How to Calculate Macros for Fat Loss: The Complete 2026 Guide | FitFuelAI
Fat Loss Guide · 2026

How to Calculate Macros for Fat Loss — The Complete 2026 Guide

Most people trying to lose fat focus only on eating less. But cutting calories without knowing how to calculate macros for fat loss means you risk losing muscle instead of fat — and end up lighter but not leaner. Macros are the real engine behind body transformation.

This guide walks you through exactly how to set your protein, carb, and fat targets for fat loss — step by step — and shows you how FitFuelAI's free AI calculator does all of this for you in under 30 seconds.

What Are Macros — and Why They Matter for Fat Loss

Macros (macronutrients) are the three nutrients your body uses for energy: protein, carbohydrates, and fat. Every food you eat is made up of some combination of these three.

Fat loss happens when you eat fewer calories than your body burns. But which tissues you lose — fat or muscle — depends entirely on your macro balance. Without enough protein during a calorie deficit, your body breaks down muscle for energy. You lose scale weight, but you lose strength and look "soft." Tracking macros protects the muscle while the fat melts away.

Key Point: Calories determine if you lose weight. Macros determine what kind of weight you lose — fat or muscle. Getting both right is the difference between a lean physique and just a smaller version of the same body.

How to Calculate Macros for Fat Loss (Step by Step)

Follow these five steps to find your exact daily macro targets. You can do this manually — or skip straight to FitFuelAI's free AI tool, which handles all of this instantly.

1

Calculate Your BMR (Basal Metabolic Rate)

BMR is how many calories your body burns at rest. Use the Mifflin-St Jeor formula — the most clinically accurate option for most people.

Men:   BMR = (10 × weight kg) + (6.25 × height cm) − (5 × age) + 5
Women: BMR = (10 × weight kg) + (6.25 × height cm) − (5 × age) − 161
2

Find Your TDEE (Total Daily Energy Expenditure)

Multiply your BMR by your activity multiplier to get the total calories you burn per day.

Sedentary: × 1.2  |  Light Active: × 1.375
Moderate: × 1.55  |  Very Active: × 1.725
3

Set Your Calorie Deficit

Subtract 300–500 calories from your TDEE for safe, sustainable fat loss. A 500-calorie daily deficit creates roughly 0.5 kg of fat loss per week. Dropping below 300 calories risks muscle loss and metabolic slowdown.

4

Set Your Protein Target First

Protein is the most important macro for fat loss. It preserves muscle, reduces hunger, and has the highest thermic effect. Target 1.6–2.2 g of protein per kilogram of body weight daily. Set this before allocating carbs and fat.

5

Divide Remaining Calories Between Carbs and Fat

After calculating protein calories (4 kcal per gram), split the remaining calories roughly 55/45 between carbs and fat based on your preference. Low-carb dieters can shift to 30% carbs and 70% fat on the remainder.

The Best Macro Ratio for Fat Loss in 2026

Research consistently supports a high-protein macro split as the most effective approach for fat loss. Here is the ratio most evidence points to for someone in a calorie deficit who also trains with weights:

🟠 Protein40% of daily calories
🔵 Carbohydrates35% of daily calories
🟡 Fat25% of daily calories

This is a starting point — not a rigid rule. Your body's response, food preferences, and training intensity all influence what works best. The non-negotiable factor is hitting your protein target every day. According to research published in the Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition, protein intakes of 1.6–2.4 g/kg per day during a calorie deficit significantly reduce muscle loss and improve body composition outcomes.

⚠️ Important: Macro ratios matter less than absolute protein grams. A 70 kg person should target 112–154 g of protein daily regardless of what percentage that represents.

Macro Targets by Body Weight — Quick Reference Table

Use this table to find your approximate daily macro targets based on body weight. These are estimates for moderate fat loss at a moderate activity level.

Body WeightCalories (Deficit)ProteinCarbsFat
60 kg~1,550 kcal120–132 g130–145 g45–55 g
70 kg~1,750 kcal140–154 g150–165 g50–62 g
80 kg~1,950 kcal160–176 g165–185 g55–70 g
90 kg~2,150 kcal175–198 g185–205 g60–78 g
100 kg~2,300 kcal190–220 g200–220 g65–85 g

These numbers change based on your actual TDEE, age, gender, and activity level. For numbers personalized to your body, use FitFuelAI's free AI Fat Loss Calculator — it runs all of this automatically and gives you a downloadable PDF plan.

5 Macro Mistakes That Stall Fat Loss

1. Not Eating Enough Protein

This is the number one mistake. When protein is too low in a calorie deficit, your body cannibalizes muscle for energy. You lose scale weight, but your metabolism slows and body fat percentage actually rises relative to lean mass.

2. Setting the Deficit Too Large

Cutting calories by 1,000+ per day may seem aggressive. In practice, it triggers cortisol spikes, extreme hunger, muscle breakdown, and metabolic adaptation. A 300–500 calorie daily deficit is the sweet spot for sustainable fat loss without sacrificing muscle or energy.

3. Tracking Macros but Ignoring Total Calories

Macros and calories must both be tracked. Some people hit their protein target but still overshoot total calories through excess fat or carbs. Remember: every gram of fat carries 9 calories — it adds up fast.

4. Never Recalculating as You Lose Weight

As you lose fat, your TDEE decreases. The macros you calculated at 85 kg are too high once you reach 78 kg. Recalculate every 4–6 weeks or whenever fat loss stalls for more than two consecutive weeks.

5. Cutting Fat Too Low

Dietary fat supports hormone production — including testosterone and estrogen, which regulate metabolism and muscle retention. Dropping fat below 20% of total calories disrupts hormone balance and can actually slow fat loss over time.

Skip the Math — Get Your Macros in 30 Seconds

FitFuelAI calculates your BMR, TDEE, calorie deficit, and exact daily macros automatically. Free. No signup. Instant PDF plan.

Calculate My Macros Free →

How FitFuelAI Calculates Your Macros Automatically

Doing all of these calculations manually is time-consuming and easy to get wrong. FitFuelAI's free AI Fat Loss Calculator handles every step automatically using science-backed formulas — and delivers a complete plan in under 30 seconds.

1

You Enter Your Details

Age, height, current weight, target weight, gender, activity level, workout frequency, and goal speed. The tool also accounts for Pakistani and South Asian dietary preferences with a budget-friendly meal option.

2

AI Runs the Calculations

Using the Mifflin-St Jeor BMR formula, TDEE activity multipliers, the 7,700 kcal/kg fat-loss rule, and the Deurenberg body fat estimate — all simultaneously, all calibrated to your inputs.

3

You Receive a Complete Plan

Your daily calorie target, exact protein, carb, and fat grams, a week-by-week fat loss timeline, and a downloadable PDF meal plan — all free, no account required.

Want to understand the calorie side of this equation in more detail? Read our guide on how calorie deficit works for fat loss — it covers everything from TDEE to weekly progress predictions.


Frequently Asked Questions

How many grams of protein do I need per day for fat loss?
Most research supports 1.6–2.2 grams of protein per kilogram of body weight during a fat loss phase. For a 75 kg person, that means 120–165 g of protein per day. Staying at the higher end is better if you train with weights regularly.
Should I do low-carb or high-protein for fat loss?
Both can work — but the protein target is non-negotiable. Low-carb diets reduce insulin and can accelerate fat loss for some people, but when protein is matched, fat loss outcomes are similar regardless of carb intake. Choose the approach you can sustain for months, not just weeks.
How often should I recalculate my macros?
Recalculate every 4–6 weeks, or whenever fat loss stalls for more than two consecutive weeks. As your body weight decreases, your TDEE drops and so do your calorie and macro requirements.
What is the best macro ratio for fat loss without losing muscle?
A ratio of 40% protein, 35% carbs, and 25% fat is a strong starting point. The most critical element is keeping protein high at 1.6–2.2 g/kg. Combine this with strength training at least 3 times per week to send a muscle-preservation signal to your body.
Can I use FitFuelAI's calculator if I follow a high-protein or budget diet?
Yes. The FitFuelAI tool includes a high-protein diet option and a budget-friendly Pakistani meal plan option. It generates a complete meal plan tailored to your selected preference — with food items and quantities in grams, ready to download as a PDF.

More Fat Loss Guides from FitFuelAI

Ready to Start Losing Fat the Smart Way?

Get your personalized macros, calorie target, and weekly fat loss timeline — completely free. No signup required.

Get My Free Fat Loss Plan →
Scroll to Top