Macro Calculator
This free, easy-to-use macro calculator gives you your optimal macronutrients and calories. It serves as a weight loss or muscle gain calculator for both women and men.
Combine with macro counting, flexible dieting, or IIFYM to reach your goals faster.
How to calculate your macros for fat loss
The foods we eat are made up of three macros (macronutrients). These are carbohydrates (carbs), protein, and fat.
Chicken is high in protein but has no carbs; rice is high in carbs but has very little fat or protein.
The three macronutrients provide the body with energy and raw materials for growth and repair.
By calculating the appropriate daily calorie amount for you, we can then break this down into the best macronutrient ratios to achieve weight loss.
The calculator is based on sound science, combined with data from years of coaching hundreds of successful clients.
What is a good macro ratio for fat loss or muscle gain?
Your macros should be based on your Total Daily Energy Expenditure (TDEE) and your goals.
The calculator defaults at the best macro ratio proven to work for most people.
This ratio is:
- 30% fat
- Protein is 0.65 grams per pound of body weight,
- The remainder is carbs.
Depending on your goal, this will be either a calorie deficit or a surplus.
You can go further and make more adjustments: Perhaps you’re an extreme endomorph and do better with fewer carbs. Or perhaps you have one kidney and need to eat less protein.
You can fine-tune your results for you with a bit of math. See how to change your macros here.
MACRO COUNTING
- 140 page step-by-step guide.
- Achieve fat loss without starvation.
- Individually tailored to your body composition.
What is a good protein ratio?
Rather than a percentage, proteins are based on your body weight.
Our calculator has three settings:
- Moderate adjusts the ratio to 0.65 grams per pound of body weight.
This is appropriate for sedentary individuals or people with higher body fat percentages. - High is for active people with moderate strength training and an average body fat percentage.
- Maximum will set the ratio to 1 gram per pound.
This amount is good for bodybuilding and gaining muscle mass. You must be doing intense training.
Find out how to fine-tune your protein ratios when counting macros
Fat macro ratio
Set fat at 30% of daily energy expenditure.
Most people do very well with this amount of fat. See more about choosing the best macro fats. Because of high-fat diets like keto, many people are now eating more fat than they need to.
Carbohydrate macro ratio
Once you’ve calculated protein and fat, the remainder of your daily calories should be from carbohydrates.
Carbs fuel your body and workouts and are the body’s preferred energy source.
If you are coming from a low-carb background, this may seem high. However, according to respected nutritional research, this is a moderate amount of carbs.
If you are eating according to your TDEE, the notion that carbs cause weight gain or stop fat loss is incorrect.
Using as a Calorie Deficit Calculator
As a weight loss calculator, this tool establishes a safe calorie deficit only.
The Lose option puts you in a 20% calorie deficit, promoting safe, steady weight loss.
The best macro ratio for body recomposition
If you want to recompose your body (lose fat and gain muscle simultaneously), then use the body recomposition calculator.
Macro ratio for maintenance
The Maintain button shows you the macro levels to maintain your current weight.
This is great if you have lost weight and don’t want to gain it back.
Macro ratio for muscle gain
The Gain button puts you in a 20% calorie surplus.
The macro breakdown is designed to build muscle fast in conjunction and must be combined with a comprehensive weight training program.
It can also be used by people who are underweight.
TIP: Try starting with the maintenance goal and then gradually increase calories from there if you want lean muscle gains.
Calculating macros using your body fat percentage
The calculator uses your body weight to determine calories and macros.
However, you can obtain superior results by using your body fat percentage. The calculator allows you to choose which method; Normal for body weight, Lean Mass for fat percentage.
When to choose the Lean Mass Formula
If you are lean (have a low body fat percentage), choose the Lean Mass formula, and enter your body fat %.
If you are classified as obese and have a lot of weight to lose, the lean mass formula is superior. You can read more about macro counting and obesity.
Help? Calculate your ideal body weight or get an assessment of your body fat percentage.
Why the difference? Muscle cells burn more calories than fat cells, so the more accurately we measure this, the better your results will be.
How to calculate macros per meal
Once you’ve calculated your daily macros in the calculator, you can break this down into meals.
Choose from 2 to 6 meals per day to see the macro ratio you can track for each meal. For some people, this is easier, but for others, this is too much detail.
Do what works for you.
Meal Plans
See a 5-day macro-based meal plan. It includes three meals and two snacks per day.
Macro calculator activity level settings
A higher activity level means a higher daily calorie goal.
For example – if you maintain your weight at 2,000 calories per day, adding vigorous daily exercise means you need more calories to maintain your weight.
If you are sedentary and trying to lose weight, adding exercise will increase your daily calorie goal.
The idea seems counter-intuitive, but more energy is required to fuel your workouts. More workouts lead to increasing metabolism; therefore, more fat is burned!
Undereating is one of the leading causes of the weight loss plateau.
So many of our clients previously “hit the wall” with dieting. They would continually reduce calories, stop losing fat and gain weight when they eat a little more.
Macro counting defeats this by prescribing the right food and calorie levels.
Which activity level do I choose?
- Sedentary: Just regular everyday activity like a bit of walking, a couple of flights of stairs, eating, etc.
- Light: Any activity that burns an additional 200-400 calories (females) or 250-500 calories (males) over your sedentary amount.
- Moderate: Any activity that burns an additional 400-650 calories (females) or 500-800 calories (males) more than your sedentary amount.
- Extreme: Any activity that burns more than 650 calories (females) or more than 800 calories (males) in addition to your sedentary amount.
Other options for determining your calorie burn
- Use our calories burned calculator – it accurately assesses over 380 activities.
- Use a fitness tracker – like a Fitbit or Apple Watch (note that they can overestimate calorie burn).
- Use a suitable app – like MapMyFitness
Why should I eat more when I exercise more?
High physical activity not fueled with enough calories will lead to muscle catabolism (breakdown of muscle fiber).
This lack of nutrition could stall your weight loss, so eat up if you love to exercise!
I’ve got my macros – now what?
Once you’ve identified your target daily macros, you must determine the macros in all the foods you eat.
By tracking them daily, you can reach your recommended macro targets that encourage fat loss, muscle gain, or whatever your goal may be.
You can learn more about the macro counting system and the flexible dieting philosophy. Many people use an app like Myfitnesspal to track macros.
For more specifics on what to eat – see a sample macro meal plan or a list of macros for familiar foods.
I've helped 14,000+ people lose thousands of pounds by tracking their macros.
Choose either my self-guided program or let me coach you.
Learn how to count macros in under 60 minutes
- Instant download.
- 140+ page ebook + extensive bonuses
- Uncover the techniques my most successful clients use.
References
- Mifflin, M. D., St Jeor, S. T., Hill, L. A., Scott, B. J., Daugherty, S. A., & Koh, Y. O. (1990). A new predictive equation for resting energy expenditure in healthy individuals. The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 51 (2), 241-247. Link
- McArdle, W. D., Katch, F. I., & Katch, V. L. (2010). Exercise physiology: nutrition, energy, and human performance. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. Link
- Jequier, E. (1994). Carbohydrates as a source of energy. The American journal of clinical nutrition, 59(3), 682S-685S.
- Lemon, P. W., Tarnopolsky, M. A., MacDougall, J. D., & Atkinson, S. A. (1992). Protein requirements and muscle mass/strength changes during intensive training in novice bodybuilders. Journal of Applied Physiology, 73(2), 767-775. study abstract link
- Grundy, S. M. (1999). The optimal ratio of fat-to-carbohydrate in the diet. Annual review of nutrition, 19(1), 325-341. abstract
- Conlin, L.A., Aguilar, D.T., Rogers, G.E. et al. Flexible vs. rigid dieting in resistance-trained individuals seeking to optimize their physiques: A randomized controlled trial. J Int Soc Sports Nutr 18, 52 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12970-021-00452-2
2,067 Comments
Hi Ted,
Purchased and read your book today. Loved it and happy to support another New Englander. I want to lose weight but gain muscle. I have a descent amount of muscle and primarily lift and do hiit workouts. Per the calcs, my tdee is 1815 because I am very active. I broke the macros down to 30c, 35p, 35f. I have my fat higher because of flax seed etc that I take. Will such a higher fat intake effect my muscle building or depleting. Let me know your thoughts.
Hi Truffle, Thanks so much and I’m glad you liked it. It seems like your fat is too high. Daily that looks to be well over 100 grams of fat. You’ll get more out of your workouts if you fuel it better with more carbs. This will help with better gains. Also for building muscle and losing fat at the same time I recommend that you eat fluidly according to the amount of exercise you do each day. Use your sedentary TDEE as your base. I have this all described in detail in the book. All the best!
Thanks Ted. Your response is greatly appreciated. I will eat fluidly as you recommended.
Hi Ted. My overall calorie intake each day is set to 2,594, with protein being set at High and 5 meals. Is this number already 20% decreased or am I recommended to consume at least 20% less than that number to produce “lean” muscle? Thank you!
Macros: Carbohydrates – 60g
Protein – 37g
Fats – 14g
This is all from 185lb, 6’0, and 22 years-old. I workout three times per day. Early morning fasted cardio, weights in afternoon, and intense cardio in the late evening.
Hi Chris, If you have the calculator set to “lose” it already deducts the 20% and factors in your estimated calories from exercise. You may want to be sure that you aren’t overdoing it on the cardio. It may make adding muscle mass more difficult.
Hey Ted! I’m wanting to start counting my macros but I currently am breastfeeding my four month old so how so I coordinate that into my macros? I have 7 more lbs to lose and then I want to tone and hopefully compete. If you could help me that would be great!
Hi Courtney, Great! You should add in about 300 calories or so to account for breastfeeding. For example, if our calculator gives you a weight loss TDEE of 1500, you should make it 1800 and eat the extra protein, fat, and carbs at the percentages given.
Hi Ted! I am fairly new to the counting macros thing. I have been reading a lot about it and attempted to try it but in honestly a bit scared of calories and carbs and that I might consume too much..? I have been using the MFP app to track my macros and calories. I workout 6 days a week, doing circuit training, strength training, hiit and other forms of cardio (hiking, jogging, road biking, etc.). I’m trying to lose about 10lbs. I used the calculator and set my activities to moderate and it said I should be eating over 1400 calories. I don’t think I was eating that much before, maybe 1000-1200. Is that to little in your opinion? Also, I’m not sure where I should set my protein intake? I do circuit training 30-60 min 3-4 days a week. Strength about 2 days. And cardio every chance I get LOL should I set my protein to normal? Also what is your take on carb cycling? Thank you so much for your help…. I’m completely stuck on which road to take right now and don’t know what’s right for my body to lose these last extra pounds. Very frustrating 🙁
Hey LL, Welcome! This is a pretty common concern from those coming from low calorie dieting, but it’s probably the reason you can’t lose those last 10 pounds. I’ve explained this in my article here. https://healthyeater.com/eat-to-lose-weight You’re pretty active, so I would set your protein at normal or high. I also would encourage you to check out my book that explains iifym in detail and includes a lot of great tips, recipes and meal plans. https://healthyeater.com/macro-solution
Awesome, thanks Ted! I guess that’s why after a really hard workout burning 600-800 calories I feel very fatigue and dizzy. Need to definitely eat more. But when I’m using MFP and I add my workout in everything goes up, calories, carbs, fats, etc. With the calculator I’m suppose to eat 1464 calories, so if I burn 600 calories after a workout, should I be eating over 2000 calories? It just seems like so much. I’m 5’2 and 115lbs right now BTW. Trying to look leaner, thinner, and build muscle but not look stumpy LOL Also, I know we should be eating clean but I see so many people eating the quest bars. Isn’t it really processed? Therefore, it’s not good to eat right?
Also, I read that to lose weight i am suppose to eat about 20% less than my TDEE… Is that right?
I have been doing Macros for a month and have not seen a weight loss as I would like. Now I am wondering if I am doing it right. I need 1500 calories in a day keeping protein high. Do I eat back my caloires when I work out (doing strength and cardio 5 x a week) or just eat 1500 everyday. I really like counting macros but am confused on that part.
Hi Cindy, Great job on tracking for a month, you have the hardest part down! 🙂 There’s a few things involved with being successful with iifym and eating back calories depends on your approach. Some eat the same everyday, but others eat according to their exercise level. I would advise you to have a look at my book where I explain everything in detail. Also, there’s an online members only forum option where I can coach you and help you with your macros. All the best and I look forward to helping you in the forum. https://healthyeater.com/macro-solution
Ted help please. I’m really confused with what I should do, I’m 18, male, 5 foot 10 or 177 cm, currently 7% body fat I was 11% and weigh roughly 59 kg. I want to put on lean muscle mass but I’m extremely confused on how to do so, whether I should bulk then cut or stay in a caloric deficit, with more protein, I’ve been training for under a year at the gym at my school and I’m happy with the results I’ve gotten, but that was just simple training I want to start getting serious about my training I’m thinking of joining a gym that is roughly 1.5 miles away from me so if I take nutrition as in protein shakes I’ve heard they can put on a little fat so I will jog to the gym to keep that off but any advice would be greatly appreciated.
I set my goals as maintain and 3 meals per day with high protein and my macros were:
Carbs 133g
Protein 43g
Fats 23g
Hey Ryan, Great job at getting to 7%! I would say start will 100 calories more than your maintenance and see how that works. Add some more if you aren’t gaining, less if you feel you are gaining fat. This method is slower but can avoid the bulk and cut phase and produce lean muscle mass. Keep us posted on your results.
Thank you ever so much, I’ve been looking forward for this all day, and I will keep the updates flowing, thank you again !!!
Sure thing! I wish you the best.
Hi Ted. My goal is to lose at least 12 pounds. I am 18 years old (almost 19), 5 foot 4, 140 pounds. I do lift weights at the gym, as well as do HIIT cardio. I swich it up though, I will usually just follow Fitness Blender workouts (45 minutes-1 hour) workouts 5-6 times a week, mixed with HIIT cardio and strength training, altho not always access to weights.
This is what I was calculated to lose weight…
1738 cals per day
carbs – 210g 48.4%
protein – 115g 26.6%
fat – 48g 25.0%
Now, I was told that I should have my protein as the highest maconutrient, with minimum carbs. I’m also not sure what level of active I would be either light or moderate…
I also know that I have lots of muscle, but I want to lose weight without maybe losing that. I also don’t want to look smaller, I want to look lean and fit.
Any help/advice is apprecaited
Hey Emily, It sounds like flexible dieting is a great fit. First, I would advise you to rid yourself of the notion that carbs are bad. You can reach your goals and eat carbs. They fuel your workouts and actually help you go further. Increasing your protein can help preserve muscle during weight loss and especially since your goal is to maintain your muscle mass. I encourage you to check out my book, https://healthyeater.com/macro-solution where I’ve explained the in’s and the out’s of the diet extensively. Also we have a support option where I’m standing by to answer questions and provide some coaching. As for exercise I would tell you to go with moderate on your workout days and cut back to sedentary on your rest days.
I have set my ratio to 20 carbs, 40 protein, and 40 fat. I think this is what works for me. Now I also have had history of hormonal imbalance which I know can impede weight loss. So with the increased protein, I should still lose weight? What is considered “moderate”? And how many rest days?
This is my plan, does this sound good?
1453 cals per day
this is 500 calories below maintenance, and I am hoping to do like 20 minutes of HIIT each day, thats it. Plus weights a few times a week.
Does this sound okay?
I think you should use our calculator as a guide. It doesn’t seem like you’ll be eating enough on your exercise days, which will put you in an unhealthy deficit.
But if I do exercise and add more calories to eat afterwards, it should be okay right?
Hi Ted, I’ve just noticed something on MFP. Regardless I set my diet to 1800 or 2400 cal, it does not change my daily goal carbs, fat and protein amount. It only changes the calories. To my understanding, the daily amount of macro, should change too if the diet is 1800 or 2400. Have you noticed something similar while using MFP. Cheers!
Hi Marcello, I’m not seeing this at all. When I adjust my calories MFP also adjusts my carbs, protein, and fat at the percentages that I have it set to. Not sure what’s going on with yours. Have you tried to change them using their website opposed to their app?
That’s just because most people are aiming for fat loss. However the book is for gaining and losing – the principles are the same – just the amounts you eat are going to be different.
If you are looking to gain and want to use Flexible Dieting – I’m sure you’ll find the book very helpful.
Hi Dwayne, just goto https://healthyeater.com/macro-solution#buy and select one of the 3 purchasing options. Enter your CC details and the book will be emailed to you straight away.
Hey folks, please use the comments below to ask questions about the calculator functionality only. For flexible dieting advice or coaching, please see my new book, https://healthyeater.com/macro-solution which also offers access to a members only forum where I’ll be standing by to answer your questions and coach you along the way. Thanks for supporting our website.
Hi Ted!
I’m new to flexible dieting. I pugged in all my numbers and choose 4 meals per day. I was wondering if the grams that populated are per each meal or per day?
For ex: 48g of protein, 44g of carbs and 14g of fat is that to be consumed per meal?
Hi Khristina, Welcome! The calculator has several settings. by meal(s) or by day, so just be aware of which setting you are viewing. The macros you listed are per meal. Since you’re new to flexible dieting I would love it if you would check out my new book. I think it will really help you get off to a good start. https://healthyeater.com/macro-solution
I’ll definitely look into your book.
When I input my weight should i input my goal weight or my actual weight?
Your actual weight 🙂