Calorie Deficit Calculator
Calculate your TDEE, calorie target and macro split for weight loss or muscle gain. Choose your deficit rate, see your timeline to goal weight, and get personalised protein, carb and fat targets — all on one page.
Calorie Deficit Calculator
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TDEE, macros and a goal timeline — all on one page instead of three
Most calorie tools separate TDEE, calorie deficit and macro calculation across different pages or apps. This tool combines all three — plus a weight-loss timeline with projected goal date — in a single calculation from one set of inputs.
How to calculate your calorie deficit
LazyTools vs other calorie deficit calculators
Most free calorie tools show TDEE or a calorie target but not both together with macros. A goal timeline with projected date combined with macros in one step is absent across the board.
| Feature | ⭐ LazyTools | calculator.net | healthline.com | myfitnesspal.com |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| TDEE calculation | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ |
| Calorie deficit target | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ |
| Multiple deficit rates to choose | ✔ 3 rates | ⚠ 1 rate | ⚠ 1 rate | ✔ |
| Macro split (P/C/F in grams) | ✔ | ⚠ Basic | ✘ | ✔ (account req.) |
| Timeline + goal date | ✔ | ✘ | ✘ | ✔ (account req.) |
| BMI shown alongside | ✔ | ✔ | ✘ | ✘ |
| Muscle gain / surplus mode | ✔ | ⚠ Separate | ✘ | ✔ |
| No account / no signup | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ⚠ Req. for macros |
Activity level multipliers and calorie deficit rates
| Activity level | Multiplier | Typical weekly activity | Example profile |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sedentary | x 1.2 | Desk job, no planned exercise | Office worker who drives to work |
| Lightly active | x 1.375 | Light exercise 1–3 days/week | Casual walker, weekend gym-goer |
| Moderately active | x 1.55 | Moderate exercise 3–5 days/week | Regular gym-goer, cyclist |
| Very active | x 1.725 | Hard exercise 6–7 days/week | Daily runner, competitive athlete |
| Extremely active | x 1.9 | Physical job and hard daily training | Construction worker who also trains |
Calorie deficit and expected weekly loss
| Deficit | Est. weekly loss | Weekly calorie deficit | Recommended for |
|---|---|---|---|
| 250 kcal/day | ~0.25 kg (~0.5 lb) | 1,750 kcal/week | Small last few kg, maintaining muscle |
| 500 kcal/day | ~0.5 kg (~1 lb) | 3,500 kcal/week | Standard recommendation, sustainable |
| 750 kcal/day | ~0.75 kg (~1.5 lb) | 5,250 kcal/week | Faster loss, harder to maintain |
| 1,000 kcal/day | ~1 kg (~2 lb) | 7,000 kcal/week | Medical supervision recommended |
Calorie Deficit Calculator — TDEE, BMR and Macros for Weight Loss Explained
A calorie deficit means consuming fewer calories than your body burns in a day. Over time this forces the body to draw on stored energy — primarily body fat — to make up the shortfall. The mathematics of weight loss are well-established: approximately 7,700 calories of deficit produces roughly 1 kg of fat loss. A daily deficit of 500 calories therefore produces approximately 0.5 kg of fat loss per week, or around 2 kg per month. In practice results vary due to water retention, metabolic adaptation and individual differences, but the caloric deficit model remains the most evidence-based framework for weight management.
TDEE calculator with activity level free
TDEE stands for Total Daily Energy Expenditure — the total number of calories your body burns in a day accounting for all activity. It is calculated by first finding your Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR), the calories burned at complete rest, and then multiplying by an activity factor. This tool uses the Mifflin-St Jeor equation, which is the most accurate BMR formula for most adults according to the American Dietetic Association. The formula for men is: BMR = (10 x weight in kg) + (6.25 x height in cm) - (5 x age) + 5. For women: BMR = (10 x weight in kg) + (6.25 x height in cm) - (5 x age) - 161.
How many calories should I eat to lose weight calculator
The standard recommendation for sustainable weight loss is a deficit of 500 calories per day, producing approximately 0.5 kg (1 lb) of fat loss per week. This is considered the sweet spot between meaningful progress and sustainability — aggressive enough to show results but not so large that it triggers excessive hunger, muscle loss or metabolic adaptation. A deficit of 250 calories is gentler and works well for the last few kilograms or those who prioritise preserving muscle mass. A deficit above 750–1,000 calories per day is not recommended without medical supervision as it risks nutrient deficiency and muscle loss.
Calorie deficit calculator for weight loss with macros
Macronutrients — protein, carbohydrates and fat — are the three classes of calorie-containing nutrients. Protein provides 4 calories per gram, carbohydrates 4 calories per gram, and fat 9 calories per gram. For weight loss, a higher protein intake is strongly supported by research for three reasons: it increases satiety (you feel fuller on fewer calories), it preserves lean muscle mass during a caloric deficit, and it has the highest thermic effect of food (your body burns more calories digesting protein than fat or carbs). The recommended protein target during a calorie deficit is 1.6–2.4 g per kg of bodyweight. This tool uses 2 g/kg as the default, with remaining calories split 45% carbs and 30% fat.
Maintenance calories calculator online
Maintenance calories — also called TDEE — is the number of calories at which your weight stays stable. Knowing your maintenance calories has uses beyond weight loss: it tells you how much to eat to maintain your current weight, how much to eat to gain muscle (typically 250–500 calories above maintenance), and provides a reference point for tracking whether you are actually in a deficit. Many people underestimate how many calories they consume and overestimate how many they burn. Tracking food intake against a calculated TDEE is more reliable than relying on exercise machine calorie estimates, which are typically inaccurate.
Weight loss timeline calculator free
A timeline to goal weight is calculated by dividing the total weight to lose by the expected weekly rate of loss. For example, if you need to lose 10 kg and your deficit rate produces 0.5 kg per week, the timeline is 20 weeks — approximately 5 months. Real-world timelines tend to be longer for several reasons: the first 1–2 weeks often show rapid water weight loss, followed by slower actual fat loss; weight loss is rarely linear; and metabolic adaptation (the body reducing its TDEE in response to sustained caloric restriction) can slow progress. Adding a 10–20% buffer to any calculated timeline gives a more realistic expectation.
Calorie calculator keto diet
The ketogenic diet is a very low carbohydrate, high fat approach that shifts the body into ketosis — a metabolic state where fat is the primary fuel source. Standard macro splits for keto are approximately 70% fat, 25% protein and 5% carbohydrates (under 20–50 g net carbs per day). The calorie target still applies on keto — a calorie deficit is required for weight loss regardless of the diet type. This tool uses a standard 30/45/25 protein/carb/fat split for the default calculation. To adapt the output for keto, use the TDEE figure shown and apply a 70/25/5 fat/protein/carb split manually: TDEE calories x 0.70 / 9 = fat grams; TDEE x 0.25 / 4 = protein grams; TDEE x 0.05 / 4 = carb grams.