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Weight Loss Plan

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Deficit Scenario Comparison

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Accounts for the body's tendency to reduce metabolic rate under prolonged deficit.

Bear (−15% adaptation)
Slow metabolism / prolonged deficit
Base (−8% adaptation)
Typical metabolic response
Bull (No adaptation)
Linear loss — ideal scenario

Your daily deficit is equivalent to burning this much through exercise alone.

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How deficit size and goal amount interact. Your current selection is highlighted.

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Week-by-Week Weight Planner

Week Date Expected Weight Adaptive Est. Total Lost Progress Milestone
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How to Use This Calculator

1

Enter Body Stats

Input your age, sex, height, weight, goal weight, and activity level. Choose the BMR formula that best fits your situation.

2

Set Your Deficit

Pick a deficit level (250–1,000 cal/day) or enter a custom daily calorie target. 500 cal/day = ~1 lb/week loss.

3

Review Your Plan

See your TDEE, macro targets, realistic timeline with metabolic adaptation, and week-by-week milestones.

Formula & Methodology

Mifflin-St Jeor (Default)

Male: BMR = 10W + 6.25H − 5A + 5  |  Female: BMR = 10W + 6.25H − 5A − 161

W = weight(kg), H = height(cm), A = age. Most validated formula, ±10% accuracy for most adults.

Calorie Deficit & Weight Loss

Weekly Loss (kg) = (Deficit × 7) ÷ 7,700  |  3,500 kcal ≈ 1 lb fat

Adaptive thermogenesis: expect ~8% metabolic slowdown after 8 weeks, ~15% after 16 weeks of consistent deficit.

Key Terms

Calorie Deficit
Consuming fewer calories than your TDEE, forcing your body to use stored fat for energy.
TDEE
Total Daily Energy Expenditure — BMR × activity multiplier. Your true daily calorie burn.
BMR
Basal Metabolic Rate — calories burned at complete rest to sustain vital functions.
Adaptive Thermogenesis
The body's metabolic slowdown in response to prolonged calorie restriction, reducing effectiveness over time.
Katch-McArdle
BMR formula based on lean mass (not total body weight) — most accurate when body fat % is known.

Real-World Examples

Example 1

Sustainable Cut

185 lb male, lightly active, TDEE: 2,540 cal, −500 deficit

Target: 2,040 cal/day. ~1 lb/week. 20 lbs in ~22 weeks accounting for metabolic adaptation.

Example 2

Aggressive Cut

200 lb female, moderately active, TDEE: 2,100 cal, −750 deficit

Target: 1,350 cal/day. ~1.5 lbs/week. Borderline minimum — prioritize protein to preserve muscle.

Creating a Sustainable Calorie Deficit

The 500-Calorie Rule

A 500 calorie daily deficit produces roughly 1 pound of fat loss per week under linear conditions. This moderate approach preserves muscle mass, keeps energy levels stable, and is sustainable long-term. Larger deficits often backfire through muscle catabolism, fatigue, and metabolic adaptation.

Accounting for Metabolic Adaptation

After 8–12 weeks of consistent deficit, the body reduces its resting metabolic rate by 5–15% — a phenomenon called adaptive thermogenesis. This means your week-17 results will differ from a purely linear projection. Periodic diet breaks at maintenance (1–2 weeks every 8–10 weeks) can partially reset this adaptation.

Protein: The Most Important Macro

During a cut, adequate protein (1g/lb of goal body weight or ~2.2g/kg) is critical for preserving lean muscle mass. Muscle tissue is metabolically expensive — losing it reduces your TDEE further, creating a negative cycle. Prioritize protein, then fat (≥20% of calories for hormonal health), then fill carbs with the remainder.

Diet vs. Exercise Deficit

Combining diet restriction and exercise is the most effective strategy. It is far easier to cut 300 calories from food and burn 200 through exercise than to achieve either alone. Exercise also signals muscle retention during a caloric deficit.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many calories should I eat to lose weight?

Subtract 250–1,000 calories from your TDEE. A 500 cal deficit produces ~1 lb/week loss. Never go below 1,200 cal/day (women) or 1,500 cal/day (men) without medical supervision.

What is TDEE and why does it matter?

TDEE (Total Daily Energy Expenditure) is the total calories you burn per day, including your BMR plus activity. Eating below your TDEE creates a deficit; eating above creates a surplus.

Which BMR formula is most accurate?

Mifflin-St Jeor is validated as the most accurate for most adults (±10%). Katch-McArdle is more accurate if you know your body fat %. Harris-Benedict is a well-known classic but slightly less accurate for modern populations.

How does the adaptive thermogenesis model work?

The body reduces its metabolic rate in response to sustained calorie restriction. This calculator models an ~8% reduction after 8 weeks and ~15% after 16 weeks, showing a realistic "adaptive" weight loss curve alongside the idealized linear projection.

How much protein should I eat on a cut?

Aim for 0.8–1.2g per lb of goal body weight (1.6–2.6g/kg). Higher protein preserves muscle mass and increases satiety. This calculator targets 1g/lb of goal weight as a practical default.

Is a 1,000 calorie deficit safe?

A 1,000 cal/day deficit (theoretical 2 lbs/week) is the maximum generally recommended. It risks muscle loss, nutrient deficiency, and rapid metabolic adaptation. Most people do better at 500–750 cal/day.

Why is my weight loss slower than the calculator predicted?

Metabolic adaptation, water retention, reduced non-exercise activity (NEAT), and inaccurate food logging are the most common causes. Recalculate your TDEE every 10–15 lbs lost and consider a 1–2 week diet break every 8–12 weeks.

What is Katch-McArdle and when should I use it?

Katch-McArdle calculates BMR from lean mass (total weight × (1 - body fat %)) rather than total body weight. It's most accurate for lean or muscular individuals whose total weight would overestimate fat mass.

Should I lose weight faster or slower?

Slower is almost always better for muscle preservation. Losing 0.5–1% of body weight per week minimizes muscle loss. For a 185 lb person, that's under 1.85 lbs/week — roughly a 500–650 cal deficit.

How do I calculate macros while in a calorie deficit?

Protein first (1g/lb goal weight), then fat (25% of calories ÷ 9g/kcal), then carbs fill the remainder. This calculator generates a starting macro split automatically.

Will I lose muscle on a calorie deficit?

Some muscle loss is inevitable, but it's minimized by: adequate protein (≥1g/lb), strength training 3×/week, moderate deficit size (≤750 cal/day), and avoiding very low calorie diets.

What should I do when weight loss plateaus?

After 2+ weeks of no change: (1) verify accurate food logging, (2) subtract 100–150 cal, (3) add 20–30 min daily walking, (4) take a 1-week diet break at maintenance, or (5) recalculate TDEE at your new weight.

Does meal frequency affect fat loss?

Total daily calories and protein drive fat loss — meal frequency has minimal impact. Eat 3–6 meals based on what helps you stay consistent, feel satisfied, and hit your protein targets.

How does activity level affect my calorie target?

Activity multipliers range from 1.2 (sedentary, desk job, no exercise) to 1.9 (athlete training twice daily). Choosing the wrong multiplier is the #1 source of error — when in doubt, start at "Light Active" and adjust based on 2-week results.

How accurate is this calculator?

TDEE estimates are ±10–15% for most people. Use results as a starting point, track actual weight change for 2 weeks, then adjust by 100–200 cal if not losing at the expected rate. Real-world accuracy improves with precise food logging.