpret their estimate in everyday language.
- Case 1 – Desk job, light movement. A person who sits most of the day, walks a bit, and doesn't currently exercise might treat the estimate as an upper bound and see how they feel slightly below it.
- Case 2 – On your feet all day. Someone who walks or lifts at work for many hours may notice that they feel better a little above the estimate, using it as a minimum instead of a cap.
These examples aren't prescriptions, just starting points for noticing how the estimate connects to the reality of your days.
Common misunderstandings about calorie estimates
- “This number must be perfect.” In reality it's an approximation, useful for orientation rather than precision.
- “Every day should match exactly.” Real life includes higher and lower days; patterns over weeks matter more than single totals.
- “If I don't hit it, I failed.” The estimate is a tool, not a grade—flexibility is part of a sustainable relationship with food.
Using the calculator with a gentle mindset usually makes the information more helpful and less stressful.