Understanding Your Total Daily Energy Expenditure
Your Total Daily Energy Expenditure (TDEE) is the total number of calories your body burns in a 24-hour period. It combines your Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR) — the energy needed just to keep you alive at rest — with the thermic effect of food (TEF), non-exercise activity thermogenesis (NEAT), and exercise activity thermogenesis (EAT). Understanding your TDEE is the foundation of any nutrition strategy, whether for fat loss, muscle gain, or maintenance.
Key Facts
- BMR accounts for 60-70% of total daily calories burned, even without any movement
- NEAT (fidgeting, standing, walking) varies by 500-2000 calories between individuals
- Muscle tissue burns ~6 calories per pound per day at rest vs ~2 for fat tissue
- Metabolic adaptation reduces TDEE by 15-25% during prolonged caloric restriction
- The thermic effect of protein is 20-30% vs 5-10% for carbs and 0-3% for fats
- TDEE decreases approximately 2-3% per decade after age 30 without intervention
Why TDEE Calculations Are Estimates, Not Prescriptions
TDEE formulas (Mifflin-St Jeor, Harris-Benedict, Katch-McArdle) provide estimates based on population averages. Individual variation of ±15% is normal due to differences in hormonal status (thyroid, cortisol, insulin sensitivity), gut microbiome composition (which affects calorie extraction from food), genetic metabolic rate differences, and adaptive thermogenesis. The most accurate approach is to use a formula as a starting point, then adjust based on 2-3 weeks of tracking actual weight change against caloric intake.











