TDEE am i doing this right?
sallysally
Posts: 25 Member
Hi i am
78 kilos/ 172 pound
162 cm / 5f 3in
Im 38 years old female
I calculate i need about 1900 calories to live so i minus 500 which gives me 1400 per day. I eat this and even if i burn 300 or 400 calories i dont count that as food (ie i dont eat my exercise calories back) so sometimes i net 1000 calories sometimes lower depends on how much exercise i do.
Am i doing this right???
Thank you all in advance for your help and advice
78 kilos/ 172 pound
162 cm / 5f 3in
Im 38 years old female
I calculate i need about 1900 calories to live so i minus 500 which gives me 1400 per day. I eat this and even if i burn 300 or 400 calories i dont count that as food (ie i dont eat my exercise calories back) so sometimes i net 1000 calories sometimes lower depends on how much exercise i do.
Am i doing this right???
Thank you all in advance for your help and advice
0
Replies
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I was just going to post basically same question. Specifically..when using TDEE-20% (in my case about 1650) do you eat exercise calories back?0
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My understanding is that if you are using the TDEE method, it already includes an estimate of your activity (including exercise), so you don't eat back exercise calories.0
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Hi i am
78 kilos/ 172 pound
162 cm / 5f 3in
Im 38 years old female
I calculate i need about 1900 calories to live...
You're carrying a very high body fat percentage, so your BMR calculation needs to change to a formula that accounts for that. You're looking at a BMR ("need to live") of about 1200 calories/day and a non-exercise TDEE of about 1400 calories/day.
Take it away from there...0 -
http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/975025-in-place-of-a-road-map-short-n-sweet
Edited to correct link and to say that this will best explain TDEE method0 -
Great post but it still didnt answer my question. It states entering TDEE as calorie goal in MFP which will then calculate a goal of net calories (calorie intake minus excercise), not gross. So again...do you eat exercise calories back thereby targeting a net goal of your TDEE?0
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TDEE includes activity, so no, do not eat back exercise calories. I enter my workouts under exercise notes to keep track. Also, you need to eat at a deficit of TDEE if using this method:
Need to lose (lbs)
5-10 TDEE -10%
10-20 TDEE - 15%
More than 20 TDEE - 20%
Not recommended to cut more than 20% unless extremely obese or gastric bypass patient0 -
Thanks! My concern was that if I eat my TDEE-20% (1650) and work off 500 calories, that would put my net intake at only 1150. I was afraid that would be too low.0
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I like using iifym.com calculator0
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Thanks! My concern was that if I eat my TDEE-20% (1650) and work off 500 calories, that would put my net intake at only 1150. I was afraid that would be too low.
Your net will not be 1150, since TDEE already includes what you burn in exercise0 -
Hi i am
78 kilos/ 172 pound
162 cm / 5f 3in
Im 38 years old female
I calculate i need about 1900 calories to live...
You're carrying a very high body fat percentage, so your BMR calculation needs to change to a formula that accounts for that. You're looking at a BMR ("need to live") of about 1200 calories/day and a non-exercise TDEE of about 1400 calories/day.
Take it away from there...0 -
Iifym.com put you at 1574, if you were to exercise 3 days a week. Obviously, these are merely calculators. There will be room for error whether it be more or less. Pick an intake, maintain it for a month or so, see how the scales do I've been able to up mine by about 100 calories over my weight loss and have still been losing. It's really up to the individual and it's trial and error. Make sure you weigh and measure everything and be honest with your journal and I wish you the best on your weight loss.0
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Thank you very much everyone0
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You're doing it wrong.
With the 500 deficit, it's MFP's calculation, not TDEE.
If you use MFP, you have to count and add your exercise calories, and eat them back, because MFP only bases its formula on rest TDEE.
If you use TDEE (which is on other site, like http://scoobysworkshop.com/calorie-calculator/ or iifym), you don't add exercise calories, because it's already included in the calculation.
Bottom line, if your net is anywhere less than 1200 (or your BMR, really), you're doing it wrong.0 -
Thank you @Franc127. An explanation that makes sense to me. Logic was telling me a net intake that low (by MFP calculation) wasn't a great idea. Will keep at my BMR .0
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