BMR Calculator
Use our free BMR calculator to find exactly how many calories your body burns at rest. Get your metabolic age, organ energy map, 10-year BMR projection, and a full PDF report, all in one tool. No sign-up needed.
Enter your measurements for a personalised BMR, metabolic age, organ energy map, 10-year projection, and live calorie clock.
Calculate My Metabolism
6 unique metabolic insights · Live calorie clock
Organ energy map · 10-year BMR projection
Mifflin-St Jeor (Primary - most accurate)
Male: (10×kg) + (6.25×cm) – (5×age) + 5Female: (10×kg) + (6.25×cm) – (5×age) – 161
Harris-Benedict Revised (1984)
Male: 88.362 + (13.397×kg) + (4.799×cm) – (5.677×age)Female: 447.593 + (9.247×kg) + (3.098×cm) – (4.330×age)
Katch-McArdle (Lean Mass)
Estimates lean mass as ~85% of body weight when composition is unknown.BMR = 370 + (21.6 × lean mass kg)
Metabolic Age
Compares your BMR to the average BMR of a healthy population at each age (using Mifflin-St Jeor population norms). If your BMR is higher than average for your chronological age, your metabolic age is younger.
Organ Energy Map
Research-based proportions of resting metabolic rate by organ: Liver (~27%), Brain (~19%), Skeletal Muscle (~18%), Heart (~7%), Kidneys (~10%), Other (~19%). Values are scaled to your individual BMR.
BMR Fingerprint
Scores 5 metabolic axes relative to population norms: Metabolic Power (BMR vs height-matched avg), Thermic Efficiency (BMR/kg lean), Hormonal Index (age-adjusted sex-based shift), Muscle Advantage (muscle contribution estimate), and Metabolic Stability (BMR variability between formulas).
10-Year Projection
BMR naturally declines ~1–2% per decade after age 30 due to muscle mass loss. The "With Muscle" line assumes 0.5% annual BMR preservation through resistance training. Both lines use current BMR as baseline.
Opens your full metabolic report in a new tab. Set Destination → Save as PDF in the print dialog.
What Is BMR?
BMR stands for Basal Metabolic Rate. It is the number of calories your body uses in a 24-hour period while at complete rest. No eating, no moving, no digesting food. Just the basic work of keeping you alive.
That includes:
- Breathing
- Pumping blood
- Regulating body temperature
- Building and repairing cells
- Producing hormones
- Running brain function
Your BMR accounts for roughly 60 to 75 percent of all the calories you burn each day, according to research by Ravussin and Bogardus published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. That makes it the single biggest factor in your total daily calorie expenditure.
Think of it like the gas an engine burns just to stay idling. Even when your car sits in a parking lot with the engine running, it burns fuel. Your body does the same thing.
BMR vs. RMR: What Is the Difference?
Most people use the terms BMR and RMR interchangeably. They are close, but not the same thing.
BMR (Basal Metabolic Rate) gets measured under strict conditions: lying still in a darkened room, at a comfortable temperature, after at least 12 hours of fasting and full sleep. It represents the absolute minimum energy your body needs.
RMR (Resting Metabolic Rate) gets measured under more relaxed conditions. It includes the small amount of energy your body uses for digestion, sitting upright, and staying awake. RMR tends to run about 5 to 10 percent higher than true BMR.
Here is what matters practically: most online BMR calculators, including this one, actually calculate something closer to RMR. The formulas use your age, sex, height, and weight to produce a useful estimate. For daily nutrition planning, either number works as long as you apply the same activity multiplier consistently.
Why Your BMR Matters
Knowing your BMR gives you a factual starting point. Without it, calorie targets are just rough guesses.
With your BMR, you can:
- Set a real calorie target for fat loss, maintenance, or muscle gain
- Avoid eating too little: going below your BMR for long periods slows your metabolism
- Understand your metabolism relative to others your age and size
- Track metabolic changes as you age, lose weight, or build muscle
- Plan smarter, not just harder
The average BMR for men sits around 1,700 calories per day. For women, it sits around 1,400 calories per day. But these are averages. Your number depends entirely on your personal measurements.
The 3 BMR Formulas We Use (and Why They Differ)
Our BMR calculator runs three separate formulas at the same time so you get a fuller picture of your metabolism. Each formula was developed by different researchers using different population data.
Formula 1: Mifflin-St Jeor (Most Accurate, Primary)
Published in 1990 in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, the Mifflin-St Jeor equation is widely considered the most accurate formula for most people. The Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics recommends it.
| Gender | Mifflin-St Jeor Formula |
|---|---|
| Male | (10 x kg) + (6.25 x cm) - (5 x age) + 5 |
| Female | (10 x kg) + (6.25 x cm) - (5 x age) - 161 |
Example: A 30-year-old man, 80 kg, 180 cm tall. BMR = (10 x 80) + (6.25 x 180) – (5 x 30) + 5 = 800 + 1,125 – 150 + 5 = 1,780 kcal/day
Formula 2: Harris-Benedict Revised (1984)
The original Harris-Benedict equation dates back to 1919. Roza and Shizgal revised it in 1984 using updated population data. Clinicians still use it widely today.
| Gender | Harris-Benedict Formula (Revised 1984) |
|---|---|
| Male | 88.362 + (13.397 x kg) + (4.799 x cm) - (5.677 x age) |
| Female | 447.593 + (9.247 x kg) + (3.098 x cm) - (4.330 x age) |
Formula 3: Katch-McArdle (Best for Lean People)
The Katch-McArdle formula skips gender and height entirely. Instead, it uses lean body mass, your total weight minus body fat. This makes it the most accurate formula for athletes and people who know their body fat percentage.
| Step | Katch-McArdle Formula |
|---|---|
| Step 1 | Lean Mass = Weight (kg) x (1 - Body Fat %) |
| Step 2 | BMR = 370 + (21.6 x Lean Mass) |
Example: 80 kg person with 15% body fat. Lean mass = 80 x (1 – 0.15) = 68 kg BMR = 370 + (21.6 x 68) = 370 + 1,469 = 1,839 kcal/day
Our calculator shows all three results side by side. If you enter your body fat percentage, the Katch-McArdle result becomes significantly more accurate.
How Accurate Are These Formulas?
All three formulas produce estimates, not measurements. Research shows these equations carry a margin of error of roughly 10 to 15 percent in both directions. A DEXA scan or metabolic breath test gives a more precise reading, but those require lab equipment.
For practical purposes, setting calorie targets, tracking changes over time, and understanding your metabolism, these formulas are more than accurate enough. The WHO, the ACSM, and most hospital dietitians worldwide use these same formulas.
What Affects Your BMR?
Your BMR is not a fixed number. It shifts throughout your life based on several factors.
1. Body Size
The larger your body, the more cells it has to maintain. Taller, heavier people generally have higher BMRs. This holds true even when comparing people of the same age and sex.
2. Muscle Mass
This is the biggest controllable factor. Muscle tissue burns significantly more calories at rest than fat tissue, roughly 13 kcal per kilogram of muscle per day. A person with 10 kg more muscle than someone of the same weight burns an extra 130 kcal daily just sitting still.
3. Age
BMR naturally falls as you get older. Research published in Science (Pontzer et al., 2021) found that metabolic rate stays stable between ages 20 and 60, then declines at roughly 0.7 percent per year after 60. The primary reason is muscle loss, a process called sarcopenia, which begins as early as your 30s if you are not actively training.
4. Sex
Men generally have higher BMRs than women. The main reason is body composition: men carry more lean muscle mass due to higher testosterone levels. The difference averages around 200 to 300 kcal per day.
5. Hormones
Thyroid hormones are the main metabolic regulators. An underactive thyroid (hypothyroidism) can lower BMR by 10 to 15 percent. An overactive thyroid raises it. Other hormones, including cortisol, insulin, and sex hormones, also play a role, though their effects are smaller.
6. Genetics
Studies show that BMR can vary by up to 10 percent between two people of identical age, sex, weight, and body composition. Some of that variation is genetic. You cannot change your genes, but you can change everything else on this list.
7. Diet History
Severe calorie restriction, meaning eating far below your BMR for extended periods, triggers a response called metabolic adaptation or adaptive thermogenesis. Your body lowers its BMR by 10 to 20 percent to conserve energy. This is why crash diets backfire. You lose weight at first, then your metabolism slows down and weight loss stalls.
BMR and TDEE: Understanding the Difference
Your BMR tells you what your body burns at complete rest. Your TDEE (Total Daily Energy Expenditure) tells you what you actually burn across a full day, including movement, exercise, and digesting food.
| Activity Level | Description | Multiplier | Formula |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sedentary | Desk job, little or no exercise | 1.2 | BMR x 1.2 |
| Lightly Active | Light exercise 1-3 days per week | 1.375 | BMR x 1.375 |
| Moderately Active | Moderate exercise 3-5 days per week | 1.55 | BMR x 1.55 |
| Very Active | Hard exercise 6-7 days per week | 1.725 | BMR x 1.725 |
| Extra Active | Athlete or physical job plus training | 1.9 | BMR x 1.9 |
Your TDEE has three main parts:
- BMR: 60 to 75 percent (energy for basic body functions)
- NEAT and exercise: 15 to 35 percent (movement of all kinds)
- TEF (Thermic Effect of Food): about 10 percent (energy to digest food)
So if your BMR is 1,780 kcal and you are moderately active, your TDEE is: 1,780 x 1.55 = 2,759 kcal per day
That is the number of calories you need to eat each day to maintain your current weight.
The Thermic Effect of Food (TEF)
Not all calories are equal when it comes to digestion. Your body burns different amounts of energy processing different macronutrients. Nutrition scientists call this the Thermic Effect of Food (TEF).
| Macronutrient | Thermic Effect | What This Means |
|---|---|---|
| Protein | 20-30% | Of every 100 kcal of protein you eat, 20-30 kcal go toward digesting it |
| Carbohydrates | 5-10% | Moderate digestion cost, varies by fiber content |
| Fat | 0-3% | Lowest digestion cost. Your body stores dietary fat very efficiently |
The practical takeaway: eating more protein raises your calorie burn through digestion. A 200-calorie serving of chicken breast costs around 50 calories to digest. A 200-calorie serving of olive oil costs about 4 calories to digest. Same calories in, very different metabolic effect.
Where Does Your BMR Actually Go? The Organ Energy Map
Your BMR does not spread evenly across your body. Certain organs burn a disproportionately large share of your resting calories. Research by Wang et al. published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition (2010) mapped the approximate contribution of each major organ to total resting metabolism.
| Organ | % of BMR | At 1,780 kcal BMR |
|---|---|---|
| Liver | 27% | 481 kcal/day |
| Brain | 19% | 338 kcal/day |
| Skeletal Muscle | 18% | 320 kcal/day |
| Kidneys | 10% | 178 kcal/day |
| Heart | 7% | 125 kcal/day |
| Other Organs | 19% | 338 kcal/day |
Your liver is the hardest-working organ metabolically. It processes nutrients, filters blood, and produces proteins around the clock. Your brain uses nearly 20 percent of your resting calories despite making up just 2 percent of your body weight.
Skeletal muscle comes in third at 18 percent, and this is the number you can directly influence through training.
How to Use Your BMR to Reach Your Goal
Goal 1: Lose Body Fat
To lose fat, you need to eat fewer calories than your TDEE. A deficit of 500 kcal per day produces roughly 0.5 kg of fat loss per week. The WHO considers this a safe and sustainable rate.
The critical rule: Never eat below your BMR for extended periods. Going below your minimum keeps you alive but triggers metabolic adaptation. Your body lowers its BMR to compensate, and fat loss stalls.
Practical target: TDEE minus 400 to 500 kcal per day.
Goal 2: Build Muscle
Building muscle requires a calorie surplus. Research consistently shows a surplus of 200 to 300 kcal above TDEE, combined with progressive resistance training, produces meaningful muscle gain with minimal fat gain.
Practical target: TDEE plus 200 to 300 kcal per day.
Goal 3: Maintain Weight
Eat at your TDEE. It is that simple. The challenge is that TDEE estimates have a 10 to 15 percent margin of error, so you may need to adjust up or down based on 2 to 4 weeks of real-world results.
How to Increase Your BMR Naturally
1. Build Muscle Through Resistance Training
Resistance training is one of the most effective ways to support a higher resting metabolic rate over time. A landmark study in older adults found that 12 weeks of resistance training significantly increased resting metabolic rate and fat-free mass (Campbell et al., 1994). Muscle tissue requires energy to maintain, which means increasing lean body mass can modestly raise the number of calories your body burns at rest.
Action: Strength train 3 to 4 times per week using compound movements such as squats, deadlifts, rows, presses, and pull-ups. Focus on progressive overload and consistency over months, not days.
2. Eat More Protein
Protein has a thermic effect of 20 to 30 percent, far higher than carbohydrates (5 to 10 percent) or fat (0 to 3 percent). Eating more protein keeps your metabolism more active throughout the day. It also preserves muscle during a calorie deficit.
Action: Aim for 1.6 to 2.0 grams of protein per kilogram of body weight per day. Spread intake across 3 to 4 meals.
3. Avoid Severe Calorie Restriction
Eating far below your BMR tells your body that food is scarce. It responds by lowering its BMR by 10 to 20 percent, a process called adaptive thermogenesis. This is why crash diets stop working after a few weeks.
Action: Stay within 300 to 500 kcal below your TDEE. Take a diet break every 8 to 12 weeks if you are in an extended deficit.
4. Prioritize Sleep
Poor sleep disrupts the hormones that regulate metabolism, particularly growth hormone, cortisol, and insulin. Research shows that sleeping less than 6 hours per night connects to measurable reductions in resting energy expenditure. It also increases muscle breakdown and appetite.
Action: Target 7 to 9 hours of sleep per night. Consistent sleep and wake times matter as much as total duration.
What Is Metabolic Age and What Does Yours Mean?
Metabolic age compares your actual BMR to the average BMR for someone your age and sex. If your BMR matches the average for a 25-year-old but you are actually 35, your metabolic age is 25, which is 10 years younger than your chronological age.
A younger metabolic age generally means you have more lean muscle mass and better metabolic health than the average person your age. An older metabolic age suggests your metabolism runs slower than typical, usually due to lower muscle mass, a more sedentary lifestyle, or both.
Metabolic age is based on the Mifflin-St Jeor population norms and serves as a motivating benchmark. Improving your metabolic age over time means your lifestyle changes are working at a cellular level.
BMR Over Time: The 10-Year Projection
Research published in Science (Pontzer et al., 2021) confirmed that BMR does not decline much between ages 20 and 60. The primary cause of metabolic slowdown in adults is muscle loss, not aging itself.
That is actually good news. Muscle loss is preventable and partially reversible with the right training.
Our calculator shows two projections:
- Natural decline: -1.5 percent per year, what happens without deliberate intervention
- With resistance training: -0.8 percent per year, the realistic outcome for someone who trains consistently
Over 10 years, the gap between these two lines can represent 200 to 300 kcal per day. That is a meaningful difference in your metabolic health, weight management, and overall energy levels.
How to Read Your Calculator Results
When you calculate your BMR, you get several numbers. Here is what each one means:
| Result | What It Means | How to Use It |
|---|---|---|
| BMR (Mifflin) | Calories burned at complete rest | Your metabolic floor. Never eat below this long-term |
| TDEE | Total daily calorie burn including activity | Eat at this to maintain weight |
| Metabolic Age | BMR compared to population average for your age | A benchmark. Lower is better |
| Calorie Target (Lose) | TDEE minus 500 kcal | Safe fat loss rate of ~0.5 kg per week |
| Calorie Target (Gain) | TDEE plus 300 kcal | Lean muscle gain with minimal fat |
Common BMR Mistakes to Avoid
Eating below your BMR. Your BMR is the minimum your organs need to function. Eating below it consistently suppresses metabolism and causes muscle loss.
Using BMR as your calorie target. BMR does not include movement, digestion, or any activity. Always use your TDEE as the starting point for calorie planning.
Recalculating too often. Your BMR changes slowly. Recalculate every 4 to 8 weeks or after a significant change in weight (more than 5 kg) or activity level.
Treating the number as exact. All BMR formulas have a 10 to 15 percent margin of error. Use the number as a starting point, then adjust based on 2 to 4 weeks of real results.
Ignoring body composition. Two people of identical weight and height can have very different BMRs if their muscle-to-fat ratio differs. The Katch-McArdle formula, which uses lean mass, is more accurate when you know your body fat percentage.
The Bottom Line on BMR Calculator
Your BMR is the foundation of your entire energy system. Get it right and every other piece of your nutrition plan, calorie targets, meal timing, and macro splits, becomes easier to set and easier to trust.
The key things to remember:
- Your BMR is how many calories your body burns at complete rest
- TDEE is your real daily calorie need: BMR times your activity level
- Muscle mass is the biggest controllable driver of BMR
- Never eat below your BMR for extended periods
- Resistance training is the most effective long-term way to raise your metabolic rate
Use the BellyZero BMR calculator above to get your numbers. Then use those numbers to build a plan that fits how your body actually works.
Frequently Asked Questions
For informational and educational purposes only. All content on BellyZero, including articles, calculators, health tools, templates, and recipes, is intended to provide general health information. It does not constitute medical advice, a clinical diagnosis, or a substitute for professional healthcare guidance.
Results generated by BellyZero calculators and tools are estimates based on population-level formulas and standard reference ranges. They do not account for your full medical history, individual physiology, existing health conditions, or medications. Results may not apply to pregnant women, children, competitive athletes, or individuals with chronic illness.
Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before making changes to your diet, exercise routine, or health regimen based on anything found on this website. If you have symptoms or concerns about your health, seek medical attention promptly. BellyZero does not accept liability for decisions made based on content published on this site.
Written By: Vikas Arora Updated: May 2026