What Is TDEE? Total Daily Energy Expenditure Explained

Updated March 2026 · 8 min read

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TDEE stands for Total Daily Energy Expenditure. It is the total number of calories your body burns in a 24-hour period, accounting for everything from breathing and digestion to exercise and walking around. Knowing your TDEE is the single most useful number for managing your weight, whether your goal is fat loss, muscle gain, or maintenance.

BMR vs. TDEE: What Is the Difference?

Your Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR) is the number of calories your body needs just to keep you alive at complete rest—heart beating, lungs breathing, cells dividing. For most people, BMR accounts for 60–75% of total daily calorie burn.

TDEE builds on BMR by adding the calories you burn through daily activity and exercise. The relationship is simple:

TDEE = BMR × Activity Multiplier

You can calculate your BMR using the BMR calculator, then multiply by the appropriate activity factor to get your TDEE.

The Four Components of TDEE

Your total daily calorie expenditure is made up of four components:

  1. BMR (60–75%) — Calories burned at complete rest. Determined largely by body size, age, sex, and genetics.
  2. TEF — Thermic Effect of Food (8–15%) — Energy used to digest, absorb, and metabolize food. Protein has the highest thermic effect (~20–30%), followed by carbs (~5–10%), then fat (~0–3%).
  3. EAT — Exercise Activity Thermogenesis (5–15%) — Calories burned through intentional exercise like running, lifting weights, or cycling.
  4. NEAT — Non-Exercise Activity Thermogenesis (10–20%) — Calories burned through all other movement: walking, fidgeting, standing, household chores. NEAT varies enormously between individuals and is often the biggest difference between "fast" and "slow" metabolisms.

Activity Level Multipliers

The most widely used system multiplies your BMR by a factor based on how active you are. These multipliers come from the Harris-Benedict and Katch-McArdle research:

Activity Level Multiplier Description
Sedentary1.2Desk job, little or no exercise
Lightly Active1.375Light exercise 1–3 days/week
Moderately Active1.55Moderate exercise 3–5 days/week
Very Active1.725Hard exercise 6–7 days/week
Extra Active1.9Very hard exercise + physical job, or training twice per day

Worked Example

Consider a 30-year-old male, 5'10" (178 cm), 180 lbs (82 kg), who exercises moderately 4 days per week.

Step 1: Calculate BMR (Mifflin-St Jeor equation)

BMR = (10 × 82) + (6.25 × 178) − (5 × 30) − 5

BMR = 820 + 1,112.5 − 150 − 5 = 1,778 calories/day

Step 2: Apply Activity Multiplier

TDEE = 1,778 × 1.55 (moderately active)

TDEE = 2,756 calories/day

This person burns approximately 2,756 calories per day. To maintain weight, they should eat around that amount. To lose weight, they need to eat less; to gain weight, more.

How to Use TDEE for Weight Loss

Weight loss requires a caloric deficit—eating fewer calories than your TDEE. Here is how different deficit sizes translate to fat loss:

For the person above with a TDEE of 2,756:

Use the calorie calculator to get a personalized daily target, or the macro calculator to break that target into protein, carbs, and fat.

How to Use TDEE for Muscle Gain

Building muscle requires a caloric surplus—eating more than your TDEE—combined with resistance training and adequate protein intake (0.7–1 g per pound of body weight).

For our example person: a lean bulk would mean eating 2,956–3,056 calories per day with at least 126–180 g of protein.

Common Mistakes When Estimating TDEE

  1. Overestimating activity level. Most people are less active than they think. If you exercise 3 times a week but have a desk job, "Lightly Active" is usually more accurate than "Moderately Active."
  2. Not tracking food accurately. Studies show people underestimate calorie intake by 30–50% on average. Use a food scale for the first few weeks.
  3. Ignoring metabolic adaptation. As you lose weight, your BMR decreases. Recalculate TDEE every 10–15 lbs lost.
  4. Treating TDEE as exact. TDEE is an estimate. Use it as a starting point, then adjust based on real-world results over 2–4 weeks.

How Often Should You Recalculate?

Recalculate your TDEE whenever your weight changes by 10+ lbs, your activity level changes significantly, or your weight-loss progress stalls for more than 2–3 weeks. The TDEE calculator makes this quick and easy.

Key Takeaways

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Related tools: TDEE Calculator · BMR Calculator · Calorie Calculator · Macro Calculator