Calorie Calculator India (2026) – Daily Calorie Needs for Weight Loss, Gain & Maintenance
How to Use This Calorie Calculator
This calculator uses the Mifflin-St Jeor equation (the most accurate BMR formula for most adults) to calculate your Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR), then multiplies it by your activity factor to get your TDEE (Total Daily Energy Expenditure). Based on your goal, it then adjusts calories up or down to give you a daily calorie target.
- Gender: Male and female BMR formulas differ. Males have higher BMR due to greater muscle mass and lower body fat percentage.
- Goal: Choose from losing 1 kg/week (aggressive, –1000 kcal/day), losing 0.5 kg/week (sustainable, –500 kcal/day), maintaining weight (TDEE), or gaining weight (+500 kcal/day for +0.5 kg/week).
- Age, Height, Weight: All three are needed for accurate BMR calculation. Use your current weight, not your goal weight.
- Activity Level: Be honest — most Indians are sedentary or lightly active. Overestimating activity is the most common reason calorie calculations fail.
BMR & TDEE Formulas Explained
Understanding BMR and TDEE is the foundation of any calorie-based approach to weight management. These two numbers tell you exactly how many calories your body needs.
BMR – Basal Metabolic Rate (Mifflin-St Jeor)
Female BMR = (10 × weight kg) + (6.25 × height cm) – (5 × age) – 161
Example: 28-year-old woman, 65 kg, 165 cm
BMR = (10 × 65) + (6.25 × 165) – (5 × 28) – 161
= 650 + 1031.25 – 140 – 161 = 1,380 kcal/day
TDEE – Total Daily Energy Expenditure
Activity Factors:
Sedentary (desk job, no exercise) × 1.2
Lightly Active (exercise 1–3 days/week) × 1.375
Moderately Active (exercise 3–5 days/week) × 1.55
Very Active (hard exercise 6–7 days/week) × 1.725
Extra Active (physical job + daily training) × 1.9
Example continued: BMR 1,380 × 1.375 (lightly active) = 1,898 kcal/day TDEE
Calorie Targets Based on Goal
| Goal | Calorie Adjustment | Expected Rate | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lose 1 kg/week | TDEE – 1,000 kcal | ~1 kg/week | Aggressive – need medical supervision if under 1,500 kcal |
| Lose 0.5 kg/week | TDEE – 500 kcal | ~0.5 kg/week | Recommended – sustainable long-term |
| Maintain Weight | TDEE exactly | No change | Eat at TDEE — monitor and adjust |
| Gain 0.5 kg/week | TDEE + 500 kcal | ~0.5 kg/week | With strength training for lean muscle gain |
Daily Calorie Needs – India Reference Table 2026
Use this table to find approximate daily calorie needs for Indian adults by age, gender and activity level. These are TDEE values (maintenance calories) — adjust down by 500 for weight loss or up by 500 for weight gain.
Daily Calorie Needs for Indian Men
| Age | Sedentary | Lightly Active | Moderately Active | Very Active |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 18–25 years | 2,100 | 2,400 | 2,700 | 3,100 |
| 26–35 years | 2,000 | 2,300 | 2,600 | 2,950 |
| 36–45 years | 1,950 | 2,200 | 2,500 | 2,800 |
| 46–55 years | 1,850 | 2,100 | 2,350 | 2,650 |
| 56–65 years | 1,750 | 2,000 | 2,250 | 2,550 |
| 65+ years | 1,650 | 1,900 | 2,100 | 2,400 |
Daily Calorie Needs for Indian Women
| Age | Sedentary | Lightly Active | Moderately Active | Very Active |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 18–25 years | 1,700 | 1,950 | 2,200 | 2,500 |
| 26–35 years | 1,650 | 1,900 | 2,100 | 2,400 |
| 36–45 years | 1,600 | 1,850 | 2,050 | 2,350 |
| 46–55 years | 1,550 | 1,750 | 1,950 | 2,200 |
| 56–65 years | 1,450 | 1,650 | 1,850 | 2,100 |
| 65+ years | 1,400 | 1,600 | 1,800 | 2,050 |
*All values in kcal/day. Calculated using Mifflin-St Jeor for average Indian height/weight. Individual needs may vary by ±200 kcal based on exact measurements and metabolic rate.
Calorie Count – Common Indian Foods (2026)
Most Indians underestimate how many calories are in common meals. This comprehensive reference table covers everyday Indian foods — from staples like dal-rice and roti to popular street foods and snacks.
Indian Staples & Main Course
| Food Item | Serving Size | Calories (kcal) | Protein (g) | Carbs (g) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chapati / Roti (plain) | 1 medium (40g) | 120 | 3.1 | 22 |
| Paratha (plain, with ghee) | 1 medium (70g) | 220 | 4.5 | 30 |
| Aloo Paratha | 1 piece (120g) | 290 | 6 | 45 |
| Steamed Rice (white) | 1 cup cooked (150g) | 200 | 4 | 44 |
| Brown Rice | 1 cup cooked (150g) | 185 | 4.5 | 39 |
| Dal (moong/masoor, cooked) | 1 cup (200g) | 150 | 10 | 24 |
| Rajma (cooked) | 1 cup (200g) | 220 | 15 | 36 |
| Chana Dal / Chole | 1 cup (200g) | 210 | 13 | 34 |
| Paneer (100g) | 100g | 265 | 18 | 4 |
| Chicken Curry | 1 serving (150g) | 250 | 25 | 8 |
| Egg Bhurji (2 eggs) | 1 serving | 200 | 14 | 5 |
| Fish Curry | 1 serving (150g) | 190 | 22 | 6 |
| Idli (plain) | 2 pieces | 140 | 4 | 28 |
| Masala Dosa | 1 piece | 220 | 5 | 38 |
| Poha (cooked) | 1 plate (200g) | 250 | 5 | 48 |
| Biryani (chicken) | 1 plate (350g) | 550 | 28 | 60 |
Indian Snacks, Sweets & Beverages
| Food Item | Serving | Calories (kcal) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chai (with milk & 2 tsp sugar) | 1 cup (200ml) | 80 | 3 cups/day = 240 kcal |
| Samosa | 1 medium | 250 | High fat + refined carbs |
| Vada Pav | 1 piece | 310 | Common Mumbai snack |
| Bhel Puri | 1 plate (150g) | 180 | Relatively low calorie |
| Pav Bhaji | 1 plate (2 pav) | 400 | High butter content |
| Gulab Jamun | 2 pieces | 200 | High sugar |
| Rasgulla | 2 pieces | 150 | Lower fat than gulab jamun |
| Barfi / Halwa | 1 piece (50g) | 200 | Very dense calories |
| Banana (medium) | 1 fruit | 90 | Good pre-workout snack |
| Whole Milk | 1 glass (250ml) | 150 | Also provides protein 8g |
| Lassi (sweet) | 1 glass (300ml) | 230 | High sugar |
| Buttermilk (chaas) | 1 glass (300ml) | 60 | Excellent low-calorie choice |
| Cold Drink / Cola | 1 can (330ml) | 140 | Zero nutrition, all sugar |
| Packaged Biscuits | 4 biscuits (50g) | 220 | High refined carbs + trans fat |
Protein, Carbs & Fat – Macro Guide for Indians
Macronutrients (macros) are the three major energy-providing nutrients: protein, carbohydrates, and fat. Understanding how many grams of each you need is more useful than tracking calories alone — especially for body composition goals like fat loss while preserving muscle.
Calorie Value of Each Macro
| Macronutrient | Calories per gram | Recommended % of Total Calories | For 1,700 kcal/day |
|---|---|---|---|
| Protein | 4 kcal/g | 25–30% (weight loss) | 106–128 g |
| Carbohydrates | 4 kcal/g | 40–50% | 170–213 g |
| Fat | 9 kcal/g | 25–35% | 47–66 g |
Protein – The Most Important Macro for Indians
India has a widespread protein deficiency. Most Indian adults consume only 40–50 g of protein daily — less than half the recommended amount for weight management. Adequate protein is critical for:
- Preserving muscle mass during calorie deficit (prevents muscle loss while losing fat)
- Increasing satiety — protein is the most filling macronutrient, reducing total calorie intake naturally
- Higher thermic effect — digesting protein burns 20–30% of its calories (vs 5–10% for carbs and 0–3% for fat)
- Supporting hormones, immune function, enzymes, and tissue repair
Target: 1.2–1.6 g protein per kg body weight for weight loss | 1.6–2.0 g/kg for muscle gain. A 65 kg Indian woman targeting fat loss should aim for 78–104 g protein daily.
Carbohydrates – Reduce Quality, Not Quantity Completely
Carbohydrates are not the enemy — refined, processed carbohydrates are. Replace high glycaemic index carbs (white rice, maida, packaged biscuits, soft drinks) with low-GI alternatives (millets, brown rice, oats, whole wheat roti, dal, vegetables) without dramatic total reduction. Indian diets work best with moderate carbohydrates and high fibre intake.
Fat – Essential But Easy to Overeat
Dietary fat is essential for vitamin absorption, hormone production, and satiety. The issue for most Indians is excessive intake of cooking oil and ghee — 3–4 tablespoons per meal is common. Each tablespoon of oil or ghee = 120 kcal. Reducing oil in cooking by 50% (use non-stick pans, air fryer, or baking) is one of the most effective calorie reduction strategies for Indian households.
Calorie Deficit for Weight Loss – How It Works for Indians
Weight loss fundamentally requires consuming fewer calories than you burn. This principle — the calorie deficit — is the foundation of all successful weight loss approaches, regardless of whether it is a keto diet, intermittent fasting, or a traditional Indian diet plan.
The 7,700 Calorie Rule
To lose 0.5 kg per week: 7,700 ÷ 2 = 3,850 kcal deficit/week = 550 kcal/day deficit
To lose 1 kg per week: 7,700 kcal deficit/week = 1,100 kcal/day deficit
Example: TDEE = 2,000 kcal
For 0.5 kg/week loss: eat 2,000 – 550 = 1,450 kcal/day
Why Scale Weight Fluctuates Despite Calorie Deficit
Many Indians get discouraged when the scale does not move linearly despite maintaining a calorie deficit. Common reasons for scale fluctuations that are NOT fat gain:
- Water retention: High sodium meals, hormonal changes (especially in women), glycogen replenishment after exercise — all cause water weight changes of 1–3 kg that have nothing to do with fat
- Bowel content: The weight of undigested food in the digestive system varies by 0.5–2 kg throughout the day
- Muscle gain: If you have started strength training, muscle gain can offset fat loss on the scale even as body composition improves
Solution: Weigh yourself at the same time every morning (before eating, after urinating) and track the weekly average — not individual days. True fat loss trend is visible over 2–4 weeks, not day-to-day.
Calories Burned by Common Exercises – Indian Context
All calorie burn estimates below are for a person weighing approximately 65 kg. Heavier individuals burn more; lighter individuals burn less.
| Activity | Duration | Calories Burned (~65 kg) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Walking (slow, 3 km/h) | 60 min | 195 kcal | Good for beginners |
| Brisk Walking (5 km/h) | 60 min | 270 kcal | Most accessible exercise for Indians |
| Jogging (8 km/h) | 30 min | 270 kcal | Good cardio option |
| Running (10 km/h) | 30 min | 320 kcal | High intensity |
| Cycling (moderate) | 60 min | 400 kcal | Low impact, joint-friendly |
| Swimming | 30 min | 280 kcal | Full body workout |
| Strength Training | 45 min | 220 kcal | + afterburn effect (EPOC) |
| Yoga (Hatha) | 60 min | 180 kcal | Also reduces stress cortisol |
| Yoga (Power/Vinyasa) | 60 min | 300 kcal | More intense variant |
| Skipping/Jump Rope | 20 min | 250 kcal | Excellent for fat burn |
| Dance (Bollywood/Zumba) | 45 min | 320 kcal | Fun and effective |
| Household work | 60 min | 130 kcal | Counts as NEAT |
Frequently Asked Questions – Calorie Calculator India
SWP Calculator (2026) – Systematic Withdrawal Plan Returns, Monthly Income & Remaining Corpus
Watch how your corpus balance changes each year after monthly withdrawals. Green = corpus growing, Orange = corpus shrinking, Red = corpus depleted.
| Year | Opening Balance | Investment Growth | Annual Withdrawal | Closing Balance |
|---|
What is SWP & How to Use This Calculator
A Systematic Withdrawal Plan (SWP) is the opposite of a SIP. Instead of investing a fixed amount every month, in SWP you withdraw a fixed amount every month from your mutual fund corpus. The remaining amount continues to stay invested and grow at the expected return rate. SWP is widely used for retirement income planning, regular cash flow from lump sum investments, and as a tax-efficient alternative to FD interest income.
Think of SWP as a personal pension plan from your mutual fund. You park a large corpus — built through years of SIP investing or a lumpsum — and then start a monthly SWP to receive regular income. If your corpus grows faster than your withdrawal rate, the corpus can actually grow over time even as you withdraw every month.
How to Use This SWP Calculator
- Initial Investment: The total corpus you are starting the SWP with. This could be your accumulated SIP corpus, a lumpsum FD maturity, retirement gratuity, or any other one-time amount.
- Monthly Withdrawal: The fixed amount you want to receive every month. A sustainable withdrawal rate is typically 0.5%–0.7% of corpus per month (6%–8.4% annually). Withdrawing too much depletes the corpus faster than growth replenishes it.
- Expected Annual Return: The return your investment continues to earn while SWP is running. Use 10%–12% for equity mutual funds and 6%–8% for debt/hybrid funds.
- Withdrawal Period: How many years you plan to withdraw monthly. For retirement planning, use your expected retirement duration (typically 20–30 years for Indian retirees).
SWP Formula & Calculation Explained
SWP is calculated month by month — at the start of each month, the previous month's closing balance earns one month's return, then the withdrawal is deducted to arrive at the new closing balance.
Month-by-Month SWP Formula
Where:
Balance(m) = Corpus at end of month m
r = Monthly return rate = Annual Rate ÷ 12 ÷ 100
W = Monthly withdrawal amount
Example: ₹10,00,000 corpus at 12% p.a., ₹10,000/month withdrawal
Month 1: 10,00,000 × (1 + 0.01) – 10,000 = 10,10,000 – 10,000 = ₹10,00,000
Month 2: 10,00,000 × 1.01 – 10,000 = ₹10,00,000 (stable!)
At exactly 1% monthly return and ₹10,000 withdrawal on ₹10,00,000 — corpus is perfectly sustainable indefinitely.
Sustainable Withdrawal Rate Formula
Example: ₹50,00,000 corpus at 12% p.a. (1% monthly)
Max Sustainable Withdrawal = 50,00,000 × 0.01 = ₹50,000/month
At this rate, the corpus never depletes — only investment returns are withdrawn.
Withdrawing less = corpus grows. Withdrawing more = corpus slowly depletes.
How Long Will Your Corpus Last?
Net monthly depletion = W – (Corpus × r)
Example: ₹10,00,000 at 8% p.a. (0.667%/month), ₹15,000/month withdrawal
Monthly growth = 10,00,000 × 0.00667 = ₹6,667
Net depletion = 15,000 – 6,667 = ₹8,333/month
Corpus depletes in approximately 10,00,000 ÷ 8,333 = ~120 months (10 years)
(Actual time is longer because depletion accelerates as corpus shrinks — use calculator for precision)
SWP Reference Table – How Long Corpus Lasts at Different Withdrawal Rates
This table shows how long a corpus lasts at various monthly withdrawal amounts and return rates. Green cells indicate the corpus is sustainable (doesn't deplete in 30 years). Red indicates depletion years.
₹50 Lakh Corpus – Monthly Withdrawal vs Duration at Different Returns
| Monthly Withdrawal | @ 8% p.a. | @ 10% p.a. | @ 12% p.a. | Sustainable? (12%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ₹20,000 | 30+ yrs | 30+ yrs | 30+ yrs | Yes – corpus grows |
| ₹30,000 | 28 yrs | 30+ yrs | 30+ yrs | Yes (borderline) |
| ₹40,000 | 17 yrs | 25 yrs | 30+ yrs | Yes – slowly grows |
| ₹50,000 | 13 yrs | 19 yrs | 28 yrs | Marginally |
| ₹60,000 | 10 yrs | 15 yrs | 22 yrs | No – depletes |
| ₹80,000 | 7 yrs | 10 yrs | 15 yrs | No – depletes fast |
₹1 Crore Corpus – Monthly Income SWP at 12% p.a.
| Monthly Withdrawal | Annual Withdrawal | 10-Year Remaining Corpus | 20-Year Remaining Corpus | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ₹30,000 | ₹3.6L/yr (3.6%) | ₹2.05 Cr | ₹4.82 Cr | Growing rapidly |
| ₹50,000 | ₹6L/yr (6%) | ₹1.43 Cr | ₹2.28 Cr | Sustainable |
| ₹80,000 | ₹9.6L/yr (9.6%) | ₹87 L | ₹65 L | Slowly depleting |
| ₹1,00,000 | ₹12L/yr (12%) | ₹55 L | Depleted in ~17 yrs | Depletes |
*All values at 12% p.a. annual return. Actual returns vary. For retirement planning, use a conservative 8–10% assumption.
SWP vs SIP – Key Differences
SWP and SIP are mirror images of each other. Understanding the difference helps you use each at the right life stage — SIP during the wealth accumulation phase, SWP during the wealth distribution phase.
| Feature | SIP (Systematic Investment Plan) | SWP (Systematic Withdrawal Plan) |
|---|---|---|
| Direction of Cash Flow | Money goes INTO mutual fund each month | Money comes OUT of mutual fund each month |
| Purpose | Wealth accumulation / building corpus | Wealth distribution / regular income |
| Best Life Stage | Working years (20–55 years) | Retirement / post-retirement (55+ years) |
| Effect on Corpus | Corpus grows with each instalment | Corpus may grow or deplete depending on withdrawal rate |
| Tax Treatment | No tax on SIP investment | Each withdrawal is taxed as capital gains redemption |
| Flexibility | Can pause, stop, increase, decrease anytime | Can pause, stop, change amount anytime |
| Minimum Amount | ₹100–500/month | ₹500–1,000/month (fund-specific) |
| Inflation Protection | Wealth grows faster than inflation in equity | Need to step-up withdrawal annually for inflation |
SIP + SWP — The Complete Lifecycle Strategy
The most effective mutual fund wealth strategy in India follows a two-phase approach:
- Phase 1 (Working Years, Age 25–55): SIP ₹10,000–50,000/month in equity funds for 20–30 years. Build a corpus of ₹1–5 crore.
- Phase 2 (Retirement, Age 55+): Stop SIP, move corpus to balanced/debt fund, start SWP for monthly income. At ₹2 crore corpus and 10% return, ₹1.5 lakh/month SWP is sustainable for 20+ years.
Using SWP for Retirement Income Planning in India
SWP from mutual funds is increasingly being recommended over traditional options like FD interest and annuity plans for retirement income in India. Here is why — and how to structure it correctly.
Why SWP is Better Than FD Interest for Retirement
- Higher returns: Equity/balanced mutual funds at 8–12% vs FD at 7–8% p.a.
- Tax efficiency: FD interest is taxed at your full income slab rate. SWP from equity funds held over 1 year attracts 12.5% LTCG tax only on the gain component — the principal portion of each SWP is tax-free
- Inflation beating: Equity SWP corpus grows over time and can be stepped up; FD interest is fixed and loses real value each year
- Flexibility: FD requires breaking the entire deposit for extra cash; SWP can be paused or modified anytime without penalties
- Corpus preservation: Well-structured SWP from a growing corpus can provide income for 25–30 years while preserving or even growing the original corpus
Practical SWP Retirement Plan – Example
| Corpus Size | Recommended Monthly SWP | Annual Withdrawal Rate | Expected Sustainability (@ 10% return) |
|---|---|---|---|
| ₹50 Lakhs | ₹25,000–35,000 | 6–8.4% | 25–30+ years |
| ₹1 Crore | ₹50,000–70,000 | 6–8.4% | 25–30+ years |
| ₹2 Crore | ₹1,00,000–1,40,000 | 6–8.4% | 25–30+ years |
| ₹3 Crore | ₹1,50,000–2,10,000 | 6–8.4% | 25–30+ years |
| ₹5 Crore | ₹2,50,000–3,50,000 | 6–8.4% | Indefinitely sustainable |
Tax on SWP Withdrawals in India (FY 2026-27)
Unlike FD interest which is fully taxed at your income slab rate, SWP withdrawals are treated as partial redemptions of mutual fund units — and only the gain portion of each withdrawal is taxable, not the entire withdrawal amount. This makes SWP significantly more tax-efficient than FD for retirees in the 20%–30% tax bracket.
How SWP Tax is Calculated
Each SWP withdrawal redeems some mutual fund units at the current NAV. The taxable gain = Current NAV × Units redeemed – Cost of those units at purchase NAV. Only this gain portion is taxable:
| Fund Type | Holding Period | Tax Rate | Effective Tax on ₹50,000 Withdrawal (gain = ₹20,000) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Equity Mutual Fund | More than 1 year | 12.5% LTCG on gains above ₹1.25L/year | ₹2,500 (5% effective) |
| Equity Mutual Fund | Less than 1 year | 20% STCG | ₹4,000 (8% effective) |
| Debt Mutual Fund | Any period | As per income slab | ₹6,000–8,000 (30% slab) |
| FD Interest (for comparison) | N/A | Full slab rate on entire interest | ₹15,000 (30% slab on full interest) |