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  4. /BMR Calculator (Basal Metabolic Rate)

BMR Calculator (Basal Metabolic Rate)

Last updated: April 5, 2026

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.

Calculator

Results

Basal Metabolic Rate

1,618

kcal/day

BMR per Hour

67.4

kcal/hr

BMR per kg

23.1

kcal/kg/day

30-Day Baseline Energy

48,525

kcal/30 days

Results

Basal Metabolic Rate

1,618

kcal/day

BMR per Hour

67.4

kcal/hr

BMR per kg

23.1

kcal/kg/day

30-Day Baseline Energy

48,525

kcal/30 days

In This Guide

  1. 01BMR Formulas: Mifflin-St Jeor vs. Harris-Benedict
  2. 02From BMR to Daily Calorie Target: The Activity Multiplier
  3. 03Factors That Affect Your BMR Most Significantly
  4. 04BMR and Weight Loss: The Math Behind the Calories

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.

BMR Formulas: Mifflin-St Jeor vs. Harris-Benedict

The two most widely used BMR equations:

Mifflin-St Jeor (recommended):

  • 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 (1984):

  • 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

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.

From BMR to Daily Calorie Target: The Activity Multiplier

BMR × activity factor = Total Daily Energy Expenditure (TDEE):

  • Sedentary (desk work, no exercise): × 1.2
  • Lightly active (light exercise 1–3×/week): × 1.375
  • Moderately active (exercise 3–5×/week): × 1.55
  • Very active (hard exercise 6–7×/week): × 1.725
  • Extremely active (physical job + daily training): × 1.9

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.

Factors That Affect Your BMR Most Significantly

Understanding what drives your BMR helps you optimize it:

  • Lean muscle mass: the biggest variable — each kg of muscle burns approximately 13 kcal/day at rest; fat tissue burns only 4.5 kcal/kg/day. Two people of the same weight can differ by 200–300 kcal/day in BMR based on body composition alone.
  • Age: BMR drops 1–2% per decade after 20, primarily from muscle loss (sarcopenia). Resistance training counteracts this effectively.
  • Sex: men typically have 5–10% higher BMR than women of the same size due to greater lean mass and hormonal differences.
  • Thyroid function: hypothyroidism reduces BMR by 20–40%; hyperthyroidism raises it — both significantly affect calorie needs

The lean body mass calculator and metabolic calculators provide the complete metabolic assessment toolkit.

BMR and Weight Loss: The Math Behind the Calories

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.

Visual Analysis

How It Works

Enter age, sex, height, and weight. Mifflin-St Jeor: Men BMR = 10×weight(kg) + 6.25×height(cm) − 5×age + 5; Women BMR = 10×weight(kg) + 6.25×height(cm) − 5×age − 161. The calculator also shows the Katch-McArdle formula result if body fat percentage is provided. TDEE = BMR × selected activity multiplier (1.2 to 1.9).

Understanding Your Results

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.

Worked Examples

Male, Mifflin-St Jeor

Inputs

gendermale
age30
weight80
height180
formulamifflin
body fat18

Results

bmr1780
bmr hourly74.2
bmr per kg22.3

A 30-year-old, 80 kg, 180 cm male has a Mifflin BMR of 1,780 kcal/day (74 kcal/hour).

Female, Katch-McArdle

Inputs

genderfemale
age28
weight60
height165
formulakatch
body fat22

Results

bmr1379
bmr hourly57.5
bmr per kg23

A female with 22% body fat (46.8 kg lean mass) has a Katch-McArdle BMR of 1,379 kcal/day.

Frequently Asked Questions

Basal metabolic rate (BMR) is the number of calories your body burns at complete rest to maintain basic life-sustaining functions: breathing, circulation, cell production, protein synthesis, and temperature regulation. It represents the energy your body would use if you stayed in bed all day without moving. BMR accounts for approximately 60–70% of your total daily energy expenditure (TDEE). It is not the same as your resting metabolic rate (RMR), which is slightly higher because RMR is measured after a shorter fast and includes some energy for digestion. For practical weight management purposes, BMR and RMR are often used interchangeably, and both are the starting point for calculating your TDEE and dietary calorie targets.
The Mifflin-St Jeor equation is recommended by the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics as the most accurate BMR formula for most healthy adults. Developed in 1990, it was validated against measured BMR in a broad population and consistently outperforms the original Harris-Benedict equation (1919) in accuracy studies — it comes within 10% of measured BMR in approximately 82% of people. The revised Harris-Benedict (1984) is close in accuracy but slightly less reliable. The Katch-McArdle formula is the most accurate if you know your lean body mass, because it accounts for body composition directly (muscle burns more calories than fat). Use Mifflin-St Jeor as your default; switch to Katch-McArdle if you have a measured body fat percentage from DEXA or BOD POD.
Multiply your BMR by your physical activity level (PAL) multiplier to get your Total Daily Energy Expenditure (TDEE): sedentary (desk job, little exercise): BMR × 1.2; lightly active (light exercise 1–3 days/week): BMR × 1.375; moderately active (moderate exercise 3–5 days/week): BMR × 1.55; very active (hard exercise 6–7 days/week): BMR × 1.725; extra active (physical job + hard exercise): BMR × 1.9. For a person with BMR 1,600 kcal/day who exercises 4 days per week: TDEE = 1,600 × 1.55 = 2,480 kcal/day. To lose 0.5 kg/week: eat approximately 500 kcal/day below TDEE = 1,980 kcal/day. To gain weight: eat 300–500 kcal above TDEE. Always consult a healthcare provider or registered dietitian for personalized calorie targets.
BMR declines approximately 1–2% per decade after age 20, primarily because lean muscle mass (which is metabolically active — it burns calories) decreases as we age, a process called sarcopenia. After age 30, adults lose approximately 3–5% of muscle mass per decade without resistance training. Less muscle = lower BMR = fewer calories burned at rest. Additional factors: hormonal changes (declining testosterone in men, declining estrogen in women) affect muscle maintenance; thyroid function tends to decrease with age, lowering metabolic rate; physical activity typically decreases with age, reducing the muscle-preserving stimulus of exercise. The practical implication: maintaining or building muscle through resistance training is the most effective way to prevent age-related BMR decline — aerobic exercise alone does not preserve muscle mass as effectively.
BMR (Basal Metabolic Rate) is calories burned at complete rest — no movement, no digestion, thermoneutral temperature. TDEE (Total Daily Energy Expenditure) is total calories burned in a full day, including all physical activity, the thermic effect of food (digestion, approximately 10% of calories eaten), and non-exercise activity thermogenesis (NEAT — fidgeting, walking to the kitchen, posture maintenance). TDEE is the number that matters for weight management: if you eat exactly your TDEE, your weight is stable; eat below TDEE to lose weight; eat above TDEE to gain. TDEE = BMR × activity multiplier, typically ranging from BMR × 1.2 (sedentary) to BMR × 1.9 (very physically demanding lifestyle).
Yes — the most effective strategies for raising BMR: build muscle through resistance training (each kg of muscle mass burns approximately 13 kcal/day at rest; replacing fat with muscle raises BMR proportionally; 8–12 weeks of consistent resistance training raises BMR by 5–10% on average); eat adequate protein (the thermic effect of protein is 20–30% of its calories — higher than carbs at 5–10% or fat at 0–3%; also essential for maintaining muscle during weight loss); avoid extreme calorie restriction (below 1,200 kcal/day triggers metabolic adaptation — the body reduces BMR by 10–20% as a starvation response); sleep 7–9 hours (sleep deprivation decreases BMR by reducing growth hormone secretion, which is essential for muscle maintenance). Certain medical conditions (hypothyroidism, Cushing's syndrome) lower BMR — if you suspect a medical cause for a very low BMR, consult your healthcare provider.

Sources & Methodology

Mifflin, M.D. et al. (1990). A new predictive equation for resting energy expenditure in healthy individuals. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 51(2), 241–247. Frankenfield, D. et al. (2005). Comparison of predictive equations for REE in healthy, nonobese adults. Journal of the American Dietetic Association, 105(5), 775–789.

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