Macro Calculator for Fat Loss
Find your personalised daily protein, carbohydrate and fat targets for fat loss, calculated from your TDEE using science-backed guidelines from the International Society of Sports Nutrition.
- Home
- Calculators
- Macro Calculator for Fat Loss
QUICK ANSWER
Macros are the three main energy-providing nutrients: protein, carbohydrates and fat. For fat loss, research supports a protein intake of 0.7 to 1 gram per pound of bodyweight per day, with the remaining calories split between carbohydrates and fat according to personal preference and training demands. The exact ratio matters less than total calorie intake and hitting your protein target consistently.
Macro Calculator for Fat Loss
Enter your stats to get your personalised daily protein, carbohydrate and fat targets for fat loss.
Your current weight right now.
Used to calculate your TDEE accurately.
Affects your Basal Metabolic Rate calculation.
Required for Mifflin-St Jeor BMR formula.
Choose the level that best describes your typical week.
How aggressive a deficit do you want? A 20% deficit is a good starting point for most people.
20% deficit
5% โ Very gentle
15% โ Moderate
25% โ Aggressive
30% โ Very aggressive
Please fill in all fields before calculating.
Your Daily Macro Targets
How to Use Your Macro Results
The calculator gives you three daily targets: grams of protein, grams of carbohydrates and grams of fat. Here is how to think about each one. Your protein target is the most important number. Protein does three things during a fat loss phase: it provides the amino acids your muscles need to maintain themselves while in a calorie deficit, it keeps you feeling fuller for longer because it has a higher satiety effect than carbohydrates or fat, and it has a higher thermic effect, meaning your body uses more energy to digest it. Missing your protein target consistently is the single most common reason people lose muscle alongside fat. Your carbohydrate target fuels your training and daily activity. Carbohydrates are your body’s preferred fuel source for moderate to high intensity exercise. Eating too few can make training feel harder, reduce performance and increase fatigue. The calculator sets your carb target to support your activity level while keeping overall calories at your fat loss goal. Your fat target covers the remaining calories. Dietary fat supports hormone production, fat-soluble vitamin absorption and satiety. It should not be cut too low. Research suggests keeping dietary fat above 0.3 grams per pound of bodyweight to maintain hormonal health, particularly testosterone, which plays a role in muscle maintenance during a cut. Hitting your macro targets does not require perfection. Research from the ISSN suggests that being within 5 to 10 percent of your targets across the week produces essentially the same results as hitting them exactly every day. Focus on consistency over precision.
What Are Macros and
Why Do They Matter for Fat Loss?
Macros is short for macronutrients. The three macronutrients are protein, carbohydrates and fat. They are called macro because they are the nutrients your body needs in large amounts, as opposed to micronutrients like vitamins and minerals which are needed in smaller quantities. Every calorie you consume comes from one or more of these three macronutrients. Protein provides 4 calories per gram, carbohydrates provide 4 calories per gram, and fat provides 9 calories per gram. Alcohol provides 7 calories per gram but is not a macronutrient in the traditional sense because it has no nutritional function. The reason macros matter for fat loss is that the ratio of protein, carbohydrates and fat in your diet affects not just how much weight you lose, but what kind of weight you lose. Two people eating the same number of calories but different macro splits can have meaningfully different outcomes in terms of how much of their weight loss comes from fat versus muscle. Tracking macros is sometimes called flexible dieting or IIFYM (If It Fits Your Macros). The core principle is that the source of your macros matters less than the total amounts, which gives people more flexibility in food choices while still making progress toward their goals.
Common Macro Splits for Fat Loss
The table below shows common macro distributions used for fat loss. Your calculator result is based on the moderate approach, which is well-supported by research. All three approaches can produce fat loss when calories are appropriately set.
| Approach | Protein | Carbohydrates | Fat | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Conservative | 25 to 30% | 40 to 50% | 25 to 30% | Active people who train 4 or more days per week |
| Moderate (default) | 30 to 35% | 35 to 45% | 25 to 30% | Most people with a fat loss goal and regular training |
| High protein | 35 to 40% | 30 to 40% | 20 to 25% | Experienced lifters preserving maximum muscle during a cut |
| Lower carb | 30 to 35% | 20 to 30% | 35 to 45% | People who prefer lower carb eating or are less active |