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Energy Requirements

Your daily energy requirement (calories) is calculated using evidence-based formulas that account for your individual characteristics.

Platebreaker uses the methodology described in the nutrition authority guidelines to estimate your Estimated Energy Requirement (EER).

Basic physiology:

  • Age: Energy needs change throughout life
  • Sex: Males and females have different baseline needs
  • Weight: Heavier bodies require more energy
  • Height: Taller bodies require more energy

Activity level:

  • Sedentary: Little to no exercise (office work, mostly sitting)
  • Lightly Active: Light exercise 1-3 days/week
  • Moderately Active: Moderate exercise 3-5 days/week
  • Very Active: Hard exercise 6-7 days/week
  • Extremely Active: Very hard exercise, physical job, or training twice per day

Special conditions:

  • Pregnancy: Additional energy for fetal growth (varies by trimester)
  • Breastfeeding: Extra energy for milk production (varies by stage of lactation)

The formulas used are based on:

  • Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR): Energy needed at rest
  • Physical Activity Level (PAL): Multiplier based on activity
  • Additional factors for pregnancy/breastfeeding

Example calculation for adult female (age 25, 60kg, 165cm, moderately active):

  • Calculate BMR ≈ 1,350 kcal/day
  • Apply PAL multiplier (×1.6 for moderate activity) ≈ 2,160 kcal/day
  • Result: EER ≈ 2,160 kcal/day

Note: This is a simplified example. Actual calculations use authority-specific formulas.

Your EER represents the energy intake needed to maintain your current weight at your stated activity level.

To lose weight, you need a calorie deficit:

  • Safe rate: 0.5-1 kg (1-2 lbs) per week
  • Deficit needed: 500-1,000 kcal/day below EER
  • Platebreaker adjustment: Reduces your energy target accordingly

Important: Very low calorie diets (<1,200 kcal/day for women, <1,500 kcal/day for men) should only be done under medical supervision.

To gain weight, you need a calorie surplus:

  • Safe rate: 0.25-0.5 kg (0.5-1 lb) per week
  • Surplus needed: 250-500 kcal/day above EER
  • Platebreaker adjustment: Increases your energy target accordingly

When you adjust your energy target for weight goals:

  • Macronutrient targets adjust proportionally (protein, carbs, fats maintain their % of calories)
  • Micronutrient targets generally stay the same (vitamin and mineral needs don’t decrease just because you’re eating fewer calories)
  • This can make it harder to meet all targets on a calorie deficit—the gap between micronutrient needs and available calories increases

Energy requirement formulas are estimates based on population averages:

  • Some people have faster or slower metabolisms
  • Medical conditions can affect energy needs
  • Medications can change metabolism

Physical activity levels are self-reported and approximate - update your profile if your activity level changes.