How Many Calories Are Recommended For A Teenager? | Fast Facts Now

Teen calorie needs land between about 1,600 and 3,200 kcal per day, based on age, sex, and daily activity.

Recommended Calories For Teens: Quick Benchmarks

Calories power growth, school, sports, and recovery. Needs swing with movement and age. Younger teens and girls sit toward the lower bands. Older boys in sports sit toward the higher bands. The ranges below come from Table A2-2 in the current Dietary Guidelines for Americans and mirror three activity bands: sedentary, moderately active, and active.

Use this as a starting point, then fine-tune based on weight trend, hunger cues, and season of sport. For a closer look at the reference bands, see the federal Dietary Guidelines Appendix 2.

Teen Calorie Needs By Age And Activity

Daily calories by age (Sedentary / Moderate / Active)
Age (years) Girls (kcal) Boys (kcal)
13 1,600 / 2,000 / 2,200 2,000 / 2,200 / 2,600
14 1,800 / 2,000 / 2,400 2,000 / 2,400 / 2,800
15 1,800 / 2,000 / 2,400 2,200 / 2,600 / 3,000
16 1,800 / 2,000 / 2,400 2,400 / 2,800 / 3,200
17 1,800 / 2,000 / 2,400 2,400 / 2,800 / 3,200
18 1,800 / 2,000 / 2,400 2,400 / 2,800 / 3,200

Those bands assume nutrient-dense meals and snacks. A teen who adds more steps, practice time, or manual work will drift upward within a band or into the next one. A teen who sits more may land at the lower end.

How To Pick The Right Band

Start simple. Match the usual day to the closest activity band, then watch what happens over the next two to three weeks.

Check Daily Movement

Sedentary means daily living only. Moderately active means the day includes walking about 1.5–3 miles at 3–4 mph on top of daily living. Active means more than 3 miles at that pace or a sport that adds similar output. These descriptions come from the same Dietary Guidelines table noted above.

Scan Growth And Appetite

Teens grow in spurts. Hunger often ramps up right before height jumps. When meals feel too small and energy dips, shift toward the next band.

Watch The Trend

Hold a steady pattern for 2–3 weeks. If weight drops and energy lags, move up. If weight rises fast and energy stays low, move down a bit within the current band.

Match Sport Days

Game and practice days need extra carbs and fluids. Off days can slide to the lower end of the chosen range. Teens ages 6–17 also benefit from at least 60 minutes of daily activity; see the CDC guidance for ideas that fit busy schedules.

Build A Plate That Fits The Target

Once a daily band is set, build plates that hit the mark with simple ratios: half produce; one quarter grains or starchy foods; one quarter protein foods; plus dairy or a fortified alternative. Add healthy fats during cooking or at the table. This pattern scales up or down across the calorie bands.

1,800 kcal Day (Often Right For Many Girls Or Rest Days)

Breakfast: Oats with milk, banana, and peanut butter. Lunch: Rice bowl with chicken, mixed veggies, and yogurt. Snack: Apple and cheese. Dinner: Chapati or bread, lentils or beans, roasted veggies, and salad. Snack: Cocoa milk or a smoothie.

2,400 kcal Day (Common For Active Girls And Many Boys)

Breakfast: Eggs, toast, berries, and milk. Lunch: Wrap with tuna or paneer, avocado, and greens; side fruit. Snack: Nuts and dried fruit. Dinner: Rice or pasta with meat or tofu, tomato sauce, veggies, and grated cheese. Snack: Yogurt with honey and granola.

3,000 kcal Day (Active Boys Or Heavy Training)

Breakfast: Paratha or bagel with eggs, fruit, and milk. Lunch: Burrito or rice plate with beans, chicken, peppers, and salsa. Snack: Smoothie with milk, oats, banana, and peanut butter. Dinner: Basmati rice or potatoes with salmon or chickpeas, veggies, and yogurt sauce. Snack: Trail mix.

Protein, Carbs, Fats, And Fluids

Protein Made Simple

Include a palm-size protein food at each meal. Eggs, dairy, fish, poultry, beans, tofu, and lentils all work. Spread protein across the day for better recovery.

Carbs That Fuel

Pair grains and starchy foods with fruit or milk around practices. Add extra carbs on long practice or game days. Pick whole grains often.

Fats That Satisfy

Cook with olive, canola, or soybean oil. Add nuts, seeds, and avocado for staying power.

Hydration Matters

Milk or water at meals. Water bottles at school and practice. Sports drinks fit long, hot sessions; water covers most days.

Everyday Habits That Support The Range

  • Regular meals: Three meals plus one or two snacks steadies energy.
  • Fiber first: Fruit or veg at every meal keeps digestion on track.
  • Snack smart: Yogurt, fruit, nuts, sandwiches, eggs, or leftovers beat chips alone.
  • Sleep: Aim for 8–10 hours; better sleep often leads to steadier hunger.

Activity Ideas And Approximate Energy Use

Movement changes daily needs. The estimates below use 30-minute figures from Harvard Health’s activity table and show a rough span across lighter and heavier bodies. Teens who weigh less land near the lower number; teens who weigh more sit near the higher number. Double the numbers for 60 minutes of the same activity.

Common activities and estimated calories used
Activity Time Approx. kcal
Brisk walk (3.5 mph) 30 minutes ~110–160
Soccer practice 60 minutes ~420–590
Rope jumping 30 minutes ~225–335
Basketball game 30 minutes ~240–336

These are estimates, not assignments. The target is to move daily and mix aerobic, muscle, and bone-loading work across the week. The CDC suggests at least 60 minutes each day for ages 6–17, with muscle and bone work on 3 days per week.

Troubleshooting Common Scenarios

Energy Crash After School

Add a bigger lunch and a carb-plus-protein snack at pickup. Sandwich, yogurt with fruit, or rice and beans all fit. Many teens under-eat earlier in the day and then hit a wall by late afternoon.

Late-Night Snacking

Make dinner more filling with an extra serving of rice, pasta, or potatoes plus protein and veg. Keep a planned snack like milk and cereal or fruit and yogurt. Random grazing fades when dinner and a set snack are both strong.

Busy Sports Schedule

Pack doubles: two sandwiches, extra fruit, milk, yogurt drinks, and trail mix. Add a post-practice snack even when dinner is close. Training days often need a bump inside the same calorie band.

Weight Gain During Off-Season

Shift to the lower end of the current band. Swap one sugary drink for water, and add a daily walk with a friend. Small steps work well and keep energy steady.

When Bands Need A Custom Fit

Each teen is different. Height, weight, sleep, training load, and health shape needs. If growth is off-track or eating feels stressful, speak with a pediatric clinician or a registered dietitian who works with teens and families.