Most adults burn roughly 1,600–3,000 calories per day, with body size and activity setting the pace.
Sedentary Day
Moderately Active
Active Day
Calorie Cut (−300 to −500/day)
- Slow, steady rate
- Keep protein 1.6–2.2 g/kg
- Train 2–4 days/wk
Weight loss
Maintenance
- Hold weight steady
- Match intake to TDEE
- Track weekly trend
Steady state
Lean Gain (+200 to +300/day)
- Lift 3–5 days/wk
- Aim for sleep 7–9 h
- Small surplus only
Muscle gain
How Daily Energy Burn Works
Your body spends energy all day, not just during a workout. Add four streams together to get your total daily energy expenditure, or TDEE. Those streams are resting metabolism, everyday movement, planned exercise, and the energy used to digest food.
Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR)
BMR is the baseline burn that keeps you alive while resting. It runs your brain, heart, lungs, and more. For many adults, BMR covers the biggest slice of daily burn.
Non-Exercise Activity (NEAT)
NEAT is the energy you use while living life. Walking to the bus, standing at a counter, cleaning, fidgeting, and yard work fall here. Small choices stack up across the day.
Exercise Activity
This is planned training. Running, rowing, strength work, sports. Minutes, intensity, and body weight drive the burn.
Thermic Effect Of Food (TEF)
Digesting food takes energy too. Protein costs the most, carbs sit in the middle, fat costs the least. TEF is a smaller share of the pie, yet it still counts.
Daily Burn Ranges By Body Size And Day Type
| Profile | Sedentary Day (kcal) | Active Day (kcal) |
|---|---|---|
| Smaller adult (55–60 kg) | 1,600–1,900 | 2,200–2,600 |
| Mid-size adult (70–75 kg) | 1,900–2,200 | 2,500–2,900 |
| Larger adult (85–90 kg) | 2,100–2,400 | 2,800–3,200 |
| Very active worker or athlete | — | 3,000+ (varies) |
How Many Calories Do You Burn In A Day?
There’s no single number that fits everyone. Two tools can get you close. First, an equation based on height, weight, age, and sex. Second, an activity layer that scales the estimate for your day.
If you want a fast answer with math done for you, try the NIH Body Weight Planner. It blends calorie intake and activity to project change over time. You can also match your workouts to the CDC intensity levels so your picks line up with your estimate.
Step-By-Step Quick Method
- Pick your stats: height, weight, age, and sex.
- Estimate resting burn with a trusted calculator.
- Select a day type: sedentary, light, moderate, or active.
- Multiply the resting burn by the day type to get a first pass at TDEE.
- Adjust with a short test week and track scale trend and waist changes.
Wearables can help but they tend to drift. Treat any single day as noisy data. A weekly average paints a better picture.
What Shifts Your Daily Burn
Body Size And Composition
Larger bodies burn more energy. Muscle raises resting burn a bit, and it helps you train harder, which raises total burn more.
Age
Calorie needs usually drop with age. Part of that comes from lower activity and changes in muscle.
Sex
At the same height and weight, men often burn more than women. That gap comes mostly from lean mass and hormone differences.
Sleep And Stress Load
Short sleep and high stress can cut training drive and daily movement. That trims NEAT and total burn.
Climate And Job Pattern
Heat, cold, and physical jobs can raise energy use. Desk days often lower it.
Practical Ways To Raise Daily Burn
You don’t need long workouts to move the needle. Short bursts across the day work well.
Walks And Errands
Brisk walking adds up fast. Ten minutes here and there can lift your total by a nice margin over a week.
Strength Micro-Sets
Push-ups, air squats, or a few kettlebell swings raise energy use and build muscle over time. Muscle helps with the next session too.
Stand And Fidget Breaks
Set a timer every hour. Stand, stretch, and do a lap. It keeps NEAT alive during long desk blocks.
Active Play
Pick sports and games you enjoy. Fun beats perfect plans because you’ll stick with it.
Sample Calorie Burns For Common Activities
The numbers below use a 70-kg adult as a simple baseline. Actual burn varies with speed, grade, technique, and fitness.
| Activity (10 min) | Intensity | Calories |
|---|---|---|
| Brisk walk (5–6 km/h) | Moderate | 40–60 |
| Jog (8–9 km/h) | Vigorous | 90–120 |
| Cycle (16–20 km/h) | Moderate | 70–100 |
| Jump rope | Vigorous | 110–150 |
| Bodyweight circuit | Moderate | 60–90 |
| Rowing machine | Moderate–Vigorous | 80–120 |
| Yard work | Light–Moderate | 40–70 |
| Stairs (up & down) | Moderate | 50–80 |
Tracking Methods And Pitfalls
Food labels and device readouts carry error. Apps and watches give ballpark figures, not lab values. Use trends, not single days.
Wearables
Step counts are handy for NEAT goals. Heart-rate based estimates during steady cardio are closer than during lifting.
Food Tracking
Portion sizes drift. Weigh key items for a week if you want a tighter picture. Then return to plate-based cues.
Weekly Review
Pick a weigh-in window and use the same scale. Pair it with tape-measure checks. Match the trend to your intake notes and adjust.
Set A Daily Target And Adjust
Pick a starting target based on your calculator or planner. Hold that level for two weeks. If weight drifts up, trim a small slice. If weight drops too fast, add a small slice. Keep protein steady, stay active, and carry on.