The BMR and Calorie Metabolism Calculator computes Basal Metabolic Rate using the Mifflin-St Jeor equation and applies your activity multiplier to produce Total Daily Energy Expenditure. Use it to set accurate daily calorie targets for weight loss, maintenance, or lean muscle gain.
1,618
kcal/day
67.4
kcal/hr
23.1
kcal/kg/day
48,525
kcal/30 days
1,618
kcal/day
67.4
kcal/hr
23.1
kcal/kg/day
48,525
kcal/30 days
Your BMR is the minimum caloric engine running your body 24/7 — breathing, pumping blood, maintaining body temperature, building and repairing cells. Everything else you eat is fuel for activity and digestion on top of this baseline. Get the baseline wrong and every calorie target you build on it is off. The BMR calculator uses the Mifflin-St Jeor equation — validated to within 10% of measured BMR in 82% of healthy adults — to give you a reliable starting number for your energy needs.
The two most widely used BMR equations:
Mifflin-St Jeor (recommended):
Revised Harris-Benedict (1984):
Example (35-year-old woman, 65 kg, 165 cm): Mifflin BMR = (10 × 65) + (6.25 × 165) − (5 × 35) − 161 = 650 + 1,031.25 − 175 − 161 = 1,345 kcal/day. Use this online calculator for your personal BMR. The calorie calculator extends this to your full TDEE with activity level.
BMR × activity factor = Total Daily Energy Expenditure (TDEE):
Your TDEE is your maintenance calorie level — eat this to maintain weight. Subtract 500 kcal/day to lose approximately 0.5 kg/week; add 250–500 kcal/day for lean muscle gain. The TDEE calculator and calorie calculator apply these multipliers automatically.
Understanding what drives your BMR helps you optimize it:
The lean body mass calculator and metabolic calculators provide the complete metabolic assessment toolkit.
One kg of body fat ≈ 7,700 kcal. To lose 0.5 kg/week: create a deficit of 7,700 ÷ 2 = 3,850 kcal/week = 550 kcal/day below TDEE. To lose 1 kg/week: 7,700 ÷ 7 = 1,100 kcal/day deficit — aggressive and typically unsustainable without muscle loss. Never eat below your BMR chronically — doing so forces your body to break down muscle for energy, reducing BMR further and creating a cycle of metabolic adaptation. Most nutrition professionals recommend not eating more than 500–750 kcal below TDEE for sustainable weight loss. Consult a registered dietitian for a personalized plan.
Your BMR is the absolute minimum calories your body needs at rest. Typical adult BMR ranges from 1,200 to 2,000+ kcal/day. Males average 1,600-1,800 kcal/day and females 1,200-1,500 kcal/day. The per-kg value lets you compare metabolic efficiency (typical: 20-25 kcal/kg/day). If you know your body fat percentage, the Katch-McArdle formula may be more accurate as it accounts for lean mass directly.
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Results
A 30-year-old, 80 kg, 180 cm male has a Mifflin BMR of 1,780 kcal/day (74 kcal/hour).
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Results
A female with 22% body fat (46.8 kg lean mass) has a Katch-McArdle BMR of 1,379 kcal/day.
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