Calorie Deficit Calculator
Use this Calorie Deficit Calculator to estimate your daily calorie target for weight loss based on your body details, activity level, and preferred fat loss speed.
Choose your unit system, enter your body details, select your activity level, and choose your preferred weight loss speed. The calculator estimates your maintenance calories and then shows a practical daily calorie target for fat loss.
How to Use This Calorie Deficit Calculator
Choose metric or imperial units first. Then enter your gender, age, body weight, height, activity level, and preferred weight loss speed. Click the calculate button to estimate your maintenance calories and daily calorie target for fat loss.
Use the result as a practical starting point. You can adjust your calorie intake later based on real progress, recovery, training performance, and how sustainable the plan feels.
What Is a Calorie Deficit?
A calorie deficit happens when you eat fewer calories than your body burns. When that energy gap stays in place over time, your body uses stored energy to cover the difference, which usually leads to weight loss.
The size of the deficit matters. A smaller deficit is often easier to maintain, while a larger deficit may produce faster weight loss but can feel harder to sustain.
Why Use Our Calorie Deficit Calculator?
- Estimate a practical fat loss calorie target quickly
- Use body data and activity level instead of guesswork
- Compare different weight loss speeds easily
- See BMR, TDEE, and applied deficit together
- Use a clear calculator on mobile and desktop
How This Calorie Deficit Calculator Works
This calculator first estimates your basal metabolic rate with the Mifflin-St Jeor equation. It then multiplies that number by your selected activity level to estimate your total daily energy expenditure, also known as TDEE.
After that, it subtracts calories based on your selected weight loss speed. If the result falls too low for general planning, the calculator applies a practical calorie floor and adjusts the effective deficit automatically.
Calorie Deficit Logic Used
This tool uses a practical calorie-deficit approach based on common fat loss planning.
Slow loss: 250 calorie daily deficit
Moderate loss: 500 calorie daily deficit
Fast loss: 750 calorie daily deficit
Aggressive loss: 1000 calorie daily deficit
The calculator also uses a general calorie floor of 1200 kcal/day for planning so results do not drop unrealistically low. When that floor is applied, the actual effective deficit may be smaller than the selected one.
Calorie Deficit Calculation Example
Example: If your estimated maintenance calories are 2500 kcal per day and you choose a 500 calorie daily deficit, your daily calorie target becomes 2000 kcal per day.
Over one week, that creates a 3500 calorie weekly deficit. In practical terms, that often aligns with moderate and sustainable fat loss for many people.
Why Calorie Deficit Matters for Weight Loss
A calorie deficit matters because fat loss usually does not happen consistently without it. Exercise can help support weight loss, but overall calorie balance still plays a major role.
A practical calorie target can make dieting easier because it gives you a clear number to follow instead of guessing what “eating less” should look like.