BMR vs TDEE vs BMI: Which Number Should You Use?
TL;DR
- BMR = calories at rest (your floor)
- TDEE = BMR × activity = calories you burn per day (use this to set your diet)
- BMI = a rough height/weight health screen (not a calorie tool)
- For fat loss or muscle gain, TDEE is the number that matters.
1) Three numbers, three jobs
People mix these up constantly, then wonder why their diet isn’t working. Here’s the one-line version of each:
| Number | What it is | Use it for |
|---|---|---|
| BMR | Energy burned at complete rest (breathing, organs) | Knowing your safe calorie floor |
| TDEE | BMR × activity factor = total daily burn | Setting calories for fat loss / gain |
| BMI | Weight ÷ height² — a health-risk screen | A rough check, nothing more |
2) BMR — your baseline
The Mifflin-St Jeor equation is the modern standard:
Women: BMR = 10 × weight(kg) + 6.25 × height(cm) − 5 × age − 161
Don’t eat below your BMR for long stretches — it tanks energy, sleep and adherence, and costs muscle.
3) TDEE — the number that runs your diet
Multiply BMR by how active you are:
| Activity | Multiplier |
|---|---|
| Sedentary | 1.2 |
| Lightly active | 1.375 |
| Moderately active | 1.55 |
| Very active | 1.725 |
Eat at TDEE → weight stable. Below → fat loss. Above → weight gain. This is the only number you adjust to change your body.
4) BMI — useful, but overrated
BMI sorts people into “underweight / normal / overweight / obese” by height and weight. It’s a quick population-level screen, but it can’t see body composition — a muscular athlete and an unfit person can share a BMI. Use it as a loose reference, not a calorie plan.
5) Calculate yours now (free)
6) Which one should you use?
- Want to lose fat or gain muscle? → TDEE (eat below or above it).
- Worried you’re eating too little? → check you’re above BMR.
- Just want a health snapshot? → BMI, then move on.
FAQ
What’s the difference between BMR and TDEE?
BMR is rest-only burn; TDEE is BMR × activity = your full daily burn. Diet is set against TDEE.
BMI or TDEE for weight loss?
TDEE. BMI doesn’t tell you how many calories to eat.
How do I calculate TDEE?
BMR (Mifflin-St Jeor) × activity factor (1.2–1.725). The free calculator above does it instantly.