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Nutrition Science

Calorie Deficit Calculator — Free

Calculate your daily calorie deficit to achieve your weight loss goals and create a sustainable nutrition plan. Built on the peer-reviewed Mifflin-St Jeor formula.

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Calculate Calorie Deficit

cmft·in

Enter your height in centimeters (e.g., 170 cm)

*This calculator is for informational purposes only. Please consult a healthcare professional before making any health decisions. See our medical disclaimer for more information.

Calculations are powered by the Mifflin-St Jeor Equation, the clinical standard in modern metabolic and nutritional science.

How Many Calories Should I Eat to Lose Weight?

To lose weight at a safe, sustainable rate of 0.25–0.5 kg (0.5–1 lb) per week, eat 275–550 calories below your TDEE daily. For most adults this means consuming 1,400–2,200 calories per day depending on current weight, height, age and activity level. Deficits at or below 500 kcal/day produce steady, highly sustainable loss; deficits of 500–750 kcal/day are aggressive, and deficits above 750 kcal/day increase lean muscle loss risk and are not recommended without medical supervision.

How Calorie Deficit Works

Understanding the mathematics of weight loss helps you set realistic expectations. This foundational principle is supported by comprehensive NCBI energy balance research. Here is the step-by-step breakdown of how a calorie deficit yields results:

Total Daily Energy Expenditure

Your Maintenance Calories

Your TDEE is the baseline. It represents the total number of calories you burn each day, factoring in your basal metabolic rate (BMR), the thermic effect of food (digestion), and all physical activity. Eating at your TDEE keeps your weight exactly the same.

Creating the Deficit

1 lb of fat ≈ 3,500 calories

By subtracting calories from your TDEE, you create a deficit. For example, a 500-calorie daily deficit results in a 3,500-calorie weekly deficit. Because one pound of body fat contains roughly 3,500 calories, this theoretically leads to losing one pound of fat per week.

Safe Calorie Deficit Clinical Reference Chart

Deficit LevelDaily DeficitWeekly Loss RateBest ForClinical Risk Level
Minimal100–200 kcal~0.2–0.4 lbs/weekMaintenance tweaking; long-term lifestyle managementVery Low
Conservative250–350 kcal~0.5–0.7 lbs/weekBeginners, breastfeeding mothers, low body weight individualsLow
Moderate (Recommended)350–500 kcal~0.5–1 lb/weekStandard evidence-based fat loss; muscle preservationLow–Moderate
Aggressive500–750 kcal~1–1.5 lbs/weekSupervised fat loss; requires adequate protein and resistance trainingModerate
Very Aggressive>750 kcal>1.5 lbs/weekMedically supervised only; bariatric-level interventionHigh
Source: Evidence-based recommendations for energy intake in weight management — NCBI / PubMed

For a date-specific plan, use our goal weight calculator by date to find exactly when you'll arrive at your target weight — or what daily calories you need to meet a deadline.

Calorie Deficit Calculator Limitations

  • Metabolic adaptation occurs during prolonged caloric restriction — adaptive thermogenesis can lower your TDEE by a further 5–10% beyond the drop expected from lost body weight, so progress naturally slows over time
  • Aggressive calorie deficits (>500 kcal/day) increase muscle catabolism risk — protein intake and resistance training become critical to preserve lean mass
  • PCOS-related insulin resistance means standard calorie deficit calculations may not produce expected weight loss — hormonal management is essential

Calorie Deficit Calculator for PCOS Weight Loss

Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS) fundamentally alters how the body processes energy. Due to underlying insulin resistance, women with PCOS often experience a lower Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR) than standard predictive equations suggest—sometimes by as much as 14–40%.

This means a standard 500-calorie deficit calculated by generic formulas might actually represent maintenance calories for someone with PCOS. Successful weight loss in this demographic requires not just a caloric deficit, but strict macronutrient management—specifically prioritizing protein and fiber while managing glycemic load to stabilize insulin levels and reduce androgen production.

Safe Calorie Deficit Calculator for Breastfeeding Mothers

Postpartum weight loss requires a highly specialized approach, particularly for nursing mothers. Lactation is an incredibly metabolically demanding process, burning an estimated 300 to 500 additional calories per day depending on milk production volume.

When calculating a deficit while breastfeeding, it is critical not to drop calories too aggressively, as severe restriction can rapidly diminish milk supply and compromise maternal energy levels. Medical professionals generally recommend waiting until milk supply is fully established (around 6–8 weeks postpartum) before attempting a mild deficit, ensuring total daily intake rarely drops below 1,800 calories.

Calculator note: This calculator applies a population-level safe minimum of 1,200 kcal/day for women (1,500 kcal/day for men). For breastfeeding mothers, the clinical recommendation is higher — generally 1,800 kcal/day or above to protect milk supply and maternal health. If the calculator outputs a target below 1,800 kcal/day, treat that value as an alert to choose a more conservative weekly loss rate rather than a target to follow.

How to Calculate a Calorie Deficit Without Losing Muscle

A calorie deficit occurs when you consume fewer calories than your body expends in a given day. While this negative energy balance is the fundamental mechanism behind all successful weight loss, the goal is to lose fat, not lean muscle tissue.

To ensure this stored energy comes primarily from body fat rather than muscle catabolism, the deficit must be moderate (typically 300–500 calories below maintenance). Additionally, maintaining a high protein intake (0.8–1.0g per pound of body weight) and engaging in regular resistance training signals to your body that muscle tissue is essential and should be preserved during the weight loss phase.

Calorie Deficit: Health & Longevity Implications

Optimising your Calorie Deficit result is directly connected to the following biological and longevity markers:

Cardiovascular StrainA sustained, moderate calorie deficit (300–500 kcal/day) reduces visceral adiposity — the primary driver of cardiovascular inflammation — more efficiently than rapid deficit protocols that primarily reduce water and lean mass.
Metabolic FlexibilityGradual fat loss preserves metabolic rate, whereas aggressive deficits trigger adaptive thermogenesis — a physiological downregulation of TDEE — making long-term weight maintenance increasingly difficult.
Insulin SensitivityClinical studies confirm that even a modest 5% reduction in body weight via sustained calorie deficit improves fasting insulin levels and reduces HbA1c in pre-diabetic individuals within 12 weeks.
Hormonal BalanceDeficits exceeding 25% of TDEE suppress leptin, ghrelin, and thyroid T3 levels, triggering intense hunger signals and systemic hormonal disruption that persists well beyond the diet period.

Creating a Sustainable Calorie Deficit

Safe Execution Protocol: Calorie Deficit Next Steps

Before acting on your results, follow these expert-validated guidelines to protect metabolic health and long-term progress:

  • Begin with a conservative 300–400 kcal/day deficit and evaluate real-world weight change after 2 weeks before making further adjustments.
  • Never allow total daily calories to fall below your BMR — sub-BMR eating triggers muscle catabolism and metabolic suppression within 72 hours.
  • For breastfeeding mothers, the minimum safe deficit is 300 kcal/day below TDEE; never target rapid fat loss during active lactation.
  • PCOS-affected individuals should prioritise carbohydrate quality (low glycaemic index foods) alongside a calorie deficit, as insulin resistance reduces the effectiveness of calorie restriction alone.

Use the clinical routing dashboard below to execute these steps safely with verified professional resources.

Frequently Asked Questions

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