Fat Loss CalculatorStart Now

A fat loss calculator estimates your daily calorie target and the weekly pace needed to reach your goal, so you know how much to eat and what a realistic timeline looks like.

Creator profile
Creator
Kody Abberton
Fitness coach focused on practical, data-driven weight loss plans with clear daily calorie targets.
Last updated February 4, 2026

Quick summary

This fat loss calculator estimates daily calories and expected weekly progress for a target goal. The page includes a timeline chart, formulas, examples, FAQs, and references for realistic planning.

Table of contents

Fat Loss Calculator

This fat loss calculator uses your age, sex, height, weight, and activity level to estimate maintenance calories, then applies your preferred weekly loss rate to set a daily calorie target. If you have not calculated maintenance before, start with the TDEE calculator for weight loss and return here to translate it into a weekly plan. The results show both pounds and kilograms so you can track progress in any unit.

A steady weekly rate keeps hunger and energy levels manageable. Many people begin around 0.5-1.0 lb (0.2-0.5 kg) per week and adjust after two to three weeks of consistent tracking. If you need help dialing in a specific calorie gap, the calorie deficit calculator is a helpful companion.

Calculator

Estimate your daily calories for fat loss using your stats and target weekly pace. The results include a timeline showing expected progress.

Maintenance calories2042 kcal/day
Daily calorie deficit499 kcal/day
Fat loss target1543 kcal/day
Weekly loss pace1.00 lb/week | 0.45 kg/week
Fat loss timeline
WeekTotal lossExpected weight
2 weeks2.0 lb | 0.9 kg163.0 lb | 73.9 kg
4 weeks4.0 lb | 1.8 kg161.0 lb | 73.0 kg
8 weeks8.0 lb | 3.6 kg157.0 lb | 71.2 kg
12 weeks12.0 lb | 5.4 kg153.0 lb | 69.4 kg
16 weeks16.0 lb | 7.3 kg149.0 lb | 67.6 kg

Fat loss timeline chart

The chart below shows an example timeline using a 1 lb (0.45 kg) per week pace starting at 180 lb (81.6 kg). Use it as a reference, then personalize the timeline in the calculator above.

WeekTotal lossExpected weight
4 weeks4.0 lb | 1.8 kg176.0 lb | 79.8 kg
8 weeks8.0 lb | 3.6 kg172.0 lb | 78.0 kg
12 weeks12.0 lb | 5.4 kg168.0 lb | 76.2 kg
16 weeks16.0 lb | 7.3 kg164.0 lb | 74.4 kg

Fat loss formula

We estimate basal metabolic rate (BMR) with the Mifflin-St Jeor formula, then multiply by an activity factor to get maintenance calories (TDEE). Your weekly fat loss goal converts to a daily calorie deficit, which is subtracted from maintenance to set a target.

Female BMR = 10 × weight (kg) + 6.25 × height (cm) − 5 × age − 161
Male BMR = 10 × weight (kg) + 6.25 × height (cm) − 5 × age + 5
TDEE = BMR × activity factor
Daily deficit = (Weekly loss × 3,500) ÷ 7
Daily deficit (kg) = (Weekly loss × 7,700) ÷ 7
Target calories = TDEE − daily deficit

Activity factors range from 1.2 (sedentary) to 1.9 (athlete). A 10-20% deficit is common for steady fat loss, but the weekly loss input lets you match the pace to your lifestyle and training load.

Example calculation

Example: Female, 32 years old, 5'6" (168 cm), 165 lb (75 kg), moderately active (1.55). BMR = 10 × 75 + 6.25 × 168 − 5 × 32 − 161 = 1,487 kcal. TDEE = 1,487 × 1.55 = 2,305 kcal/day.

With a 1 lb weekly loss goal, daily deficit = 3,500 ÷ 7 = 500 kcal. Target calories = 2,305 − 500 = 1,805 kcal/day. After 8 weeks, the projected loss is about 8 lb (3.6 kg).

FAQ

What is a safe weekly fat loss rate?

Many people do well with 0.5-1.0 lb (0.2-0.5 kg) per week. Faster loss can be harder to sustain and may reduce training performance or recovery.

Should I change calories as weight drops?

Yes. Maintenance calories decrease as you lose weight. Update your inputs every 4-6 weeks or after a 5-10 lb change to keep the target accurate.

Why is my scale not moving every week?

Water retention, sodium, sleep, and menstrual cycles can mask fat loss. Look at 2-3 week trends before making adjustments.

Do I need cardio to lose fat?

Cardio helps create a deficit, but nutrition drives most of the change. Use the calories burned calculator for running to estimate how workouts affect your daily target.

Resources

These references outline evidence-based weight loss guidance and the formulas behind resting energy expenditure.

Evidence-based references: CDC: Healthy weight loss, NIDDK: Healthy eating and activity, PubMed: Predictive equation for resting energy expenditure.