🍎 Complete Guide to Calories, TDEE & Nutrition

Everything you need to know about calories, energy balance, macronutrients, and building a sustainable nutrition plan — backed by science, explained simply.

What Are Calories?

A calorie is a unit of energy. Specifically, one dietary calorie (kcal) is the amount of energy needed to raise the temperature of 1 kilogram of water by 1°C. Your body uses calories from food to fuel every function — from breathing and thinking to running and lifting.

The three macronutrients provide different amounts of energy:

MacronutrientCalories per GramPrimary Role
Protein4 cal/gMuscle repair, enzymes, hormones
Carbohydrates4 cal/gEnergy, brain function, exercise fuel
Fat9 cal/gHormones, cell membranes, nutrient absorption
Alcohol7 cal/gNo nutritional benefit

Understanding Energy Balance

Weight management comes down to energy balance — the relationship between calories consumed and calories burned:

A deficit of ~500 calories per day results in approximately 1 pound (0.45 kg) of fat loss per week. A deficit of ~250 calories per day is gentler and more sustainable long-term.

BMR vs. TDEE: What's the Difference?

Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR)

BMR is the number of calories your body burns at complete rest — just to keep you alive (breathing, circulation, cell repair). It typically accounts for 60-75% of your total daily calorie burn.

The most accurate formula is the Mifflin-St Jeor equation, recommended by the American Dietetic Association:

GenderFormula
MaleBMR = (10 × weight in kg) + (6.25 × height in cm) − (5 × age) + 5
FemaleBMR = (10 × weight in kg) + (6.25 × height in cm) − (5 × age) − 161

➡ Calculate your BMR and TDEE now

Total Daily Energy Expenditure (TDEE)

TDEE is your total daily calorie burn, including all activity. It's calculated as: TDEE = BMR × Activity Multiplier

Activity LevelMultiplierExample
Sedentary1.2Desk job, no exercise
Lightly Active1.375Light exercise 1-3 days/week
Moderately Active1.55Moderate exercise 3-5 days/week
Very Active1.725Heavy exercise 6-7 days/week
Extra Active1.9Athlete or physical labor job

Understanding Macronutrients

Protein: The Building Block

Carbohydrates: The Energy Source

Fat: The Essential Nutrient

➡ Calculate your personalized macro split

Practical Nutrition Strategies

Starting a Calorie Deficit

  1. Calculate your TDEE using our calorie calculator
  2. Subtract 250-500 calories for a moderate, sustainable deficit
  3. Set your protein target first (0.8-1g per pound of body weight)
  4. Distribute remaining calories between carbs and fat based on preference
  5. Track for 2-4 weeks to build awareness, then transition to intuitive eating

Common Mistakes to Avoid

When to Recalculate

Recalculate your calories every 4-6 weeks, or when:

Hydration and Nutrition

Water is often overlooked in nutrition planning. Proper hydration supports digestion, nutrient absorption, and can reduce false hunger signals. Aim for ~35 ml per kg of body weight daily.

➡ Calculate your daily water needs

Key Takeaways

Frequently Asked Questions

No, but it helps. Calorie counting is a tool for building awareness about portion sizes and food choices. Many people find that 2-4 weeks of tracking teaches them enough to transition to intuitive eating. The key principle — eating less than you burn — works regardless of whether you count.

For weight change, a calorie is a calorie. But for health, body composition, and satiety, quality matters. 500 calories of chicken and vegetables will keep you fuller, preserve more muscle, and provide more nutrients than 500 calories of candy — even though the weight change effect is similar.

First, confirm it's a real plateau (2+ weeks with no change in weight or measurements). Then: recalculate your TDEE at your new weight, ensure you're tracking accurately (weigh food, count everything), increase NEAT (non-exercise activity), or take a diet break at maintenance for 1-2 weeks to reset hormones.

There's no single best split. A good starting point is 30% protein, 40% carbs, 30% fat. For weight loss, increase protein to 35-40%. For endurance athletes, increase carbs to 50-60%. The best split is one you can maintain consistently.

Both matter, but post-workout nutrition is more important. Within 2 hours after exercise, consume protein (20-40g) for muscle recovery and carbs to replenish glycogen. Pre-workout, eat a light meal 2-3 hours before or a small snack 30-60 minutes before.