confused on how may calories to eat to lose weight

I'm so confused on how many calories I should be eating to lose weight. I weigh 150 and I'm 5'0 female and I want to get to 130 and toned. I was at 120 before my daughters but I felt too small for a Latin curvy woman lol. Please please help me on how many calories to eat to lose at least 2 pounds. My day consist of sitting 8 hour a day (desk job) but I lift 4 days a week and do 30 min of hiit kick boxing 1day a week. Rest for 2 days. I calculated my TDEE and it says 1877 but MFP says 1200 calories to eat a day, I think that's so low. So you see, I need help. All of this is so confusing to me. Thank you!!
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Replies

  • Barbosas77
    Barbosas77 Posts: 100 Member
    Sorry...meant to say 2 pounds a WEEK.
  • malibu927
    malibu927 Posts: 17,562 Member
    MFP uses the NEAT method, which doesn't include exercise, so you're expected to eat some of those calories back.
  • juggernaut1974
    juggernaut1974 Posts: 6,212 Member
    With only 20 lbs to lose, your goal should be closer to 0.5-0.75 lb loss per week.

    Also, recognize that the MFP calculator doesn't take exercise into account, so you'd need to eat back at least a portion of those calories burnt in addition to what the calculator estimates.

    I didn't crunch the numbers, but I'm guessing somewhere in the 1600 calorie range would be a good place to start. In the end, the online calculators and such are just estimators based on population averages, so you'll have to use trial and error to nail down the right amount for you.
  • futuremanda
    futuremanda Posts: 816 Member
    It's because of a) your goal (if you chose 2 lbs a week) and b) the fact that MFP takes exercise into account AFTER you do it. So at 1200, you'd log your exercise, and get more calories to eat.

    If you think your TDEE is 1877, then set a custom target of 1377, to lose 1 lb a week. (500 deficit per day) If you choose this method, don't eat back exercise calories -- just eat 1377 (or thereabouts).

    If your TDEE is 1877, you cannot healthily lose 2 lbs a week. You'd be eating 877, which is way, way too low.
  • ncboiler89
    ncboiler89 Posts: 2,408 Member
    Barbosas77 wrote: »
    I'm so confused on how many calories I should be eating to lose weight. I weigh 150 and I'm 5'0 female and I want to get to 130 and toned. I was at 120 before my daughters but I felt too small for a Latin curvy woman lol. Please please help me on how many calories to eat to lose at least 2 pounds. My day consist of sitting 8 hour a day (desk job) but I lift 4 days a week and do 30 min of hiit kick boxing 1day a week. Rest for 2 days. I calculated my TDEE and it says 1877 but MFP says 1200 calories to eat a day, I think that's so low. So you see, I need help. All of this is so confusing to me. Thank you!!

    If your TDEE is 1877 then to lose two pounds per week you will need to eat 877 calories. Because you will die if you eat only 877 calories the minimum MFP suggests is 1200. If you want to lose 1 pound per week you can consume 1377 calories.

    fwiw; I'm not sure why buy everyone wants to lose 2 pounds per week when they start. They soon realize it's not the smartest thing to do. It's not like loosing 2 pounds per week is just a little bit harder. It's A LOT harder.
  • nm212
    nm212 Posts: 570 Member
    edited May 2015
    I think your TDEE is what you want to eat to maintain your weight....not to lose weight. You should find out your BMR. http://iifym.com/ has a good calculator for that and you can log in exercise time, for how much to eat and still lose!
  • shadow2soul
    shadow2soul Posts: 7,692 Member
    edited May 2015
    Well, MFP expects you to log your exercise and eat the calories the workouts give you. So MFP is 1200+exercise calorie burns.

    You shouldn't be aiming for more than 2lbs per week. 1-2 lbs per week is the amount recommended for safe healthy weight loss.

    The differences:
    • TDEE gives you the same number of calories everyday regardless of what you do (MFP adds calories when you workout so you eat more some days and less others)
    • TDEE is likely not giving you 2lbs per week loss. 20% off mine gives me 19xx calories for a little less than 1lb per week loss. Most TDEE calculators I know of give you a goal taking 10-20% off (and a few go up to 30% off), but generally these percentages don't get you 2 lbs per week loss.


    Just follow MFP and eat 50-75% (adjusting up or down as needed after a month) of your exercise calorie burns. Try not to make it any more confusing than it has to be.
  • Barbosas77
    Barbosas77 Posts: 100 Member
    malibu927 wrote: »
    MFP uses the NEAT method, which doesn't include exercise, so you're expected to eat some of those calories back.

  • Barbosas77
    Barbosas77 Posts: 100 Member
    Barbosas77 wrote: »
    malibu927 wrote: »
    MFP uses the NEAT method, which doesn't include exercise, so you're expected to eat some of those calories back.

    Ok got it. I didn't know that's how it works!

  • Barbosas77
    Barbosas77 Posts: 100 Member
    nm212 wrote: »

    That's the website I went to get my TDEE.
  • Barbosas77
    Barbosas77 Posts: 100 Member
    ncboiler89 wrote: »
    Barbosas77 wrote: »
    I'm so confused on how many calories I should be eating to lose weight. I weigh 150 and I'm 5'0 female and I want to get to 130 and toned. I was at 120 before my daughters but I felt too small for a Latin curvy woman lol. Please please help me on how many calories to eat to lose at least 2 pounds. My day consist of sitting 8 hour a day (desk job) but I lift 4 days a week and do 30 min of hiit kick boxing 1day a week. Rest for 2 days. I calculated my TDEE and it says 1877 but MFP says 1200 calories to eat a day, I think that's so low. So you see, I need help. All of this is so confusing to me. Thank you!!

    If your TDEE is 1877 then to lose two pounds per week you will need to eat 877 calories. Because you will die if you eat only 877 calories the minimum MFP suggests is 1200. If you want to lose 1 pound per week you can consume 1377 calories.

    fwiw; I'm not sure why buy everyone wants to lose 2 pounds per week when they start. They soon realize it's not the smartest thing to do. It's not like loosing 2 pounds per week is just a little bit harder. It's A LOT harder.


    Yes I would die! But you and another person said the same as far as just adjusting it to 1377. I'm gonna try that and not eat my calories burned
  • nm212
    nm212 Posts: 570 Member
    Your BMR is more important...it's what your body uses to burn energy naturally, with no exercise. I have a similar TDEE as you (around 1860), and my BMR is 1360... With no exercise, I can eat that much and still be in 500 calorie deficit (to burn a pound a week).

    Your TDEE is the MOST you could eat, without gaining weight.

    To LOSE weight, you have to eat less than that. MFP does 1200 calories a day as a general guide for weight loss (and yes you can eat back exercise calories)

    All I'm saying is that you can eat a little more if you want and still lose weight! lol but it's up to you...both methods work. If you do your BMR, you can still eat back half of your exercise calories too.

    :smile:
  • futuremanda
    futuremanda Posts: 816 Member
    nm212 wrote: »
    Your BMR is more important...it's what your body uses to burn energy naturally, with no exercise. I have a similar TDEE as you (around 1860), and my BMR is 1360... With no exercise, I can eat that much and still be in 500 calorie deficit (to burn a pound a week).

    Your TDEE is the MOST you could eat, without gaining weight.

    To LOSE weight, you have to eat less than that. MFP does 1200 calories a day as a general guide for weight loss (and yes you can eat back exercise calories)

    All I'm saying is that you can eat a little more if you want and still lose weight! lol but it's up to you...both methods work. If you do your BMR, you can still eat back half of your exercise calories too.

    :smile:

    No. BMR is not a figure you should be basing anything on. There are a lot of myths about BMR.

    She understands that you eat less than your TDEE. Specifically, 500 calories less per day, if you want to lose 1 lb a week. Hence 1377.

    She could eat her BMR, or any other calorie target between 1200 and her TDEE. But there's no reason to eat her BMR, specifically. Your TDEE gives the WHOLE picture of what you burn. To lose weight, you eat less than you burn. To predict and plan your weight loss, you need to know your total burn, and subtract from that... aka your TDEE.

    And MFP does not give 1200 calories as a general guide. It gives it as a minimum.

    IMO, she should choose between MFP at sedentary, 1 lb per week, eating back exercise calories, or TDEE - 500 calories. (-20% would be even slower, and if she can manage the 1377, she'll be at a pace I think she'll be happier with) -- BMR is largely irrelevant, and primarily used by calculators as a starting figure to help get your TDEE (or NEAT).

    And I see she's chosen to try 1377, which is a great, simple starting point.
  • nm212
    nm212 Posts: 570 Member
    edited May 2015
    nm212 wrote: »
    Your BMR is more important...it's what your body uses to burn energy naturally, with no exercise. I have a similar TDEE as you (around 1860), and my BMR is 1360... With no exercise, I can eat that much and still be in 500 calorie deficit (to burn a pound a week).

    Your TDEE is the MOST you could eat, without gaining weight.

    To LOSE weight, you have to eat less than that. MFP does 1200 calories a day as a general guide for weight loss (and yes you can eat back exercise calories)

    All I'm saying is that you can eat a little more if you want and still lose weight! lol but it's up to you...both methods work. If you do your BMR, you can still eat back half of your exercise calories too.

    :smile:

    No. BMR is not a figure you should be basing anything on. There are a lot of myths about BMR.

    She understands that you eat less than your TDEE. Specifically, 500 calories less per day, if you want to lose 1 lb a week. Hence 1377.

    She could eat her BMR, or any other calorie target between 1200 and her TDEE. But there's no reason to eat her BMR, specifically. Your TDEE gives the WHOLE picture of what you burn. To lose weight, you eat less than you burn. To predict and plan your weight loss, you need to know your total burn, and subtract from that... aka your TDEE.

    And MFP does not give 1200 calories as a general guide. It gives it as a minimum.

    IMO, she should choose between MFP at sedentary, 1 lb per week, eating back exercise calories, or TDEE - 500 calories. (-20% would be even slower, and if she can manage the 1377, she'll be at a pace I think she'll be happier with) -- BMR is largely irrelevant, and primarily used by calculators as a starting figure to help get your TDEE (or NEAT).

    And I see she's chosen to try 1377, which is a great, simple starting point.

    Now I AM confused . LOL For me my BMR is the same as 500 calories less than my TDEE. So basically, we are saying the same thing in different ways.
  • 3bambi3
    3bambi3 Posts: 1,650 Member
    nm212 wrote: »
    nm212 wrote: »
    Your BMR is more important...it's what your body uses to burn energy naturally, with no exercise. I have a similar TDEE as you (around 1860), and my BMR is 1360... With no exercise, I can eat that much and still be in 500 calorie deficit (to burn a pound a week).

    Your TDEE is the MOST you could eat, without gaining weight.

    To LOSE weight, you have to eat less than that. MFP does 1200 calories a day as a general guide for weight loss (and yes you can eat back exercise calories)

    All I'm saying is that you can eat a little more if you want and still lose weight! lol but it's up to you...both methods work. If you do your BMR, you can still eat back half of your exercise calories too.

    :smile:

    No. BMR is not a figure you should be basing anything on. There are a lot of myths about BMR.

    She understands that you eat less than your TDEE. Specifically, 500 calories less per day, if you want to lose 1 lb a week. Hence 1377.

    She could eat her BMR, or any other calorie target between 1200 and her TDEE. But there's no reason to eat her BMR, specifically. Your TDEE gives the WHOLE picture of what you burn. To lose weight, you eat less than you burn. To predict and plan your weight loss, you need to know your total burn, and subtract from that... aka your TDEE.

    And MFP does not give 1200 calories as a general guide. It gives it as a minimum.

    IMO, she should choose between MFP at sedentary, 1 lb per week, eating back exercise calories, or TDEE - 500 calories. (-20% would be even slower, and if she can manage the 1377, she'll be at a pace I think she'll be happier with) -- BMR is largely irrelevant, and primarily used by calculators as a starting figure to help get your TDEE (or NEAT).

    And I see she's chosen to try 1377, which is a great, simple starting point.

    Now I AM confused . LOL For me my BMR is the same as 500 calories less than my TDEE.

    For YOU. Not for everyone.
  • nm212
    nm212 Posts: 570 Member
    3bambi3 wrote: »
    nm212 wrote: »
    nm212 wrote: »
    Your BMR is more important...it's what your body uses to burn energy naturally, with no exercise. I have a similar TDEE as you (around 1860), and my BMR is 1360... With no exercise, I can eat that much and still be in 500 calorie deficit (to burn a pound a week).

    Your TDEE is the MOST you could eat, without gaining weight.

    To LOSE weight, you have to eat less than that. MFP does 1200 calories a day as a general guide for weight loss (and yes you can eat back exercise calories)

    All I'm saying is that you can eat a little more if you want and still lose weight! lol but it's up to you...both methods work. If you do your BMR, you can still eat back half of your exercise calories too.

    :smile:

    No. BMR is not a figure you should be basing anything on. There are a lot of myths about BMR.

    She understands that you eat less than your TDEE. Specifically, 500 calories less per day, if you want to lose 1 lb a week. Hence 1377.

    She could eat her BMR, or any other calorie target between 1200 and her TDEE. But there's no reason to eat her BMR, specifically. Your TDEE gives the WHOLE picture of what you burn. To lose weight, you eat less than you burn. To predict and plan your weight loss, you need to know your total burn, and subtract from that... aka your TDEE.

    And MFP does not give 1200 calories as a general guide. It gives it as a minimum.

    IMO, she should choose between MFP at sedentary, 1 lb per week, eating back exercise calories, or TDEE - 500 calories. (-20% would be even slower, and if she can manage the 1377, she'll be at a pace I think she'll be happier with) -- BMR is largely irrelevant, and primarily used by calculators as a starting figure to help get your TDEE (or NEAT).

    And I see she's chosen to try 1377, which is a great, simple starting point.

    Now I AM confused . LOL For me my BMR is the same as 500 calories less than my TDEE.

    For YOU. Not for everyone.

    Well, if you calculated hers, you would see it is also the same. You may be correct but I was talking about her specifically.
  • nm212
    nm212 Posts: 570 Member
    I get your point though. It differs for everyone...
  • StaciMarie1974
    StaciMarie1974 Posts: 4,138 Member
    If your TDEE is 1877, then losing 2 pounds per week is NOT realistic. Here is why:

    1877 TDEE - 1000 (to lose 2 pounds per week) = 877. Meaning you'd need to eat a crazy low # of calories to have any chance at it. MFP bottoms out at 1200, which is what happened with you.

    Two things you can do: aim to lose a lesser # per week and aim to move more. A 1 pound per week goal would put you at 1377 per day consumption: 1877 - 500 = 1377. And look for ways to walk an additional 15-30 minutes a day, even if its not super aggressive, to fit in more activity.
  • RGv2
    RGv2 Posts: 5,789 Member
    nm212 wrote: »
    Your BMR is more important...it's what your body uses to burn energy naturally, with no exercise. I have a similar TDEE as you (around 1860), and my BMR is 1360... With no exercise, I can eat that much and still be in 500 calorie deficit (to burn a pound a week).

    Your TDEE is the MOST you could eat, without gaining weight.

    To LOSE weight, you have to eat less than that. MFP does 1200 calories a day as a general guide for weight loss (and yes you can eat back exercise calories)

    All I'm saying is that you can eat a little more if you want and still lose weight! lol but it's up to you...both methods work. If you do your BMR, you can still eat back half of your exercise calories too.

    :smile:

    MFP does not do 1200 calories as a general guide for weight loss. It's a calculator. A person enters their stats and goals, MFP calculates the users daily TDEE and subtracts from that to meet the goal the person enters. 1200 is also where MFP bottoms out. In this case, as pointed out earlier, for the OP to meet their goal they would need to eat 877 calories per day. MFP won't go that low, so it displays the default basement (1200).
  • 999tigger
    999tigger Posts: 5,235 Member
    I think you will find 2lb a week hard consiering how much you have to lose.
    Working out how many calories simply requires you knowing how much you need to maintain then creating a deficit of 500 per day per lb a week you wish to try and lose. That can be from eating less or burning calories. Work out were your deficit is coming from.
  • futuremanda
    futuremanda Posts: 816 Member
    nm212 wrote: »
    I get your point though. It differs for everyone...

    Yep. Like, if she were lightly active in her job instead of sedentary, her TDEE would be higher, maybe 2077, making 1 lb a week 1577. Her BMR would be the same though.

    MFP looks at BMR + lifestyle calories (calories burned existing + living your life, going about your day) to get you a target with your deficit built in. Then you log exercise and eat that back to maintain that deficit (rather than increase it further).

    TDEE looks at your BMR and lifestyle and exercise and gives you an average total daily energy burn. You subtract from that to get a deficit, and eat that, flat, every day.

    So BMR itself really shouldn't be used for anything, except getting these other numbers. You don't add to or subtract from it yourself. Knowing the minimum number of calories your body would burn in a day (if you didn't move at all) doesn't really help you determine how much to eat to still be eating at a set target below what you burn in total.
  • Barbosas77
    Barbosas77 Posts: 100 Member
    Pu_239 wrote: »
    Barbosas77 wrote: »
    I'm so confused on how many calories I should be eating to lose weight. I weigh 150 and I'm 5'0 female and I want to get to 130 and toned. I was at 120 before my daughters but I felt too small for a Latin curvy woman lol. Please please help me on how many calories to eat to lose at least 2 pounds. My day consist of sitting 8 hour a day (desk job) but I lift 4 days a week and do 30 min of hiit kick boxing 1day a week. Rest for 2 days. I calculated my TDEE and it says 1877 but MFP says 1200 calories to eat a day, I think that's so low. So you see, I need help. All of this is so confusing to me. Thank you!!

    have you tried putting your information into MFP and setting it to 2lbs a week?

    Yes

  • charlesmauch
    charlesmauch Posts: 58 Member
    I've fooled with online calculators to try and figure this stuff out, and was never convinced that I should be eating as much as they indicated. Eventually I just started tracking what I ate and calculated my own TDEE, which is pretty simple to do.

    Log what you eat for 2 weeks, which you should be doing already here. Add up all the calories you ate in that period of time, and then add 3500 calories to that number for every pound you lost (or subtract 3500 for every pound you gained). Divide by 14 (2 weeks) and you'll have your TDEE for the past 2 weeks which includes all your exercise activity.

    As for calculating the most deficit you maintain (safely), if you know your current bodyfat level (I use both tape measure and skin-fold calipers), take the amount of fat on your body in pounds and multiply that number by 31. (see: http://www.mindandmuscle.net/articles/determining-the-maximum-dietary-deficit-for-fat-loss/ and http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15615615 for the science)

    This is the largest deficit (in calories) you can sustain without loosing muscle mass. Subtract that number from your TDEE and you have a maximum deficit. Eat somewhere between that number and your TDEE and you'll lose weight.

    Ignore BMR. In terms of diet it does not seem to provide any meaningful information you can use.
  • lynn_glenmont
    lynn_glenmont Posts: 10,091 Member
    Barbosas77 wrote: »
    I'm so confused on how many calories I should be eating to lose weight. I weigh 150 and I'm 5'0 female and I want to get to 130 and toned. I was at 120 before my daughters but I felt too small for a Latin curvy woman lol. Please please help me on how many calories to eat to lose at least 2 pounds. My day consist of sitting 8 hour a day (desk job) but I lift 4 days a week and do 30 min of hiit kick boxing 1day a week. Rest for 2 days. I calculated my TDEE and it says 1877 but MFP says 1200 calories to eat a day, I think that's so low. So you see, I need help. All of this is so confusing to me. Thank you!!

    Getting "toned" and losing at least 2 lbs a week are conflicting goals at your starting weight. A big deficit when you are that close to goal weight makes it hard for your body to fuel the deficit from your stored fat, and instead it will tap other energy storage (like muscle) more than would be necessary at a more a moderate deficit (like a half to three-quarters pound a week), and you will end up what people like to call "skinny fat"--which is pretty much the opposite of what most people mean by "toned."
  • nm212
    nm212 Posts: 570 Member
    edited May 2015
    RGv2 wrote: »
    nm212 wrote: »
    Your BMR is more important...it's what your body uses to burn energy naturally, with no exercise. I have a similar TDEE as you (around 1860), and my BMR is 1360... With no exercise, I can eat that much and still be in 500 calorie deficit (to burn a pound a week).

    Your TDEE is the MOST you could eat, without gaining weight.

    To LOSE weight, you have to eat less than that. MFP does 1200 calories a day as a general guide for weight loss (and yes you can eat back exercise calories)

    All I'm saying is that you can eat a little more if you want and still lose weight! lol but it's up to you...both methods work. If you do your BMR, you can still eat back half of your exercise calories too.

    :smile:

    MFP does not do 1200 calories as a general guide for weight loss. It's a calculator. A person enters their stats and goals, MFP calculates the users daily TDEE and subtracts from that to meet the goal the person enters. 1200 is also where MFP bottoms out. In this case, as pointed out earlier, for the OP to meet their goal they would need to eat 877 calories per day. MFP won't go that low, so it displays the default basement (1200).

    Sorry for the misinformation. Now I am confused myself . lol Then why does MFP give different numbers than a TDEE calculator? Someone told me about the iifym.com website and it worked for me. I've heard people say that MFP is not accurate . I know 1200 is the minimum anybody should eat...not talking about that. lol
  • RGv2
    RGv2 Posts: 5,789 Member
    nm212 wrote: »
    RGv2 wrote: »
    nm212 wrote: »
    Your BMR is more important...it's what your body uses to burn energy naturally, with no exercise. I have a similar TDEE as you (around 1860), and my BMR is 1360... With no exercise, I can eat that much and still be in 500 calorie deficit (to burn a pound a week).

    Your TDEE is the MOST you could eat, without gaining weight.

    To LOSE weight, you have to eat less than that. MFP does 1200 calories a day as a general guide for weight loss (and yes you can eat back exercise calories)

    All I'm saying is that you can eat a little more if you want and still lose weight! lol but it's up to you...both methods work. If you do your BMR, you can still eat back half of your exercise calories too.

    :smile:

    MFP does not do 1200 calories as a general guide for weight loss. It's a calculator. A person enters their stats and goals, MFP calculates the users daily TDEE and subtracts from that to meet the goal the person enters. 1200 is also where MFP bottoms out. In this case, as pointed out earlier, for the OP to meet their goal they would need to eat 877 calories per day. MFP won't go that low, so it displays the default basement (1200).

    Sorry for the misinformation. Now I am confused myself . lol Then why does MFP give different numbers than a TDEE calculator? Someone told me about the iifym.com website and it worked for me. I've heard people say that MFP is not accurate . I know 1200 is the minimum anybody should eat...not talking about that. lol

    MFP doesn't include exercise in their calculation where TDEE does. That is why you get calories to eat back when you enter your exercise.
  • cwolfman13
    cwolfman13 Posts: 41,865 Member
    Barbosas77 wrote: »
    I'm so confused on how many calories I should be eating to lose weight. I weigh 150 and I'm 5'0 female and I want to get to 130 and toned. I was at 120 before my daughters but I felt too small for a Latin curvy woman lol. Please please help me on how many calories to eat to lose at least 2 pounds. My day consist of sitting 8 hour a day (desk job) but I lift 4 days a week and do 30 min of hiit kick boxing 1day a week. Rest for 2 days. I calculated my TDEE and it says 1877 but MFP says 1200 calories to eat a day, I think that's so low. So you see, I need help. All of this is so confusing to me. Thank you!!

    TDEE is maintenance calories...you aren't even comparing apples to apples here. You would need to compare TDEE - X%.

    Most women maintain somewhere in the neighborhood of 1800 - 2000 calories per day with minimal if any exercise...so when you put your stats into MFP, the calculator is going to take a cut from your theoretical maintenance number. People tend to pick the most aggressive goal possible...2 Lbs per week...doesn't sound like much, but that's a 1,000 calorie cut from maintenance and 1200 is as low as MFP will go for liability reasons. It's difficult at that point to get adequate nutrition which is why there is usually doctors supervision when people to VLCDs.

    Also, your activity level with MFP isn't supposed to include any exercise, just your day to day...you account for exercise after the fact when you log it and then get those calories to "eat back".

    If you're doing it right, TDEE and MFP are 6 of 1.
  • shlygraham
    shlygraham Posts: 21 Member
    nm212 wrote: »

    This is what my good friend, who is a personal trainer, has told me. Figure out what you need to consume to maintain your weight and then deduct a 4 or 5 hundred calories a day from that number. 1200 or 1300 calories is way too few calories.

  • cwolfman13
    cwolfman13 Posts: 41,865 Member
    nm212 wrote: »
    RGv2 wrote: »
    nm212 wrote: »
    Your BMR is more important...it's what your body uses to burn energy naturally, with no exercise. I have a similar TDEE as you (around 1860), and my BMR is 1360... With no exercise, I can eat that much and still be in 500 calorie deficit (to burn a pound a week).

    Your TDEE is the MOST you could eat, without gaining weight.

    To LOSE weight, you have to eat less than that. MFP does 1200 calories a day as a general guide for weight loss (and yes you can eat back exercise calories)

    All I'm saying is that you can eat a little more if you want and still lose weight! lol but it's up to you...both methods work. If you do your BMR, you can still eat back half of your exercise calories too.

    :smile:

    MFP does not do 1200 calories as a general guide for weight loss. It's a calculator. A person enters their stats and goals, MFP calculates the users daily TDEE and subtracts from that to meet the goal the person enters. 1200 is also where MFP bottoms out. In this case, as pointed out earlier, for the OP to meet their goal they would need to eat 877 calories per day. MFP won't go that low, so it displays the default basement (1200).

    Sorry for the misinformation. Now I am confused myself . lol Then why does MFP give different numbers than a TDEE calculator? Someone told me about the iifym.com website and it worked for me. I've heard people say that MFP is not accurate . I know 1200 is the minimum anybody should eat...not talking about that. lol

    MFP is a NEAT method calculator, not a TDEE calculator. A TDEE calculator is going to include an estimate of exercise in your activity level and thus an estimate of those calorie requirements. With the NEAT method, your activity level only includes your day to day hum drum...exercise is an "extra" activity that you log and then get those calories.

    When I did MFP, my net calorie goal was 1800 to lose 1 Lb per week...with regular exercise I was regularly eating a gross of 2200 - 2300 calories per day. When I became more consistent in my workouts I switched methods so that I could just eat the same amount every day and my target was around 2250 daily with a 20% cut from my TDEE of 2800. Basically 6 of 1, half dozen of the other...the problem is that people don't even compare apples to apples rate of loss goals and on top of that, people seemed to be baffled by exercise and why you would want to account for that activity somewhere.