How Many Calories Do I Need?

Counting calories is a simple concept. Throughout the day you rely on food labels and online resources to determine the number of calories contained in each food and beverage you consume. At the end of the day you add it all up and, voila, you know exactly how many total calories you took in.

But what is simple in principle is almost impossible in practice. A few factors combine to make it almost unobtainable to accurately measure your daily calorie intake. One component has to do with the difference between how calorie counts are determined in the laboratory and how calories are extracted from food in your body. To determine the calorie content of foods, scientists incinerate them inside a device called, appropriately enough, a calorimeter. This device incinerates all types of foods equally well.

Your body is different. It extracts calories more easily from cooked foods, soft foods and low-fiber foods than it does from raw foods, harder foods and high-fiber foods. So, for example, if you eat 100 calories of steamed white rice, your body will absorb more calories than it would from 100 calories of raw lettuce.

More: 12 Easy Ways to Put More Fiber in Your Diet

Apart from this issue of calorie extraction, the calorie information you see on food packaging and on restaurant menus is seldom 100 percent accurate in the first place. A 2011 study by researchers at Tufts University found that only 7 percent out of 269 items on restaurant menus contained calorie counts that were within 10 calories of advertised totals.

Things get even more dicey when you try to count calories in home-prepared meals and snacks. Even experts admit that their estimates are little more than wild guesses. "I have a Ph.D. in nutrition, and I can't tell if my dinner is 500 or 800 calories just by looking at the plate," said Jean Mayer, lead author of the study mentioned above, in an interview for U.S. News & World Report.

More: How Many Calories Are You Eating?

Does Counting Calories Aid in Weight Management?

Does all of this mean that counting calories is a waste of time? Not necessarily. Although counting calories every day is certainly not necessary for successful weight management (only 43 percent of successful dieters do), it can still be an effective way to become more mindful of what and how much you're eating. In other words, you're less likely to kid yourself about your diet and are more likely to make better choices if you go through the exercise of counting calories at least once in a while.

More: Use the Active Calorie Calculator

Determining How Many Calories Your Body Uses

Of course, the number of calories you eat in a day means nothing by itself. It only becomes meaningful in relation to how many calories your body uses each day. Your calorie intake target is determined by this number and your goal.

More: 6 Tips to Stick to Your Weight-Loss Goal

If you're trying to lose weight, you should aim to consume 100 to 400 fewer calories than your body uses daily. If you're an athlete trying to maintain a steady weight and make sure your body is well fueled for training, you should aim to consume the same number of calories that your body uses. And if you're trying to build muscle, aim to consume about 100 calories more than your body uses each day.

More: Eat to Build Lean Muscles

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About the Author

Matt Fitzgerald

Matt Fitzgerald is a certified sports nutritionist, endurance coach, and author. His many books include Racing Weight and The New Rules of Marathon and Half-Marathon Nutrition. Matt's writing also appears regularly on competitor.com, in Women's Running, and elsewhere. He has served as a consultant to several sports nutrition companies, as a peer reviewer for scientific journals, and as a nutrition advisor to professional runners and triathletes. Matt also provides nutrition counseling services to athletes of all experience and ability levels through racingweight.com. A lifelong athlete himself, he speaks frequently at events throughout the United States and internationally. Learn more at mattfitzgerald.org.
Matt Fitzgerald is a certified sports nutritionist, endurance coach, and author. His many books include Racing Weight and The New Rules of Marathon and Half-Marathon Nutrition. Matt's writing also appears regularly on competitor.com, in Women's Running, and elsewhere. He has served as a consultant to several sports nutrition companies, as a peer reviewer for scientific journals, and as a nutrition advisor to professional runners and triathletes. Matt also provides nutrition counseling services to athletes of all experience and ability levels through racingweight.com. A lifelong athlete himself, he speaks frequently at events throughout the United States and internationally. Learn more at mattfitzgerald.org.

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