🧠 100+ Free Health Tools — Calculators, Quizzes & Score Trackers Explore All Tools →

Macro calculator

🥗 Nutrition Science

Your Daily Protein, Carbs and Fat — Calculated for Your Goal

Counting calories alone misses the point. Two people eating 2,000 calories can get completely different results depending on how those calories are split between protein, carbs, and fat. This calculator uses the Mifflin-St Jeor equation — the most validated BMR formula for healthy adults — to work out your TDEE, then applies goal-matched macro splits with per-meal breakdowns.

🔬 Mifflin-St Jeor BMR
📊 HealthIQ Score /100
🍽️ Per-Meal Breakdown
🎯 5 Goal Presets
🆓 Free Forever
Macro Calculator Enter your stats, goal, and diet style to get your daily macro targets
📋 Your Stats
⚡ Activity Level
🪑Sedentary
🚶Light 1-3x/wk
🏃Moderate 3-5x/wk
💪Heavy 6-7x/wk
🏋️Athlete 2x/day
🎯 Your Goal
🔥 Lose Fat500 kcal deficit
⚖️ MaintainStay at current weight
💪 Build Muscle250 kcal surplus
🥗 Diet Style
Balanced30P/40C/30F
High Protein40P/30C/30F
Low Carb35P/25C/40F
Keto30P/5C/65F
Endurance25P/55C/20F
HealthIQ Nutrition Score
grams / day Protein
grams / day Carbs
grams / day Fats
BMR (kcal)
TDEE (kcal)
Target (kcal)
Protein g/kg
Macro Calorie Split
🔵 Protein
🟡 Carbs
🟢 Fats
Per Meal Breakdown
Protein (g)
Carbs (g)
Fats (g)

Matched to Your Goal

Selected based on your goal and diet style.

Some links above are affiliate links — if you purchase, we earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. This is what keeps the site free forever, without ads getting in the way of your experience.

Next: Heart Rate Zone Calculator

Find your fat-burning and cardio zones based on your age and resting heart rate.

Why Macros Matter More Than Calories Alone

Calorie counting became popular in the 1960s off the back of Ancel Keys’ research and the idea that weight was purely a function of energy in versus energy out. That framing is not wrong — but it is incomplete. Two people eating 2,000 calories per day can have completely different body composition outcomes depending on how those calories are distributed between protein, carbohydrates, and fat.

Protein has a thermic effect of 20-30% — meaning roughly a quarter of its calories are burned just through digestion. Carbohydrates burn 5-10% through digestion. Fat burns almost nothing (0-3%). A high-protein diet at the same calorie level as a low-protein diet will result in measurably higher total energy expenditure, better muscle retention during a deficit, and greater satiety. The calories are equal; the results are not.

Formula used: This calculator uses the Mifflin-St Jeor equation (1990), validated against indirect calorimetry and shown to predict BMR within 10% for most healthy adults — more accurate than the older Harris-Benedict equation (1919) for most populations. BMR is then multiplied by an activity factor (1.2–1.9) to give TDEE, and adjusted up or down based on your goal.

The Five Diet Styles — What Each Split Actually Does

Balanced (30% protein / 40% carbs / 30% fat)

The Institute of Medicine’s Acceptable Macronutrient Distribution Ranges sit at 10-35% protein, 45-65% carbs, and 20-35% fat. The balanced preset sits within those ranges and works well as a starting point for most people who are not pursuing a specific body composition goal. It is the split most consistent with general dietary guidelines and the easiest to maintain long-term.

High Protein (40% protein / 30% carbs / 30% fat)

The research on protein intake for muscle preservation during a calorie deficit is consistent: higher protein (0.7-1.0g per pound of bodyweight) produces better outcomes. A 2014 meta-analysis in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition found that high-protein diets produced significantly greater fat loss and muscle retention compared to standard protein intakes during energy restriction. This split is appropriate for anyone in a calorie deficit who wants to minimise muscle loss, or for anyone focused on building muscle.

Low Carb (35% protein / 25% carbs / 40% fat)

Reducing carbohydrates lowers insulin response, which can benefit people with insulin resistance or those who find they feel better with fewer blood sugar fluctuations. At 25% carbs, this is not ketogenic — it still provides enough glucose for moderate exercise. This split works well for people who do not depend on high-carbohydrate intake for performance and prefer the satiety profile of higher fat intake.

Keto (30% protein / 5% carbs / 65% fat)

At under 50g of carbohydrates per day (usually under 30g to reliably enter ketosis), the liver produces ketone bodies from fat as the primary fuel source. Ketogenic diets show good short-term results for weight loss and metabolic markers in some populations. The limitation is adherence — fat provides 9 kcal per gram versus 4 kcal for protein and carbs, so staying within a calorie budget while eating 65% fat requires careful planning.

Endurance (25% protein / 55% carbs / 20% fat)

Athletes training for endurance events — running, cycling, swimming — depend on glycogen stores for performance. Glycogen is synthesised from carbohydrates. At higher training volumes, carbohydrate intake of 5-7g per kilogram of bodyweight is recommended by the American College of Sports Medicine. This split prioritises carbohydrates to fuel training and recovery, with protein still sufficient for muscle repair.

Diet StyleProteinCarbsFatBest For
Balanced30%40%30%General health, starting point
High Protein40%30%30%Fat loss, muscle building
Low Carb35%25%40%Insulin sensitivity, satiety
Keto30%5%65%Metabolic conditions, some weight loss
Endurance25%55%20%Distance athletes, high-volume training

Protein: The One Macro You Almost Certainly Under-Eat

The RDA for protein (0.8g per kilogram of bodyweight) is the minimum needed to prevent deficiency — not the amount needed to optimise body composition. For active adults, research consistently points to 1.6-2.2g per kilogram as the range that maximises muscle protein synthesis. A 70 kg active person needs 112-154g of protein per day to support muscle maintenance and growth — two to three times the RDA minimum.

Protein is also the most satiating macronutrient. A 2005 study in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition found that increasing protein from 15% to 30% of calories led participants to spontaneously eat 441 fewer calories per day — with no other dietary instruction. The satiety effect of protein is real and large enough to matter in practice.

These Numbers Are Starting Points, Not Prescriptions

The Mifflin-St Jeor equation predicts BMR within 10% for most adults — meaning your actual metabolic rate could be 10% higher or lower than the calculated figure. Activity multipliers carry additional uncertainty. The right approach is to treat your calculated targets as a starting point, track your actual intake for 2-3 weeks, and adjust based on real-world results. If your weight is not moving as expected, adjust calories by 100-150 kcal per day and reassess after two more weeks. The calculation tells you where to start; your body tells you where to go.

Frequently Asked Questions

The Mifflin-St Jeor equation predicts BMR within 10% for most healthy adults. Activity multipliers add further uncertainty — most people underestimate their sedentary time and overestimate their exercise intensity. Treat the output as a calibrated starting point. Track your actual weight for 2-3 weeks and adjust calories by 100-150 kcal if you are not seeing the expected change.
The government RDA of 0.8g per kilogram is the minimum to prevent deficiency. For active adults trying to maintain or build muscle, current research consistently recommends 1.6-2.2g per kilogram of bodyweight. Higher protein intakes (up to 3.1g/kg) in the context of resistance training show no negative health effects in healthy adults. If you are in a calorie deficit, err toward the higher end of that range to protect muscle mass.
BMR (Basal Metabolic Rate) is the number of calories your body burns at complete rest — just to keep your heart beating, lungs breathing, and organs functioning. TDEE (Total Daily Energy Expenditure) is your BMR multiplied by an activity factor that accounts for movement throughout the day. TDEE is what you actually burn in a typical day and is the number you should base your calorie targets on.
Not necessarily. Many people find it easier to hit a weekly average rather than daily targets. On training days, slightly higher carbohydrates support performance and recovery. On rest days, slightly lower carbs and higher fat is a common approach. The key variable is weekly protein total — keeping this consistent matters more than daily precision. Your macro targets are a daily average, not a hard daily limit.
Not categorically. Meta-analyses comparing ketogenic diets to other calorie-restricted diets show similar long-term fat loss when calories and protein are matched. Keto may provide an advantage for people with insulin resistance or type 2 diabetes, or for those who find high-fat foods more satiating. The best diet for fat loss is the one you can maintain consistently. If keto makes adherence easier for you, it works. If it makes it harder, it does not.
The HealthIQ Nutrition Score rates how well your calculated targets align with evidence-based recommendations for your goal. A score of 85-100 means your calorie and protein targets are in the optimal range for your goal and activity level. Lower scores reflect mismatches — for example, a very aggressive deficit that risks muscle loss, or protein intake that falls below the threshold for muscle maintenance. It is a practical benchmark, not a medical assessment.
Medical Disclaimer: Macro targets are estimates based on population-level equations. Individual metabolic rates vary. This calculator is for informational purposes only. If you have a medical condition, eating disorder history, or specific dietary requirements, consult a registered dietitian before changing your diet.
100+
Free Health Tools
11
Health Categories
3
Tool Types
Free
Always & Forever
HealthIQ Score HealthIQ Score
Free health calculators, tools & quizzes that give you a personalized HealthIQ Score — so you understand your body, track your numbers, and make smarter health decisions every day.
f in p x
📬 Get Weekly Health Tips
Health Topics
Weight Loss Nutrition Sleep & Energy Heart Health Blood Sugar Mental Health Fitness Women's Health Men's Health Gut Health Aging & Longevity
Quick Links
Home All Calculators All Tools All Quizzes Blog About Us Contact Privacy Policy Terms of Service Disclaimer Affiliate Disclosure
Our Promise

Every tool on HealthIQ Score gives you a real, personalized score — not vague generic advice. We believe knowing your own health numbers is the first step to actually changing them.

We only recommend products that genuinely match your score and health profile. Your trust matters more than any commission we earn.

💡Evidence-based information
❤️Built for real people
🔒No spam, ever
Always free to use

© 2025 HealthIQ Score. All rights reserved.
Medical Disclaimer: HealthIQ Score tools are for informational purposes only and do not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before making any health decisions.