Weight management is fundamentally about energy balance: calories consumed versus calories expended. While the biology is complex, the core math provides a reliable starting framework that you can refine with real-world data.

Step 1: Calculate Your BMR

Formula — Mifflin-St Jeor (most accurate)
Men: BMR = 10 × weight(kg) + 6.25 × height(cm) − 5 × age + 5 Women: BMR = 10 × weight(kg) + 6.25 × height(cm) − 5 × age − 161

BMR is the energy your body burns at complete rest — just to keep organs functioning. Calculate yours with the BMR Calculator.

Example: A 30-year-old man, 180 cm, 85 kg: BMR = 10(85) + 6.25(180) - 5(30) + 5 = 850 + 1125 - 150 + 5 = 1,830 calories/day.

Step 2: Calculate Your TDEE

Activity LevelMultiplierExample (BMR 1,830)
Sedentary (desk job)1.22,196 cal
Lightly Active (1-3 days/week)1.3752,516 cal
Moderately Active (3-5 days/week)1.552,837 cal
Very Active (6-7 days/week)1.7253,157 cal

Step 3: Set Your Deficit

A pound of body fat contains approximately 3,500 calories. A 500 calorie daily deficit produces roughly 1 lb/week loss. A 1,000 calorie deficit produces roughly 2 lbs/week — the maximum recommended rate. Never eat below your BMR for extended periods. Plan your deficit with the Calorie Deficit Calculator.

Calculate your exact deficit with adaptive thermogenesis modeling

Try the Calorie Deficit Calculator →

Key Takeaways

  • BMR is your baseline — never eat below it for extended periods.
  • TDEE = BMR × activity multiplier is your total daily calorie expenditure.
  • 500 cal/day deficit ≈ 1 lb/week, but metabolic adaptation slows this over time.
  • Track for 2-3 weeks and adjust based on actual weight trends, not just calculations.