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Health & Fitness

Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR) Calculator

Calculate the calories your body burns at rest and your total daily energy needs based on your activity level.

This tool is for informational purposes only. Consult a dietitian or doctor for personal diet or health programmes. Calculation formulas are based on average populations; individual variation may cause ±15% deviation.

How Is BMR Calculated? Harris-Benedict Formula

Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR) is the minimum amount of energy your body needs while at complete rest — to sustain vital functions like digestion, breathing, and cell renewal. The calculation uses age, gender, height, and weight variables. Two separate formulas are applied since men and women have different muscle-to-fat ratios. Our tool uses the globally recognized Harris-Benedict and Mifflin-St Jeor equations to provide the most accurate result.

Factors That Affect Metabolism

As muscle mass increases, basal metabolic rate increases too, because muscle cells burn more energy at rest than fat cells. As age advances, BMR generally decreases. Genetic factors, hormonal status (thyroid, etc.) and body temperature also affect energy expenditure.

Calculation Formulas

FormulaEquationYear
Mifflin-St Jeor (Male)10 × weight + 6.25 × height − 5 × age + 51990
Mifflin-St Jeor (Female)10 × weight + 6.25 × height − 5 × age − 1611990
Harris-Benedict (Male)13.397 × weight + 4.799 × height − 5.677 × age + 88.361984
Harris-Benedict (Female)9.247 × weight + 3.098 × height − 4.330 × age + 447.591984

* Height in cm, weight in kg. Mifflin-St Jeor is currently considered the most accurate method.

How Should You Use Your BMR Value?

If you want to lose weight, your total calorie intake should not fall below your BMR value (extreme calorie restriction slows metabolism). The ideal approach is to find your Total Daily Energy Expenditure (TDEE) by multiplying your BMR by an activity multiplier, then create a 15-20% deficit from that value.

Activity Multipliers (TDEE)

Sedentary

Desk job, no daily exercise

× 1.20

Lightly Active

Light exercise 1–3 days/week

× 1.375

Moderately Active

Moderate exercise 3–5 days/week

× 1.55

Very Active

Hard training 6–7 days/week

× 1.725

Extra Active

Physical job + daily intense training

× 1.90

Frequently Asked Questions

BMR is the energy needed just to stay alive; TDEE is BMR plus your daily movements and exercise added on top.

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