How to Calculate a Calorie Deficit: The Step-by-Step Guide to Accurate Weight Loss

how to calculate calorie deficit?

You have heard the phrase “calories in, calories out” more times than you can count. But knowing the concept and knowing how to calculate it for your unique body are two very different things.

Here is the reality: most people trying to lose weight are guessing. They pick a random number like 1,500 or 2,000 calories because someone online said so. Then they get frustrated when it does not work.

That stops today.

In this guide, you will learn exactly how to calculate your personal calorie deficit using science-backed formulas. No more guessing. No more cookie-cutter advice. Just a clear, step-by-step system that works for your body, your lifestyle, and your goals.

In this guide, you will learn:

  • The simple math behind every calorie deficit
  • How to calculate your BMR and TDEE with precision
  • Which activity level actually fits your life
  • How to choose the right deficit size for your goals
  • When and how to adjust your numbers as you lose weight

Let us get started.

The Simple Math Behind Every Calorie Deficit

Before we dive into calculations, you need to understand the fundamental equation. It is simple enough to fit on a napkin:

EquationMeaning
Calories InEverything you eat and drink
Calories OutEverything your body burns (BMR + activity + digestion)
Calories In < Calories OutCalorie deficit = weight loss
Calories In > Calories OutCalorie surplus = weight gain
Calories In = Calories OutMaintenance = weight stability

Coach’s note: This is not a theory. It is the first law of thermodynamics applied to the human body. Every diet that has ever worked — from keto to vegan to intermittent fasting — works because it helps you eat fewer calories than you burn.

Your job is not to figure out a “magic diet.” Your job is to figure out your numbers.

Step 1: Calculate Your BMR (Basal Metabolic Rate)

Your BMR is the number of calories your body burns at complete rest — just to keep you alive. Think of it as your body’s idling speed.

The Most Accurate Formula: Mifflin-St Jeor

The Mifflin-St Jeor equation is widely considered the most accurate formula for estimating BMR. A 2018 study in the Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics confirmed it outperforms the older Harris-Benedict equation by approximately 12%.

GenderFormula
Male(10 × weight in kg) + (6.25 × height in cm) – (5 × age) + 5
Female(10 × weight in kg) + (6.25 × height in cm) – (5 × age) – 161

Worked Examples

Example 1: A 35-year-old woman, 70kg, 165cm

StepCalculationResult
10 × weight10 × 70700
6.25 × height6.25 × 1651,031.25
5 × age5 × 35175
Add/Subtract700 + 1,031.25 – 175 – 1611,395.25
BMR1,395 calories/day

Example 2: A 40-year-old man, 85kg, 180cm

StepCalculationResult
10 × weight10 × 85850
6.25 × height6.25 × 1801,125
5 × age5 × 40200
Add/Subtract850 + 1,125 – 200 + 51,780
BMR1,780 calories/day

The Optional Katch-McArdle Formula (If You Know Your Body Fat %)

If you know your body fat percentage, the Katch-McArdle formula is even more accurate because it accounts for lean mass:

FormulaCalculation
Katch-McArdle370 + (21.6 × lean mass in kg)
Lean massBody weight in kg × (1 – body fat percentage ÷ 100)

Example: 70kg woman with 28% body fat

  • Lean mass = 70 × (1 – 0.28) = 50.4 kg
  • BMR = 370 + (21.6 × 50.4) = 370 + 1,088.6 = 1,459 calories/day

The Quick Estimate (If You Cannot Do Math Right Now)

If you need a rough starting point, use these averages:

GroupAverage BMR Range
Women (average weight 70kg)1,300 – 1,500 calories/day
Men (average weight 80kg)1,600 – 1,800 calories/day

Important: These are rough averages. Use the formula above for accuracy.


Step 2: Calculate Your TDEE (Total Daily Energy Expenditure)

Your BMR is only part of the picture. You also move, walk, fidget, exercise, and digest food. Your TDEE includes all of that.

The Activity Multiplier

Multiply your BMR by the activity factor that best matches your lifestyle.

Activity LevelMultiplierWhat It MeansExample (BMR 1,395)
SedentaryBMR × 1.2Desk job, little or no exercise, mostly sitting1,674 calories
Lightly activeBMR × 1.375Light exercise 1-3 days/week, walking occasionally1,918 calories
Moderately activeBMR × 1.55Moderate exercise 3-5 days/week, active job or regular movement2,162 calories
Very activeBMR × 1.725Hard exercise 6-7 days/week, physical job or training for event2,406 calories
Super activeBMR × 1.9Physical job (construction, farming) + daily intense training2,650 calories

How to Choose Your Activity Level Honestly

Most people overestimate their activity level. Here is how to choose accurately:

If This Describes YouChoose
Office job, drive everywhere, no formal exercise, under 5,000 steps dailySedentary
Office job, but exercise 1-3 times weekly OR walk 5,000-7,500 steps dailyLightly active
Exercise 3-5 times weekly AND get 7,500-10,000 steps dailyModerately active
Exercise 6-7 times weekly AND get 10,000-15,000 steps dailyVery active
Physical job (warehouse, nursing, construction) AND exercise most daysSuper active

Coach’s note: When in doubt, choose the lower activity level. It is better to start slightly lower and adjust up than to overestimate and wonder why you are not losing weight.

Worked Examples (Continuing from Above)

Example 1: 35-year-old woman, BMR 1,395

Activity LevelTDEE CalculationResult
Sedentary1,395 × 1.21,674 calories
Lightly active1,395 × 1.3751,918 calories
Moderately active1,395 × 1.552,162 calories
Very active1,395 × 1.7252,406 calories

If this woman has an office job but walks 30 minutes 4 times per week, she is lightly active. Her TDEE is approximately 1,918 calories.

Example 2: 40-year-old man, BMR 1,780

Activity LevelTDEE CalculationResult
Sedentary1,780 × 1.22,136 calories
Lightly active1,780 × 1.3752,448 calories
Moderately active1,780 × 1.552,759 calories
Very active1,780 × 1.7253,071 calories

If this man works a desk job but lifts weights 4 times per week, he is moderately active. His TDEE is approximately 2,759 calories.


Step 3: Choose Your Calorie Deficit Size

Now that you know your TDEE (maintenance calories), you need to decide how large of a deficit to create.

The Safe Deficit Range

Deficit SizeWeekly LossBest For
250 calories/day0.25 kg (0.5 lb)Beginners, close to goal weight, minimal hunger
500 calories/day0.5 kg (1 lb)Most people — the sweet spot
750 calories/day0.75 kg (1.5 lb)Aggressive but manageable with high protein
1000 calories/day1 kg (2 lb)Very aggressive — short-term only, medical supervision recommended

The Safety Rules

GroupAbsolute MinimumWhy
Women1,200 calories/dayBelow this risks nutrient deficiencies, muscle loss, hormonal disruption
Men1,500 calories/dayBelow this risks metabolic slowdown, fatigue, gallstones

Golden rule: Your target intake should never fall below your BMR for extended periods. If your calculated deficit would push you below your BMR, choose a smaller deficit or extend your timeline.

How to Choose Your Deficit

If This Describes YouRecommended Deficit
First time tracking calories300 calories (gentle start)
Less than 5kg to lose300-400 calories
5-15kg to lose500 calories
15kg+ to lose500-750 calories (initially)
Very active athlete cutting weight500 calories with high protein
Medical condition or history of disordered eatingConsult professional

Step 4: Calculate Your Daily Calorie Target

This is the number you have been waiting for. Your daily calorie target is:

Formula
TDEE – Deficit = Daily Calorie Target

Worked Examples

Example 1: 35-year-old woman, lightly active

  • TDEE = 1,918 calories
  • Deficit = 500 calories (moderate weight loss)
  • Daily target = 1,918 – 500 = 1,418 calories
CheckIs it safe?
Above BMR?Yes (1,418 > 1,395)
Above minimum (1,200)?Yes
VerdictSafe and effective

Example 2: 40-year-old man, moderately active

  • TDEE = 2,759 calories
  • Deficit = 500 calories
  • Daily target = 2,759 – 500 = 2,259 calories
CheckIs it safe?
Above BMR?Yes (2,259 > 1,780)
Above minimum (1,500)?Yes
VerdictSafe and effective

Example 3: Sedentary woman with low TDEE

  • TDEE = 1,674 calories
  • Goal = lose 0.5kg per week (500 calorie deficit)
  • Calculated target = 1,674 – 500 = 1,174 calories
CheckIs it safe?
Above BMR?No (1,174 < 1,395)
Above minimum (1,200)?No
VerdictUnsafe — adjust deficit

Adjustment for Example 3:

  • Maximum safe deficit = TDEE – 1,200 = 1,674 – 1,200 = 474 calories
  • Realistic weekly loss = 474 ÷ 7,700 × 7 = 0.43 kg per week
  • Daily target = 1,200 calories
  • Timeline extension needed: losing 10kg would take approximately 23 weeks instead of 20 weeks

Step 5: Calculate Your Total Deficit Needed

To reach your goal weight, you need to know the total calorie deficit required.

The Formula

Formula
1 kg of body fat = approximately 7,700 calories
CalculationFormula
Total deficit needed(Current weight – Goal weight in kg) × 7,700
Time needed (weeks)Total deficit needed ÷ (Daily deficit × 7)

Worked Examples

Example: Woman wants to lose 10kg with a 500 calorie daily deficit

CalculationResult
Total deficit needed10 kg × 7,700 = 77,000 calories
Weekly deficit500 × 7 = 3,500 calories
Weeks needed77,000 ÷ 3,500 = 22 weeks

Example: Man wants to lose 15kg with a 500 calorie daily deficit

CalculationResult
Total deficit needed15 kg × 7,700 = 115,500 calories
Weekly deficit500 × 7 = 3,500 calories
Weeks needed115,500 ÷ 3,500 = 33 weeks

Quick Reference Table: Time to Lose Weight

Total to Lose250 deficit (0.25kg/week)500 deficit (0.5kg/week)750 deficit (0.75kg/week)
2.5 kg (5.5 lbs)10 weeks5 weeks3-4 weeks
5 kg (11 lbs)20 weeks10 weeks7 weeks
10 kg (22 lbs)40 weeks20 weeks13-14 weeks
15 kg (33 lbs)60 weeks30 weeks20 weeks
20 kg (44 lbs)80 weeks40 weeks27 weeks

The 2-Week Real-TDEE Testing Protocol

Calculators give you an estimate. Real-world data gives you the truth. Here is how to validate your numbers.

Week 1: Baseline

DayAction
Days 1-7Eat at your calculated TDEE (maintenance)
DailyTrack everything you eat and drink
DailyWeigh yourself every morning (same time, same scale, after bathroom)
End of weekCalculate your average weight for Week 1

Week 2: Test

DayAction
Days 8-14Continue eating at calculated TDEE
DailyTrack everything
DailyWeigh yourself every morning
End of weekCalculate your average weight for Week 2

Interpret Your Results

Average Weight ChangeWhat It MeansAction
Stayed the same (±0.2kg)Your TDEE is accurateUse calculated numbers
Lost 0.5kg+Your TDEE is higher than calculatedAdd 150-200 calories to TDEE
Gained 0.5kg+Your TDEE is lower than calculatedSubtract 150-200 calories from TDEE

Why this works: Your scale does not lie. If you eat at what you think is maintenance but lose weight, your actual maintenance is higher. Adjust and retest if needed.


How to Calculate a Calorie Deficit for Weight Loss: Summary Table

Here is everything in one place:

StepWhat to DoFormula
1Calculate BMRMifflin-St Jeor (see formulas above)
2Choose activity multiplier1.2 to 1.9 based on your lifestyle
3Calculate TDEEBMR × Activity multiplier
4Choose deficit300-500 calories for most people
5Calculate daily targetTDEE – Deficit
6Check safetyTarget ≥ BMR and ≥ 1,200/1,500 minimums
7Calculate timeline(Goal loss in kg × 7,700) ÷ (Deficit × 7)
how to calculate calorie deficit UK

How to Adjust Your Deficit as You Lose Weight

Your calorie needs change as your body changes. Here is exactly when and how to adjust.

When to Recalculate

ChangeAction
Every 5kg (11lbs) lostMandatory recalculation
Every 4-6 weeksRecommended check-in
Plateau lasting 3+ weeksImmediate recalculation
Activity level changes significantlyImmediate recalculation

What Changes

Weight LostTDEE Drop (Approx.)Deficit Adjustment Needed
5 kg (11 lbs)50-75 calories/dayReduce intake by 50 calories OR add 10 min walking
10 kg (22 lbs)100-150 calories/dayReduce intake by 100 calories
15 kg (33 lbs)150-225 calories/dayReduce intake by 150 calories
20 kg (44 lbs)200-300 calories/dayRecalculate fully — significant change

Example Adjustment

Starting point (80kg woman):

  • BMR = 1,500
  • TDEE = 2,000 (lightly active)
  • Deficit = 500
  • Daily target = 1,500 calories

After losing 10kg (now 70kg):

  • Recalculate BMR = 1,395 (lower!)
  • Recalculate TDEE = 1,918 (lightly active)
  • Same deficit of 500 = 1,418 daily target

The difference: She must eat 82 fewer calories per day than when she started. If she kept eating 1,500 calories, her deficit would only be 418 calories — slowing her progress by 15%.

Common Calculation Mistakes (And How to Avoid Them)

Mistake 1: Using the Wrong Formula

The Harris-Benedict equation (developed in 1919) is still used by many calculators. It overestimates BMR by 5-15% for most people.

The fix: Use Mifflin-St Jeor. It is validated by modern research.

Mistake 2: Overestimating Activity Level

“I walked for 20 minutes twice this week — I am very active!” No. Overestimating activity adds hundreds of calories to your TDEE that do not exist.

The fix: Be brutally honest. When in doubt, choose the lower activity level.

Mistake 3: Forgetting to Recalculate

Your TDEE at 80kg is not the same as your TDEE at 70kg. If you do not recalculate, your deficit shrinks and your weight loss slows.

The fix: Set a calendar reminder to recalculate every 5kg lost or every 6 weeks.

Mistake 4: Ignoring the BMR Floor

Eating below your BMR for weeks or months triggers metabolic adaptation, muscle loss, and hormonal disruption.

The fix: If your calculated target is below your BMR, choose a smaller deficit. Weight loss is a marathon, not a sprint.

Mistake 5: Using Inaccurate Measurements

Guessing your weight, height, or age leads to inaccurate calculations.

The fix: Use a scale, a tape measure, and your actual birth date. No rounding up or down.


How to Use a Calorie Deficit Calculator (Instead of Doing It Manually)

While understanding the math is valuable, you do not need to do it manually every time. A good calorie deficit calculator automates the entire process.

What Our Calculator Does For You

FeatureBenefit
Mifflin-St Jeor formulaMost accurate BMR calculation
Activity multiplier selectionClear descriptions to choose correctly
Optional body fat %Katch-McArdle for athletes
Safety checksWarns if target is unsafe
Goal timelineCalculates how long it will take
Weekly projectionsShows expected weight each week
PDF reportDownload and share

How to Use Our Calculator

  1. Enter your gender, age, weight, height
  2. Select your activity level honestly
  3. Enter your goal weight and desired timeline
  4. Click calculate
  5. Review your daily target, macros, and weekly projection
  6. Download your PDF report for reference

Your 7-Day Action Plan

Ready to put this into action? Here is exactly what to do.

Day 1: Gather your data

  • Weigh yourself (first thing in the morning, after bathroom)
  • Measure your height
  • Confirm your age

Day 2: Calculate your numbers

  • Use the formulas above or our calculator
  • Write down your BMR, TDEE, and daily target

Day 3: Plan your meals

  • Based on your daily target, plan 3-4 meals
  • Prioritise protein at every meal
  • Include vegetables and fibre

Day 4: Start tracking

  • Download a tracking app
  • Track everything you eat and drink
  • Do not change anything yet — just observe

Day 5-7: Hit your target

  • Eat at your calculated daily target
  • Track everything
  • Drink 2-3 litres of water

Week 2: Assess and adjust

  • Weigh yourself (same conditions as Day 1)
  • Calculate your average weekly loss
  • If you lost 0.5-1kg, keep going
  • If not, adjust your target by 100 calories up or down

Long-term: Recalculate every 5kg lost

The Bottom Line: You Now Know Exactly How to Calculate Your Calorie Deficit

You have the formulas. You have the multipliers. You have the safety rules. You have the adjustment schedule.

Calculating a calorie deficit is not complicated — but it does require honesty. Honest about your activity level. Honest about your tracking. Honest about your timeline.

Start with a 500-calorie deficit. Track consistently for two weeks. Adjust based on real-world results. Recalculate every 5kg lost.

That is it. That is the system.

Your body is not a mystery. It runs on math. And now you know exactly how to do the math.

Your next step: Use the calculator to get your personalized numbers. Then take action. Today.

How to Calculate Calorie Deficit FAQ | Calorie Deficit Calculator UK

📐 Calorie Deficit Calculation: Frequently Asked Questions

⚡ What is the formula to calculate a calorie deficit? +

The complete formula has three steps:

Step 1: BMR = (10 × weight in kg) + (6.25 × height in cm) – (5 × age) + (5 for men, -161 for women)
Step 2: TDEE = BMR × Activity Multiplier (1.2 to 1.9)
Step 3: Deficit Target = TDEE – 500 (for 0.5kg weekly loss)

For example, a 35-year-old woman weighing 70kg at 165cm with light activity:

  • BMR = 1,395 calories
  • TDEE = 1,395 × 1.375 = 1,918 calories
  • Deficit target = 1,918 – 500 = 1,418 calories daily
📌 The 7,700 rule: To lose 1kg of body fat, you need a total deficit of approximately 7,700 calories. A 500-calorie daily deficit = 3,500 weekly deficit = 0.45kg loss per week.
⚖️ How do I calculate my TDEE for an accurate deficit? +

TDEE (Total Daily Energy Expenditure) is your BMR multiplied by an activity factor. Choose honestly:

Activity LevelMultiplierExample (BMR 1,400)
Sedentary (desk job, no exercise)1.21,680 calories
Lightly active (exercise 1-3 days/week)1.3751,925 calories
Moderately active (exercise 3-5 days/week)1.552,170 calories
Very active (exercise 6-7 days/week)1.7252,415 calories
Super active (physical job + daily exercise)1.92,660 calories
💡 Coach’s tip: Most people overestimate their activity level. If you work a desk job, start with “lightly active” even if you exercise 3-4 times weekly. You can always adjust up after two weeks.
📉 What is a safe calorie deficit per day? +

A safe calorie deficit ranges from 300 to 750 calories below your TDEE. The sweet spot for most people is 500 calories, yielding 0.5kg (1lb) loss per week.

Deficit SizeWeekly LossBest For
300-400 calories0.3-0.4 kgBeginners, close to goal weight
500 calories0.5 kgMost people — sustainable and effective
600-750 calories0.6-0.8 kgAggressive but manageable with high protein
1000+ calories1+ kgVery aggressive — medical supervision recommended
⚠️ Safety minimums: Women should never eat below 1,200 calories daily. Men should never eat below 1,500 calories daily. Your intake should also stay above your BMR for extended periods.
📊 How do I calculate how long my weight loss will take? +

Use the 7,700 calorie rule: 1kg of body fat = approximately 7,700 calories.

Weeks to goal = (Weight to lose in kg × 7,700) ÷ (Daily deficit × 7)

Example calculation: A woman wants to lose 10kg with a 500-calorie daily deficit.

  • Total deficit needed: 10 × 7,700 = 77,000 calories
  • Weekly deficit: 500 × 7 = 3,500 calories
  • Weeks needed: 77,000 ÷ 3,500 = 22 weeks (about 5.5 months)
Weight to Lose500 Deficit (0.5kg/week)750 Deficit (0.75kg/week)
5 kg10 weeks7 weeks
10 kg20 weeks13-14 weeks
15 kg30 weeks20 weeks
20 kg40 weeks27 weeks
🔄 How often should I recalculate my calorie deficit? +

Your calorie needs change as your body changes. Recalculate at these milestones:

TriggerWhyAction
Every 5kg (11lbs) lost Your smaller body burns fewer calories Reduce intake by 50-100 calories or recalculate fully
Every 4-6 weeks Metabolic adaptation may have occurred Quick check-in with your scale trends
Plateau lasting 3+ weeks Your deficit may have shrunk to zero Immediate recalculation needed
Activity level changes significantly New job, injury, marathon training Recalculate with new activity multiplier
📌 Example: Losing 10kg reduces your TDEE by approximately 100-150 calories per day. If you keep eating the same as when you started, your deficit shrinks by that amount — slowing or stopping your progress.
🧮 What is the Mifflin-St Jeor BMR formula? +

The Mifflin-St Jeor equation is the most accurate BMR formula validated by modern research. A 2018 study in the Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics confirmed it outperforms the older Harris-Benedict equation by approximately 12%.

👨 Male: (10 × weight in kg) + (6.25 × height in cm) – (5 × age) + 5

👩 Female: (10 × weight in kg) + (6.25 × height in cm) – (5 × age) – 161

Worked example (40-year-old man, 85kg, 180cm):

  • 10 × 85 = 850
  • 6.25 × 180 = 1,125
  • 5 × 40 = 200
  • 850 + 1,125 – 200 + 5 = 1,780 calories/day BMR
🏆 Why this formula? It was developed in 1990 using modern measurement techniques and validated on both obese and non-obese populations. Most scientific studies and clinical settings now use Mifflin-St Jeor as the standard.
📱 Should I use a calorie deficit calculator or do it manually? +

Both approaches work, but a good calculator saves time and reduces errors. Here is the comparison:

FeatureManual CalculationCalculator
Time required 5-10 minutes with risk of math errors 2 seconds
Formula accuracy Depends on using correct formula (many use outdated Harris-Benedict) Mifflin-St Jeor (most accurate)
Activity multiplier selection Easy to overestimate Clear descriptions for each level
Safety checks You must remember minimums (1,200/1,500) Automatic warnings for unsafe deficits
Weekly projections Manual calculation Instant chart and table
💡 Recommendation: Use our calculator for speed and accuracy, but understand the math behind it. That way you know when and how to adjust as your body changes.
🏋️ Do I eat back exercise calories in my deficit calculation? +

No — this is the most common calculation mistake.

Your TDEE already includes your activity level. When you selected “moderately active” (exercise 3-5 days/week), we multiplied your BMR by 1.55 — meaning your exercise calories are already factored into your daily target.

🎯 The rule: If you follow your calculated daily target, you do NOT add extra calories on workout days. If you eat back your workout calories, you double-count and your deficit disappears.

The only exception: Endurance athletes burning 800+ calories in a single session (marathon training, 2+ hour bike rides) may need to add back 50% of estimated burn. For everyone else, trust the TDEE calculation.

📌 Why fitness watches are misleading: Research shows fitness watches overestimate calorie burn by 20-95%. Do not use your watch’s “active calories” to adjust your intake.
📉 How do I calculate a deficit for a weight loss plateau? +

When you hit a plateau, your current deficit has likely shrunk or disappeared. Here is how to recalculate:

Step 1: Recalculate your current TDEE
Use your current weight (not your starting weight). Your smaller body burns fewer calories.

Step 2: Compare to your current intake
If your current intake is now equal to your new TDEE, you are eating at maintenance — no deficit.

Step 3: Create a new deficit
Subtract 300-500 calories from your new TDEE.

Example: You started at 80kg with TDEE 2,000. You ate 1,500 (500 deficit).
Now at 70kg with new TDEE 1,850. Eating 1,500 is only a 350 deficit.
New target: 1,850 – 500 = 1,350 calories to restart 0.5kg/week loss.
🔧 Other plateau fixes: Take a 1-2 week diet break at maintenance, increase NEAT (steps, standing), check tracking accuracy, or reduce deficit slightly for a week before resuming.
🥩 How much protein do I need in my deficit calculation? +

Protein is not part of your deficit calculation, but it is essential for preserving muscle while in a deficit. Use these targets:

Activity LevelProtein per kg body weightExample (70kg person)
Sedentary weight loss 1.2-1.6 g/kg 84-112g per day
Active weight loss 1.6-2.2 g/kg 112-154g per day
Athlete cutting weight 2.2-2.6 g/kg 154-182g per day
📌 The science: A 2016 meta-analysis in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition found that higher protein intake (1.6+ g/kg) during caloric restriction significantly preserves lean mass compared to standard protein intakes (0.8 g/kg).

How to calculate your protein calories: Protein has 4 calories per gram. If you need 140g of protein daily, that accounts for 560 of your total calorie target.

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