Macro Calculator

How many calories and macros should I eat per day?

Calculate your optimal macronutrient split for your goals.

Your Details

cm
kg
BMR (Rest)
1370
TDEE (Maint)
1884
Target Macro Split:30% / 35% / 35%

Daily Target

1884

Calories / Day

Protein
141g
Fats
73g
Carbs
165g

Macro Distribution

Detailed Breakdown

Protein
4 calories per gram
141g
564 cal
Fats
9 calories per gram
73g
657 cal
Carbohydrates
4 calories per gram
165g
660 cal

The results provided by this tool are for educational and informational purposes only. This is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions regarding a medical condition.

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The Complete Guide to Macros: Science, Strategy & Real-World Application

Key Insights & Concepts

Macronutrient tracking (or "counting macros") has revolutionized how millions of people approach nutrition. Unlike simple calorie counting, macro tracking recognizes that your body processes different nutrients in fundamentally different ways. This comprehensive guide will teach you the science behind macros, how to apply them to your goals, and the practical wisdom that makes the difference between success and frustration.

The Three Macronutrients: Your Body's Building Blocks

Every calorie you consume comes from one of three macronutrients: protein, carbohydrates, or fat. Each plays distinct, non-interchangeable roles in your body.

Protein

4 cal/gram

The builder. Essential for muscle repair, enzyme production, hormone synthesis, and immune function. Your body cannot store excess protein—it must be consumed regularly.

Carbohydrates

4 cal/gram

The fuel. Your body's preferred energy source, especially for high-intensity activity. Stored as glycogen in muscles and liver for quick access.

Fat

9 cal/gram

The reserve. Critical for hormone production, brain function (60% fat), vitamin absorption, and long-lasting energy. Essential fats cannot be made by the body.

Why Macros Matter More Than Calories Alone

The phrase "a calorie is a calorie" is technically true from a physics perspective but dangerously misleading for nutrition. Here's why macro composition matters:

1. Thermic Effect of Food (TEF)

Your body burns calories just digesting food—but the amount varies dramatically by macro. Protein burns 20-30% of its calories during digestion. Carbs burn 5-10%. Fat burns only 0-3%. This means 100 calories of protein yields only ~75 usable calories, while 100 calories of fat yields ~97.

2. Hormonal Response

Different macros trigger different hormonal cascades. Carbs spike insulin (storage hormone). Protein triggers glucagon and increases satiety hormones. Fat slows gastric emptying and keeps you fuller longer. Your macro split literally changes your body's metabolic signaling.

3. Body Composition vs. Weight

Two people can eat identical calories but end up with vastly different bodies. High-protein diets preserve muscle during fat loss. Low-protein diets cause muscle wasting. The scale might show the same number, but the mirror—and your health—tells a different story.

4. Satiety and Adherence

Protein is the most satiating macronutrient. Fiber-rich carbs keep you full. Fats slow digestion. A well-designed macro split makes your diet feel sustainable, not punishing—and sustainability is the single biggest predictor of long-term success.

The Hierarchy: Which Macro Matters Most?

When setting up your nutrition, prioritize in this order:

  1. 1
    Total Calories — This determines whether you gain, lose, or maintain weight. Get this right first.
  2. 2
    Protein — Aim for 0.7-1g per pound of body weight (or 1.6-2.2g/kg). This is non-negotiable for preserving muscle.
  3. 3
    Fat — Don't go below 0.3g per pound (0.7g/kg). Essential for hormonal health and nutrient absorption.
  4. 4
    Carbs — Fill remaining calories with carbs. Adjust based on activity level and personal preference.

Understanding TDEE: Your Daily Burn Rate

Your Total Daily Energy Expenditure (TDEE) is the total calories you burn in a day. It consists of four components:

60-70%
BMR
Breathing, circulation, cell repair
15-30%
Activity
Exercise + daily movement
10%
TEF
Digesting food
5-10%
NEAT
Fidgeting, walking, standing

NEAT (Non-Exercise Activity Thermogenesis) is often underestimated. Increasing daily movement—taking stairs, walking during calls, standing desks—can add 200-500 calories to your daily burn without "exercise."

The Fourth Macro: Alcohol

Alcohol provides 7 calories per gram and deserves special attention because:

  • Your body treats alcohol as a toxin and prioritizes metabolizing it above all else
  • While processing alcohol, fat burning is essentially paused
  • Alcohol lowers inhibitions, leading to poor food choices ("drunk munchies")
  • It disrupts sleep quality, which impairs recovery and increases hunger hormones

If you drink occasionally, account for alcohol calories. A standard glass of wine is ~120 calories. A pint of beer is ~150-200 calories. A cocktail can be 300-500+ calories.

Popular Macro Splits Explained

Balanced (30/35/35)

Best for: General health, beginners, sustainable long-term eating. Provides adequate protein, enough fat for hormonal health, and sufficient carbs for energy. The "default" that works for most people.

High Protein (50/20/30)

Best for: Muscle building, aggressive fat loss, athletes. Higher protein preserves muscle during a deficit and supports recovery. May feel restrictive for carb lovers.

Low Carb (40/40/20)

Best for: Blood sugar control, reduced hunger, sedentary individuals. Lower carbs reduce insulin spikes and can improve satiety. Not ideal for high-intensity training.

Keto (25/70/5)

Best for: Epilepsy treatment, extreme appetite control, some metabolic conditions. Very restrictive and difficult to maintain. Performance suffers without adaptation period.

High Carb / Vegan (20/20/60)

Best for: Endurance athletes, plant-based eaters, high-volume training. Maximizes glycogen storage for performance. Requires careful protein planning on plant-based diets.

Common Macro Tracking Mistakes

Not weighing food

Eyeballing portions leads to 20-50% miscounting. A food scale costs $15 and eliminates guesswork.

Forgetting cooking oils and sauces

A tablespoon of olive oil is 120 calories. Restaurant meals often add 500+ calories in hidden fats.

Weekend "free days"

Two days of 1,000-calorie surplus wipes out a 5-day deficit. Consistency beats perfection.

Over-relying on exercise calories

Fitness trackers overestimate burn by 20-90%. Never "eat back" all your exercise calories.

Setting protein too low

Most people undereat protein dramatically. Aim for at least 0.7g per pound of bodyweight minimum.

The 80/20 Rule: Practical Macro Tracking

You don't need to track perfectly forever. Here's a sustainable approach:

  1. Track strictly for 4-8 weeks to learn portion sizes and macro content of your regular foods
  2. Identify your "anchor meals"—10-15 go-to recipes you know hit your macros
  3. Transition to intuitive eating using your trained eye, with weekly check-ins
  4. Return to strict tracking only when pursuing specific goals or if progress stalls

💡 Key Takeaway

Macro tracking isn't about perfection—it's about awareness. Understanding that your body needs adequate protein, appropriate fats, and carbs matched to your activity level gives you control over your results. Start simple: hit your protein target, stay within your calorie goal, and let the rest fall into place. Consistency over perfection wins every time.

Frequently Asked Questions

BMR (Basal Metabolic Rate) is the calories your body burns at complete rest—just keeping you alive (breathing, circulation, cell repair). It typically accounts for 60-70% of your total burn. TDEE (Total Daily Energy Expenditure) is your BMR plus all activity: exercise, walking, digestion, fidgeting. TDEE is the number you use to set your calorie target. Eating at TDEE maintains weight; below it creates a deficit for fat loss.
For most active people, aim for 0.7-1.0 grams per pound of bodyweight (1.6-2.2g per kg). If you're overweight, calculate based on your goal weight or lean body mass instead. Protein needs increase during fat loss (to preserve muscle) and decrease slightly during maintenance. The RDA of 0.36g/lb is the minimum to avoid deficiency, not optimal for body composition or performance.
For most people, tracking net carbs (total carbs minus fiber) is more useful because fiber isn't digested and doesn't spike blood sugar. However, if you're following strict keto (under 20-50g carbs), you may want to track total carbs initially. For general macro tracking, net carbs give a more accurate picture of your usable carbohydrate intake.
Weight loss isn't linear. Water retention from sodium, carbohydrates, stress, menstrual cycles, and even weather can mask fat loss for 1-3 weeks. Trust the process: if you're consistently in a deficit, fat loss is happening. Track weekly averages, take measurements, and photos. If weight stalls for 3+ weeks while truly adhering, reduce calories by 100-200 or increase activity.
Technically yes for body composition—your body processes 30g of protein from chicken the same as 30g from protein powder. However, micronutrients (vitamins, minerals, fiber) matter for health, energy, and hunger. A practical approach: get 80% of your calories from whole, nutrient-dense foods, then use the remaining 20% for flexibility. This balances health with sustainability.
Restaurant meals are notoriously hard to track accurately due to hidden oils, sauces, and large portions. Strategies: 1) Look up nutrition info if available (chain restaurants), 2) Estimate by building the meal from components (grilled chicken breast = ~30g protein), 3) Aim for 'protein + vegetables' dishes, 4) Assume restaurants add 200-400 extra calories in cooking fats. Don't stress about perfection—aim for reasonable estimates.
One day over your targets won't ruin anything. Fat gain requires a sustained surplus over time (3,500 excess calories ≈ 1 lb of fat). If you significantly overeat one day, you have two options: 1) Just resume normal eating the next day (recommended), or 2) Slightly reduce calories over the following 2-3 days to average out. Never try to 'make up' a big surplus in a single day of extreme restriction.
For most people, keeping macros consistent daily is simpler and equally effective. However, some advanced approaches use 'carb cycling'—higher carbs on training days (to fuel performance) and lower carbs on rest days (since glycogen demands are lower). If you try this, keep protein consistent and swap carb calories for fat calories on rest days. This adds complexity with marginal benefit for most people.
Continuous dieting for longer than 12-16 weeks can lead to metabolic adaptation, muscle loss, hormonal disruption, and psychological fatigue. After 12-16 weeks in a deficit, take a 'diet break'—2-4 weeks eating at maintenance. This restores hormones, replenishes glycogen, and provides mental relief. Then resume if needed. This approach actually improves long-term fat loss outcomes.
Never go below 0.3g of fat per pound of bodyweight (0.6-0.7g per kg). Fat is essential for hormone production (including testosterone and estrogen), brain function, and absorbing fat-soluble vitamins (A, D, E, K). Women especially should not go extremely low-fat due to menstrual cycle disruption. If cutting calories aggressively, protect your fat floor and reduce carbs instead.