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Learn more →Enter current weight, target weight, and daily calorie deficit. Uses the standard 7,700 kcal per kg of fat to project days to goal. Includes weekly loss rate for safety check.
1 kg of body fat ≈ 7,700 kcal of energy. To lose 1 kg, you need a cumulative caloric deficit of ~7,700 kcal. So a daily deficit of 500 kcal × 14 days = 7,000 kcal ≈ 0.9 kg per 2 weeks, or about 0.45 kg/week. The famous '500 kcal deficit = 1 lb (0.45 kg) per week' rule comes from this.
Real-world results vary. Water weight fluctuates ±1-2 kg daily based on hydration, glycogen, sodium, and food in the digestive tract. The fat-loss math is reliable over weeks-to-months timeframes; daily scale readings are too noisy.
Conservative (250 kcal/day): ~0.23 kg/week. Slow, sustainable, minimal hunger and metabolic adaptation. Best for those near their goal weight or with little weight to lose.
Standard (500 kcal/day): ~0.45 kg/week. The textbook recommendation for most people. 1 lb/week loss is well-tolerated and sustainable for months.
Aggressive (750-1000 kcal/day): ~0.7-0.9 kg/week. Faster but harder to sustain. More hunger, more metabolic adaptation. Most professionals cap deficits at 25% below TDEE for sustainability — 1000 kcal/day below a 2000 TDEE is 50%, too aggressive long-term.
Metabolic adaptation: with sustained deficit, your BMR drops 5-15% as your body conserves energy. The same '500 kcal deficit' becomes effectively 350 kcal as the metabolism adapts.
Tracking accuracy: studies show people under-report calorie intake by 20-30% even when actively logging. If your weight isn't moving as predicted, the most likely cause is more calories than you think (untracked drinks, larger portions, etc.).
Lean mass loss: aggressive deficits cause up to 25% of weight loss to come from muscle, not fat. Strength training and adequate protein (1.6-2.2 g/kg of bodyweight) protect lean mass. Slow loss + lifting = mostly fat lost; rapid loss without lifting = mostly muscle lost.
It's the standard medical/scientific figure for the energy stored in 1 kg of body fat. Some sources use 7,000 (rounded) or 9,000 (counting non-fat tissue loss in deficit). 7,700 is the most cited and accurate for fat tissue specifically.
On average, yes — if your tracking is accurate and you maintain the deficit. Real-world results often lag by 10-30% due to metabolic adaptation and tracking errors. Plan for the math but expect real progress to be slightly slower.
Most evidence-based guidelines: 0.5-1% of body weight per week. For 75 kg that's 0.4-0.75 kg/week, achievable with a 250-500 kcal deficit. Faster is technically possible but riskier for muscle preservation and adherence.
No — water weight bounces ±1-2 kg daily. Use a 7-day moving average or weigh weekly under consistent conditions (morning, after bathroom, before food/water). Trends matter, not single readings.
Yes, mathematically. Calorie deficit drives weight loss; exercise just makes the deficit easier to maintain and protects muscle. Most successful long-term weight loss combines diet + exercise + behavior change.
Plateaus after 6-12 weeks are normal due to metabolic adaptation. Options: take a 'diet break' at maintenance for 1-2 weeks (reset metabolism), reduce intake by another 200 kcal, or accept current weight.
BMR/TDEE calculators give you maintenance calories. This calculator assumes you've already determined your deficit; it just projects timeline. Use them together: TDEE → desired deficit → eat (TDEE − deficit) kcal/day.
No. Calculation runs locally; nothing is sent to a server.
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Learn more →This tool is for general information only and is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Consult a qualified healthcare professional about your health.