BMR Calculator
Find out how many calories your body burns each day at rest — and adjust for your activity level.
What Is a BMR Calculator?
A BMR (Basal Metabolic Rate) calculator estimates the number of calories your body burns at complete rest to maintain essential life functions like breathing, blood circulation, cell production, and brain activity. Think of it as your body's "idle fuel consumption" — what you'd burn lying motionless in bed all day.
Understanding your BMR is foundational for weight loss, muscle gain, athletic performance, and general health. It forms the baseline from which Total Daily Energy Expenditure (TDEE) is calculated, factoring in your activity level. Fitness coaches, nutritionists, bodybuilders, and weight-loss seekers worldwide use BMR as the starting point for any calorie strategy.
For related health calculations, use our BMI Calculator to assess weight category and Age Calculator for precise age in days.
What Is Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR)?
BMR represents the minimum calories your body needs to sustain vital functions while you're at complete rest. It accounts for approximately 60-75% of total daily calorie expenditure in sedentary individuals.
Several factors influence BMR:
- Age: BMR decreases approximately 1-2% per decade after age 20 due to muscle loss
- Gender: Men typically have 5-10% higher BMR than women due to greater muscle mass
- Body composition: Muscle burns more calories than fat at rest (3x more per pound)
- Height & Weight: Larger bodies require more energy to maintain
- Genetics: Some people naturally have faster or slower metabolisms
- Hormones: Thyroid disorders can dramatically alter BMR
- Climate: Cold environments slightly increase BMR
The Mifflin-St Jeor Formula (Most Accurate)
The Mifflin-St Jeor equation, developed in 1990, is the most accurate BMR formula validated by modern research. It replaced the older Harris-Benedict equation:
Men: BMR = (10 × weight in kg) + (6.25 × height in cm) − (5 × age) + 5
Women: BMR = (10 × weight in kg) + (6.25 × height in cm) − (5 × age) − 161
Example Calculation
A 30-year-old man weighing 75 kg and 175 cm tall:
BMR = (10 × 75) + (6.25 × 175) − (5 × 30) + 5
BMR = 750 + 1093.75 − 150 + 5 = 1,698.75 calories/day
This means his body burns about 1,700 calories daily even if he doesn't move at all.
Other BMR Formulas
| Formula | Year | Accuracy | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mifflin-St Jeor | 1990 | Highest (within 10%) | General population |
| Harris-Benedict (Revised) | 1984 | Good (within 15%) | Historical reference |
| Katch-McArdle | 1996 | Excellent (if lean mass known) | Athletes, bodybuilders |
| Cunningham | 1980 | Good for athletes | High muscle mass |
BMR vs TDEE: Understanding the Difference
BMR is what you burn at rest. TDEE (Total Daily Energy Expenditure) includes all activities. To get your actual daily calorie needs, multiply your BMR by an activity multiplier:
| Activity Level | Description | Multiplier |
|---|---|---|
| Sedentary | Desk job, no exercise | BMR × 1.2 |
| Lightly Active | Light exercise 1-3 days/week | BMR × 1.375 |
| Moderately Active | Moderate exercise 3-5 days/week | BMR × 1.55 |
| Very Active | Hard exercise 6-7 days/week | BMR × 1.725 |
| Extra Active | Hard exercise + physical job | BMR × 1.9 |
Example: The man from earlier (BMR 1,700) with moderate activity needs: 1,700 × 1.55 = 2,635 calories/day to maintain weight.
How to Use Your BMR for Weight Management
Weight Loss Strategy
Create a calorie deficit below TDEE. Standard recommendations:
- Mild deficit (500 cal/day): Lose 0.45 kg (1 lb) per week — sustainable long-term
- Moderate deficit (750 cal/day): Lose 0.7 kg (1.5 lb) per week — faster but harder
- Aggressive deficit (1000 cal/day): Lose 0.9 kg (2 lb) per week — not recommended long-term
Never go below your BMR for extended periods. Eating less than BMR causes metabolic adaptation, muscle loss, and rebound weight gain.
Weight Gain (Muscle Building)
Create a calorie surplus above TDEE:
- Lean bulk (250-300 cal/day surplus): Gain 0.25 kg per week with minimal fat
- Standard bulk (500 cal/day surplus): Gain 0.45 kg per week
- Aggressive bulk (750+ cal/day surplus): Faster gains with more fat accumulation
Weight Maintenance
Simply eat at your TDEE. Monitor weight weekly. If trending up or down unexpectedly, adjust intake by 100-200 calories.
Macronutrient Distribution Based on BMR
Once you know your TDEE, plan macros (protein/carbs/fats):
| Goal | Protein | Carbs | Fats |
|---|---|---|---|
| Weight Loss | 35-40% | 30-35% | 25-30% |
| Maintenance | 25-30% | 40-50% | 25-30% |
| Muscle Gain | 25-35% | 45-55% | 20-25% |
| Athletic Performance | 20-25% | 55-65% | 15-25% |
Protein needs: 1.6-2.2 grams per kg of body weight for muscle building, 1.2-1.6 g/kg for general health.
How to Increase Your BMR Naturally
- Build muscle: Each pound of muscle burns 6-10 calories/day at rest. Strength training 3-4 times weekly delivers measurable BMR increases over 6+ months.
- Eat enough protein: Higher thermic effect of food (TEF) — protein requires 20-30% of its calories to digest vs 5-10% for carbs/fats.
- Stay hydrated: Even mild dehydration reduces metabolism by 2-3%. Drink 35 ml per kg body weight daily.
- Get quality sleep: Sleep deprivation reduces BMR by 5-20% within just a few days.
- Eat regularly: Severe calorie restriction triggers "starvation mode" that lowers BMR.
- Manage stress: Chronic cortisol elevation slows metabolism and promotes fat storage.
- Cold exposure: Brief cold showers or cool environments stimulate brown fat activity.
- Green tea & coffee: Caffeine boosts metabolism temporarily by 3-11%.
How to Use This BMR Calculator
- Enter your age in years
- Select your gender (male or female)
- Input your weight (kg or lbs)
- Enter your height (cm or inches)
- Choose activity level for TDEE calculation
- View results — BMR, TDEE, and calorie targets for different goals
Use the BMR result as a starting point. Track weight weekly for 2-3 weeks, then adjust intake based on actual results. Individual metabolism varies up to 10-15% from formula estimates.
Common BMR Mistakes
- Overestimating activity level: Most people underestimate sedentary time and overestimate exercise calories
- Relying solely on BMR: Real-world calorie needs vary — track and adjust
- Cutting calories too aggressively: Going below 1,200 (women) or 1,500 (men) is rarely sustainable
- Ignoring body composition: Muscular individuals need more calories than formulas suggest
- Not recalculating: Update BMR every 5-10 kg weight change or after major lifestyle shifts
- Trusting calorie counters blindly: Food labels can be off by 20-25%; exercise trackers often inflate burns