TDEE Explained: How Many Calories You Actually Burn in a Day
TDEE — Total Daily Energy Expenditure — is the calorie estimate every diet plan starts from. It's the answer to "how many calories does my body use in a day?" If your intake equals TDEE, weight stays stable. Below it, you lose. Above it, you gain.
The TDEE number isn't magic. It's built from four components, each with known math.
Component 1: Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR)
The calories your body uses at complete rest just to stay alive — keeping organs running, brain functioning, body temperature stable. This is roughly 60-75% of TDEE.
The most accurate widely-used formula is Mifflin-St Jeor (1990):
- Men: BMR = (10 × weight kg) + (6.25 × height cm) − (5 × age) + 5
- Women: BMR = (10 × weight kg) + (6.25 × height cm) − (5 × age) − 161
Worked example: 70 kg, 175 cm, 35 year old male = (10 × 70) + (6.25 × 175) − (5 × 35) + 5 = 700 + 1094 − 175 + 5 = 1624 kcal/day at rest.
Other formulas (Harris-Benedict, Katch-McArdle) exist but Mifflin-St Jeor has been validated as the most accurate for the general population.
Component 2: Thermic Effect of Food (TEF)
The energy your body uses digesting and processing food. Roughly 8-10% of total calories consumed.
Important nuance: TEF varies by macronutrient.
- Protein: 20-30% of its calories used in digestion
- Carbs: 5-10%
- Fat: 0-3%
This is why high-protein diets give a small "metabolic boost" — but the effect is real and modest, not dramatic.
Component 3: Exercise Activity Thermogenesis (EAT)
Calories from intentional exercise. A 30-minute moderate-intensity workout burns 200-400 kcal depending on body weight, intensity and exercise type.
| Activity | kcal/min (70 kg person) |
|---|---|
| Walking (5 km/h) | 4-5 |
| Cycling (moderate) | 7-9 |
| Strength training | 5-8 |
| Running (8 km/h) | 10-12 |
| HIIT | 10-15 |
Component 4: NEAT (Non-Exercise Activity Thermogenesis)
Everything you do that isn't intentional exercise: walking around the house, fidgeting, standing vs sitting, climbing stairs, posture maintenance. NEAT can vary by 800-2000 kcal per day across individuals — by far the largest variable in TDEE.
This is why two people with identical BMR and exercise habits can have wildly different TDEE. The fidgety, always-walking person has higher NEAT.
Putting it together: the activity multiplier
Most TDEE calculators wrap NEAT + EAT + TEF into a single "activity multiplier" applied to BMR:
| Activity level | Multiplier | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Sedentary | 1.2 | Desk job, no exercise |
| Lightly active | 1.375 | 1-3 light workouts/week |
| Moderately active | 1.55 | 3-5 workouts/week |
| Very active | 1.725 | 6-7 hard workouts/week |
| Extremely active | 1.9 | 2x/day or physical job + training |
Why TDEE estimates are often wrong
Three common failure modes:
1. Overestimating activity level
Most desk workers who train 3 times a week pick "moderately active" (1.55). The truth is closer to "lightly active" (1.375) — the 5 days at a desk dominate the energy expenditure. Picking 1.55 results in a TDEE 200-300 kcal too high, which then sets a deficit that's actually maintenance.
2. Not adjusting after weight loss
If you lose 8 kg, your BMR drops by ~80 kcal/day. Your TDEE drops more (lower NEAT cost from carrying less weight). The TDEE you calculated at the start is no longer accurate.
3. Not accounting for metabolic adaptation
After 4-6 weeks of dieting, your TDEE drops below the formula prediction by an additional 100-300 kcal. This is real and well-documented. The deficit you set is no longer the deficit you're getting.
The empirical correction
The TDEE formula gives you a starting estimate. The accurate number comes from data.
Track your calories accurately for 14 days. Track your weight at the same time daily. The simple math:
- If weight is stable: your average intake = your actual TDEE.
- If weight is dropping by 0.5 kg/week: actual TDEE = average intake + 500 kcal/day.
- If weight is rising by 0.5 kg/week: actual TDEE = average intake − 500 kcal/day.
This empirical TDEE is more useful than any formula prediction, because it accounts for your specific NEAT, your specific food log accuracy, and your specific metabolic adaptation.
Use the formula to start. Use 2 weeks of tracked data to correct. Re-correct every 6-8 weeks of dieting because the number keeps shifting.
FitLife's TDEE calculator uses Mifflin-St Jeor and computes the activity multiplier from your actual workout days × duration — more accurate than asking you to subjectively pick "moderately active."
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