Metrics Calculator

Updated March 14, 2026

Macro Calculator

Macros are protein, carbs, and fat measured in grams. To calculate yours, find your TDEE, set protein at 0.7-1 g per pound of body weight, then split remaining calories between carbs (4 cal/g) and fat (9 cal/g) based on your goals.

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Key Takeaways

  • Macronutrients are protein (4 cal/g), carbohydrates (4 cal/g), and fat (9 cal/g). Together they account for all dietary calories.
  • Protein is the most important macro for body composition. Aim for 0.7-1 gram per pound of body weight for active individuals.
  • Common macro splits: 40/30/30 (protein/carbs/fat) for weight loss, 30/40/30 for maintenance, 30/50/20 for endurance athletes.
  • Total calories matter more than exact ratios. Get protein right first, then adjust carbs and fat to preference.
  • Tracking macros for 2-3 weeks builds awareness even if you do not track long-term. Most people underestimate fat and overestimate protein.

What Are Macronutrients?

Macronutrients are the three types of nutrients that provide energy (calories) from food: protein, carbohydrates, and fat. Every food you eat is some combination of these three macros plus water, fiber, and micronutrients (vitamins and minerals). Understanding macros gives you control over not just how much you eat, but the composition of what you eat.

Each macro provides a different number of calories per gram. Protein and carbohydrates each provide 4 calories per gram. Fat provides 9 calories per gram, more than double the other two. This caloric density is why fatty foods are so energy-rich and why reducing fat intake is an efficient way to reduce total calories. However, fat is essential for hormone production, vitamin absorption, and brain function, so cutting it too low causes problems.

Leah Novak at the Pinewood Falls bakery learned about macros when she wanted to create healthier menu items. "I always knew my croissants were high in calories, but I did not realize that a single croissant has 12 grams of fat, which is 108 calories just from the fat alone," she says. By understanding macros, Leah developed a line of high-protein muffins for Marco's restaurant that have 20 grams of protein each. They became one of the most popular breakfast items because customers feel full longer. She uses our calorie calculator to estimate the nutritional profiles of her recipes.

How to Calculate Your Macros

Calculating macros is a three-step process. First, determine your daily calorie target using your TDEE adjusted for your goal. Second, set protein in grams. Third, divide remaining calories between carbs and fat. Here is a worked example for a 170-pound man targeting 2,200 calories for moderate weight loss.

Step 1: Protein. At 0.8 grams per pound: 170 x 0.8 = 136 grams of protein. At 4 calories per gram: 136 x 4 = 544 calories from protein.

Step 2: Fat. Setting fat at 30% of total calories: 2,200 x 0.30 = 660 calories from fat. At 9 calories per gram: 660 / 9 = 73 grams of fat.

Step 3: Carbs. Remaining calories: 2,200 - 544 - 660 = 996 calories from carbs. At 4 calories per gram: 996 / 4 = 249 grams of carbs.

Final macros: 136g protein, 249g carbs, 73g fat = 2,200 calories.

Macro Ratios by Goal

Different fitness goals call for different macro distributions. The table below shows common starting ratios and the reasoning behind each. These are guidelines, not rigid rules. Individual response varies, and personal preference matters for long-term adherence.

Goal Protein Carbs Fat Rationale
Fat Loss40%30%30%High protein preserves muscle in a deficit
Maintenance30%40%30%Balanced approach for stable weight
Muscle Gain30%45%25%Higher carbs fuel training and recovery
Endurance20%55%25%High carbs fuel long-duration activity
Low Carb35%20%45%Reduced carbs, higher fat for satiety
Ketogenic25%5%70%Very low carb forces fat metabolism

Sources: ISSN position stand on diets and body composition (2017), American College of Sports Medicine position stand on nutrition and athletic performance (2016).

Coach Rivera uses different macro ratios for different athletes at Pinewood Falls High. His cross-country runners eat roughly 20% protein, 55% carbs, and 25% fat to support their high-volume endurance training. His football linemen, focused on building strength, eat closer to 30% protein, 45% carbs, and 25% fat. "There is no one-size-fits-all diet," Coach Rivera tells his athletes. "What fuels a distance runner would leave a lineman sluggish in the weight room, and vice versa."

Protein: The Priority Macro

Among the three macronutrients, protein deserves the most attention when setting targets. Protein builds and repairs muscle tissue, produces enzymes and hormones, supports immune function, and has the highest thermic effect (20-30% of protein calories are burned during digestion), which contributes to your BMR. It is also the most satiating macro, meaning it keeps you feeling fuller for longer.

Activity Level Protein (g per lb body weight) Example (170 lb person)
Sedentary0.36-0.5 g/lb61-85 g
Regular Exercise0.7-0.8 g/lb119-136 g
Muscle Building0.8-1.0 g/lb136-170 g
Cutting (calorie deficit)1.0-1.2 g/lb170-204 g
Competitive Athlete0.9-1.2 g/lb153-204 g

Sources: RDA from Institute of Medicine (2005), athletic ranges from ISSN position stand on protein and exercise (Jäger et al., 2017).

Practical Macro Tracking Tips

Tracking macros does not need to be complicated or permanent. Most people benefit from tracking for 2-4 weeks to build awareness of what they eat, then transitioning to intuitive eating with occasional check-ins. Here are practical tips for getting started.

Use a food tracking app. Apps like MyFitnessPal or Cronometer have databases of thousands of foods with macro information. Logging meals takes 5-10 minutes per day and provides data you cannot get any other way. After a few weeks, you will be able to estimate macros by sight for common foods. Pair this with a body fat check to confirm your macros are producing the right kind of weight change.

Weigh your food initially. A kitchen scale costs $10-15 and eliminates guesswork. Most people dramatically underestimate portion sizes. What you think is 2 tablespoons of peanut butter (16g fat) is often 3-4 tablespoons (24-32g fat). After a week of weighing, your visual estimates improve significantly.

Plan meals in advance. Spending 15 minutes each week pre-logging meals in a tracking app helps you spot shortfalls before they happen. If you see you are short on protein by Thursday, you can swap a snack now rather than scrambling later. Forward planning is the single biggest predictor of macro adherence.

Focus on protein first. If tracking all three macros feels overwhelming, start by tracking protein only. Hit your protein target daily and let carbs and fat fall naturally. This single focus captures most of the benefit of macro tracking with a fraction of the effort.

Disclaimer: Macronutrient recommendations are general guidelines based on population research. Individual needs vary based on health conditions, medications, activity level, and goals. Consult a registered dietitian for a personalized nutrition plan, especially if you have diabetes, kidney disease, or other conditions that require specific dietary management.


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Frequently Asked Questions

What are macronutrients?

Macronutrients are the three major nutrients that provide calories: protein (4 calories per gram), carbohydrates (4 calories per gram), and fat (9 calories per gram). Together they make up the caloric content of everything you eat. Alcohol is sometimes considered a fourth macro at 7 calories per gram, but it is not essential for nutrition.

What is a good macro ratio for weight loss?

A common macro split for weight loss is 40% protein, 30% carbs, and 30% fat. The higher protein helps preserve muscle mass during a calorie deficit and increases satiety. However, the total calorie amount matters more than the exact ratio. As long as protein is adequate (0.7-1 g per pound of body weight), the carb-to-fat ratio can be adjusted based on personal preference.

How much protein do I need per day?

The recommended daily allowance is 0.36 grams per pound of body weight, but this is the minimum to prevent deficiency, not the optimal amount. For active people, 0.7-1 gram per pound of body weight is recommended. For muscle building, 0.8-1.2 grams per pound is ideal. A 170-pound person building muscle should aim for 136-204 grams of protein per day.

Do I need to hit my macros exactly?

No. Getting within 5-10 grams of each macro target is sufficient. Macros are guidelines, not rigid prescriptions. Consistency over weeks matters far more than hitting exact numbers on any single day. Focus on total calories first, protein second, then split remaining calories between carbs and fat based on preference and activity.

What is the difference between macros and calories?

Calories are a unit of energy. Macros are the nutrients that provide those calories. Counting macros automatically counts calories because each gram of protein, carb, or fat contributes a known number of calories. Macro counting goes one step further than calorie counting by ensuring you get the right balance of nutrients, not just the right total energy.

How often should I adjust my macros?

Reassess your macros every 4-6 weeks or whenever your weight changes by 5-10 pounds. As you lose weight, your calorie needs drop, so your macro grams should decrease proportionally while the percentages may stay the same. If you change your training style (switching from endurance to strength training, for example), adjust your carb-to-fat ratio to match the new demands.