Building the Perfect Diet: Nutrition, Meal Planning & Sustainable Eating

Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR) & Total Daily Energy Expenditure (TDEE)

 

Why This Matters

 

If calories are the foundation of nutrition, then BMR and TDEE are how you personalise them.

They help answer one key question:

How many calories does your body actually need each day?

Understanding this allows you to:

  • Lose weight effectively
  • Gain muscle without excessive fat
  • Maintain your results long term

 


What Is Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR)?

Your Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR) is the number of calories your body needs to function at complete rest.

This includes basic life functions such as:

  • Breathing
  • Heartbeat
  • Brain activity
  • Cell repair
  • Temperature regulation

 BMR is the minimum energy your body needs to stay alive.

 


Key Insight

BMR typically accounts for 60–70% of the calories you burn each day.

That means most of your energy use happens without exercise.

 


What Affects Your BMR?

Several factors influence your BMR:

  • Body size → Larger bodies require more energy
  • Muscle mass → More muscle = higher BMR
  • Age → BMR generally decreases with age
  • Gender → Males often have a higher BMR due to more muscle mass
  • Genetics → Natural variation between individuals

 


What Is Total Daily Energy Expenditure (TDEE)?

Your Total Daily Energy Expenditure (TDEE) is the total number of calories you burn in a full day.

It includes:

 

1. BMR (Resting Energy)

Your baseline energy needs

2. Physical Activity

  • Exercise (gym, sports)
  • Daily movement (walking, work, chores)

3. Thermic Effect of Food (TEF)

Energy used to digest and process food

 


 TDEE = BMR + Activity + Digestion


 

Estimating Your TDEE

A simple way to estimate TDEE is:

 

Step 1: Calculate BMR

(Using an online calculator or formula)

 

Step 2: Multiply by Activity Level

Activity Level Description Multiplier
Sedentary Little to no exercise 1.2
Lightly active Light exercise (1–3 days/week) 1.375
Moderately active Moderate exercise (3–5 days/week) 1.55
Very active Hard exercise (6–7 days/week) 1.725
Extremely active Intense training or physical job 1.9

 

TDEE = BMR × Activity Multiplier

 


How to Use TDEE for Your Goals

Once you estimate your TDEE, you can adjust your calorie intake based on your goal:

For Weight Loss (Fat Loss)

  • Eat below your TDEE
  • Typical deficit: 300–500 calories/day

 


For Weight Maintenance

  • Eat around your TDEE
  • Maintain current weight

 


For Muscle Gain

  • Eat above your TDEE
  • Typical surplus: 200–400 calories/day

 


Important: TDEE Is an Estimate

Your calculated TDEE is a starting point, not a perfect number.

Everyone’s body is different.

The best approach:

  1. Start with your estimate
  2. Track your progress (weight, energy, performance)
  3. Adjust as needed

 


Common Mistakes to Avoid

 Relying on numbers without adjusting

Your body may respond differently—always monitor and adapt.

 


 Overestimating activity level

Many people assume they are more active than they actually are.

 


 Eating too little

Going too far below your TDEE can:

  • Reduce energy
  • Increase hunger
  • Make results harder to sustain

 


 Ignoring consistency

Daily fluctuations don’t matter—long-term trends do.

 


A Simple Way to Think About It

  • BMR = what your body needs at rest
  • TDEE = what your body needs in real life

 BMR is your baseline
 TDEE is your reality

 


The Big Picture

Understanding BMR and TDEE gives you control.

Instead of guessing or following generic diets, you can:

  • Estimate your needs
  • Adjust for your goals
  • Build a personalised plan

 


Key Takeaway

  • BMR = calories your body needs to survive
  • TDEE = calories your body uses each day

Use TDEE as your guide:

  • Eat less → lose weight
  • Eat more → gain weight
  • Eat the same → maintain