Maintenance calories equal your daily energy use from BMR plus activity; most adults fall near 1,600–3,000 kcal/day.
Sedentary
Moderately Active
Active
Maintain (±0 kcal)
- Match intake to TDEE
- Protein at each meal
- 3–5 active days/week
Steady
Gentle Cut (−300 kcal)
- Small calorie deficit
- Prioritize lean foods
- 2–3 strength sessions
Slow Loss
Lean Gain (+250–400 kcal)
- Slight surplus
- Lift heavy, recover
- Protein & carbs
Muscle
What Maintenance Calories Actually Mean
Your body burns energy all day to run vital systems and to move. The quiet burn is your basal or resting metabolic rate (BMR/RMR). On top of that sits everything you do: steps, chores, training, and fidgeting. Add those parts and you get total daily energy expenditure (TDEE). Match intake to TDEE and weight holds steady. Eat more and you trend up. Eat less and you trend down. Simple math, but the inputs change across people and across time.
The go-to way to estimate that quiet burn is the Mifflin–St Jeor equation, which uses weight, height, age, and sex to predict resting energy use. It tracks well for many adults and gives a solid starting point for planning.
Why The Range Is Wide
Two people the same height can differ by a thousand daily calories once you weigh in age, muscle, step count, and job demands. A petite, older office worker who drives everywhere may sit near the lower band. A larger, younger warehouse picker who lifts all day can sit near the top band. Hormones, sleep, and medications can nudge appetite and activity, too. This is why tables give ranges and why real-world tracking matters.
Estimated Calories To Maintain Weight (Adults)
The ranges below come from national guidance and reflect weight-stable intake for many healthy adults. Use them as a map, then personalize.
| Age Band | Women (Sedentary → Active) | Men (Sedentary → Active) |
|---|---|---|
| 19–30 | 1,800–2,400 kcal | 2,400–3,000 kcal |
| 31–50 | 1,800–2,200 kcal | 2,200–3,000 kcal |
| 51+ | 1,600–2,200 kcal | 2,000–2,800 kcal |
See the Dietary Guidelines calorie tables for full age/sex detail.
A Practical Way To Find Your Number
You don’t need a lab. You need a decent estimate, a short test period, and small, steady tweaks. Here’s a simple path that respects both math and real life.
Step 1: Calculate Resting Burn
Use Mifflin–St Jeor as your base:
Men: 10×weight(kg) + 6.25×height(cm) − 5×age(y) + 5
Women: 10×weight(kg) + 6.25×height(cm) − 5×age(y) − 161
The result is your resting calories per day. It won’t be perfect, but it’s close enough to start.
Step 2: Add An Activity Factor
Multiply your resting number by an activity factor that reflects most days:
- Sedentary: ×1.2 (desk work, minimal steps)
- Light: ×1.375 (some walking or easy training)
- Moderate: ×1.55 (30–60 min brisk movement)
- Very Active: ×1.725 (60–120 min hard training or labor)
- Extra: ×1.9 (multiple hard sessions or heavy labor)
You now have a working TDEE. That’s your first pass at maintenance.
Step 3: Watch The Scale, Then Tweak
Weigh under the same conditions three mornings per week. Average them. Hold calories and routine steady for two to four weeks. If weight drifts up, drop 150–300 kcal. If it drifts down, add 150–300 kcal. Keep protein and fiber steady so appetite doesn’t swing wildly while you test.
Prefer a tool? The NIH Body Weight Planner models weight change over time and gives a maintenance target you can compare with your math.
How Many Calories To Maintain Your Current Weight: Smart Ranges
Below are quick bands matched to common patterns. If you land between sizes or split days between desk work and training, lean toward the middle and test.
Office Worker, Light Movement
You sit most of the day, fit in some steps, and train once or twice per week. Many see maintenance near 1,600–2,000 kcal (women) or 2,100–2,600 kcal (men), shifting higher with more muscle or taller frames. A daily 20–30 minute walk can widen your eating room without weight creep. Regular activity also helps keep weight steady after loss.
Active Job Or Daily Training
Your shift includes lifting, walking, or you train most days. Maintenance often sits around 2,100–2,600 kcal (women) or 2,700–3,000+ kcal (men). Meals need staying power: lean proteins, starchy carbs around training, and fluids. On rest days, hold protein steady and scale carbs to appetite and step count.
Petite Or Older Adult
Size and age lower resting burn. Many feel best near 1,600–2,000 kcal while keeping protein up and moving daily. Short strength sessions protect muscle, which supports calorie use and mobility. A small bump in steps can offset a modest meal out without scale swings.
Taller, Younger, Or Very Muscular
Height, mass, and training load push needs up. It’s common to land at 2,400–3,000+ kcal. Track for a few weeks, then raise or lower in small steps until weight steadies. If hunger stays high on paper maintenance, check sleep, fluids, and fiber before adding calories.
Simple Tuning Table
Use recent scale trends to adjust intake without guesswork. Pair this with stable training and similar step counts while you test.
| Weekly Weight Change | What It Suggests | Adjust Calories By |
|---|---|---|
| +0.25 to +0.5 kg | Above maintenance | −150 to −300 kcal/day |
| −0.25 to −0.5 kg | Below maintenance | +150 to +300 kcal/day |
| Within ±0.1 kg | Near maintenance | Hold steady |
Common Mistakes That Skew The Math
Guessing Portion Sizes: A “tablespoon” of peanut butter easily becomes two. Weigh a few staples for a week to recalibrate your eye.
Changing Two Things At Once: If you add a new workout plan and cut calories on the same day, you won’t know which lever moved the scale.
Under-Counting Drinks: Lattes, juices, and sugary sodas add up fast. Swapping one 12-ounce soda to water saves about 140 kcal. Do that daily and the weekly swing is large.
Weekend Amnesia: Consistency across the week matters. A big Saturday can erase a tidy weekday average.
Low Step Days: A quiet Sunday can drop burn by a few hundred calories. A walk brings activity back to baseline.
How Nutrition Patterns Support Maintenance
Calories are the dial, and food quality keeps the dial steady. Lean proteins, fiber-rich carbs, and unsaturated fats help with fullness and training recovery. Spreading protein across meals works well for many. Hydration smooths appetite cues, and a regular sleep window keeps hunger hormones from swinging wildly.
When Your Needs Change
New job? New training block? Weight up or down by more than a few kilos? Re-run your estimate, pick the closest activity factor, and test again for two to four weeks. For another data point, try the NIH planner alongside your calculation and let real-world weight trends be the judge.
Bring It Together
Start with an evidence-based estimate, match intake to activity, and track a short window. Adjust in small steps until the scale holds steady. If you want a quick reference, the national tables place many adults between 1,600 and 3,000 kcal per day, with height, weight, age, and movement setting your spot on that line. That blend of math plus feedback keeps maintenance simple and sustainable.