A maintenance calorie calculator should help you hold weight steady, plan a diet break, or set a sensible starting target. Many calculators stop after BMR and an activity multiplier. TrueTDEE keeps those pieces but adds observed intake and weight change so the answer reflects your own recent data.
This is useful because maintenance is personal. A desk worker who trains hard, a nurse who walks all day, a parent with broken sleep, and a lifter in a high-volume training block may all need different planning methods.
The role of BMR in maintenance calories
BMR is the estimated energy your body uses at rest. TrueTDEE uses the Mifflin-St Jeor equation because it is a common, practical starting point. BMR is not maintenance by itself because it excludes movement, exercise, digestion, and daily life.
The calculator combines BMR with a step-informed multiplier to create a theoretical TDEE. That number is useful context, but the observed estimate from intake and weight trend carries more weight in the final result.
Using maintenance calories in practice
Once you have a maintenance estimate, choose a simple test. Hold calories near the number for a few weeks and keep steps reasonably consistent. If trend weight stays stable, the estimate is working. If weight moves consistently, adjust by 100 to 200 kcal and test again.
Maintenance is especially useful after dieting. It can provide structure while hunger, training performance, and daily energy normalize. A realistic maintenance target can also prevent accidental weight regain from jumping from a diet target to an untested number.
Why the length of your data matters
TrueTDEE rewards better data because body weight is noisy. A seven day period can be pushed around by a salty restaurant meal, a hard training session, a long flight, alcohol, illness, menstrual cycle changes, extra carbohydrate, or a missed weigh-in. Those changes can move scale weight without meaningfully changing body fat. That is why the calculator displays a visible confidence score instead of pretending every estimate is equally precise.
Four weeks is the recommended minimum because a 28 day trend gives enough time for many short-term fluctuations to average out. Sixty days is stronger, and ninety days is the best representation of normal life for most people. Longer periods also make tracking errors less powerful. One unusual weekend can dominate a seven day estimate, but it has much less influence across two or three months.
How TrueTDEE uses your real-world data
The calculator starts with BMR from the Mifflin-St Jeor equation and builds a theoretical TDEE from your step-based activity level. It then calculates observed maintenance calories from average intake and body weight change. If weight went down, your body was in an energy deficit, so maintenance is estimated above your logged intake. If weight went up, maintenance is estimated below your logged intake. The model assumes about 7,700 kcal per kilogram of body weight change.
The final TrueTDEE estimate weights observed data more heavily than theory. Wearable data can help explain activity patterns, but device calorie numbers are still estimates. For that reason, Apple Watch, Garmin, Fitbit, Samsung Health, and other wearable values are treated as comparison signals rather than the main answer.
Finding useful data in fitness apps
For Apple Health or Apple Watch, look for active energy, resting energy, steps, workouts, and weight trends over the same date range as your food log. For Garmin Connect, use calories, resting calories, active calories, steps, intensity minutes, and weight reports. For Fitbit, review calories burned, steps, exercise minutes, and weight history. For Samsung Health, use daily activity, exercise time, steps, calories burned, and weight entries.
The important part is consistency. Match the same start and end dates across food, weight, steps, and wearable averages. If a device was not worn for several days, leave wearable fields blank or choose a longer period. The calculator still works without wearable data because the weight trend and calorie intake are the strongest inputs.
Safety and responsible use
This tool provides educational information only and does not provide medical advice. Results are estimates and may be inaccurate, especially when calorie tracking is inconsistent or weight changes are affected by water, medication, illness, travel, or major lifestyle changes. Consult a qualified health professional for medical or dietary advice.
TrueTDEE does not recommend aggressive calorie deficits and protects calorie targets from falling below generally accepted minimums. If the calculator output conflicts with medical guidance, symptoms, performance, hunger, or mental health, treat those signals as more important than the number on the screen.
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FAQ
Does BMR equal maintenance calories?
No. BMR estimates resting needs. Maintenance calories include BMR plus daily movement, exercise, digestion, and other activity.
How often should I recalculate maintenance?
Recalculate after major weight changes, routine changes, training changes, or when your trend weight no longer matches the expected result.
Is TrueTDEE more accurate than a standard TDEE calculator?
It can be more useful when your calorie intake and weight data are consistent because it uses observed weight change instead of only a generic activity multiplier. The estimate still depends on the quality and length of your data.
Why is 28 days recommended?
Twenty-eight days gives short-term water weight changes more time to average out. Seven days can still be useful, but it is much more affected by sodium, travel, alcohol, hard workouts, illness, and glycogen changes.
Does TrueTDEE store my health data?
No. The calculator runs in your browser, requires no account, has no database, and does not upload files. You enter summary averages and the result is calculated on the client side.
Can I use wearable calorie estimates as my TDEE?
Wearable estimates are useful context, but they can overestimate or underestimate calorie burn. TrueTDEE compares device estimates with your observed intake and weight trend instead of trusting the device number alone.
What if my result seems too high or too low?
Check whether the date ranges match, whether weight entries reflect trend weight rather than one unusual weigh-in, and whether calorie tracking included weekends, drinks, sauces, snacks, and restaurant meals. Extending the data window usually improves confidence.
