Enter Your Details
Your BMR Results
ℹ️ BMR = calories burned at complete rest. Multiply by your activity level (see sidebar) to find your TDEE.
Three clinically-validated formulas. Instant calorie results. The first step toward smarter weight loss.
ℹ️ BMR = calories burned at complete rest. Multiply by your activity level (see sidebar) to find your TDEE.
A BMR calculator estimates the number of calories your body burns every day just to stay alive — no movement required. BMR stands for Basal Metabolic Rate, and it represents the energy your organs (brain, heart, liver, kidneys) consume at complete rest. Think of it as the "idle speed" of your metabolism.
Knowing how to calculate basal metabolic rate is the essential first step before setting any calorie target, whether your goal is weight loss, muscle gain, or simply maintaining a healthy body.
Your BMR sets the floor for how many calories you need. Eat fewer than your BMR for extended periods and your body enters a survival mode — muscle breaks down, metabolism slows, and long-term fat loss stalls. Eating slightly below your Total Daily Energy Expenditure (TDEE = BMR × activity factor) creates a safe, sustainable calorie deficit.
The standard evidence-based recommendation is a 300–500 kcal/day deficit, which translates to roughly 0.3–0.5 kg of fat loss per week — enough to produce real results without triggering metabolic adaptation.
Use our TDEE calculator to include your activity level and get your complete daily calorie goal.
Developed in 1990, the Mifflin-St Jeor equation is the most widely validated formula for the general adult population. Multiple peer-reviewed studies confirm it outperforms the original Harris-Benedict equation in predicting resting energy expenditure.
Originally published in 1919 and revised by Roza and Shizgal in 1984, the Harris-Benedict formula remains a robust reference. The revised version corrects for the slight over-prediction of the original and is still used in many clinical settings.
The Katch-McArdle formula is unique because it uses lean body mass rather than total body weight. This makes it the most accurate option for people who know their body-fat percentage — particularly athletes, bodybuilders, or anyone who has recently had a DEXA scan or body-composition test.
Step 1. Choose your unit system (Imperial or Metric).
Step 2. Select your biological sex — BMR differs significantly between males and females due to differences in muscle mass and hormones.
Step 3. Enter your age, height, and weight accurately. Even small errors in weight can shift results by 30–50 kcal.
Step 4. If you know your body-fat percentage, tick Katch-McArdle and enter it for a more personalised result.
Step 5. Click Calculate My BMR and compare results across all selected formulas.
Step 6. Multiply your BMR by the activity multiplier (see sidebar) to get your full TDEE — your real daily calorie target.
BMR is what you burn doing nothing. TDEE (Total Daily Energy Expenditure) is what you actually burn in a real day — it adds the calories from walking, exercise, digestion (the thermic effect of food), and non-exercise activity thermogenesis (NEAT) like fidgeting, standing, and daily chores.
For most people, TDEE is 20–60% higher than BMR. A sedentary office worker multiplies their BMR by 1.2; a construction worker or serious athlete might multiply by 1.7–1.9. This is why two people of the same height and weight can have very different calorie needs.