Fitness Goal Calculator
Estimate how long it will take to lose weight, gain muscle, or improve fitness based on your body metrics and daily calorie intake.
Personal Details
This calculator auto-updates when values change.
Your Custom Fitness Plan
Daily calorie target
1,789 kcal
BMR
1,477 kcal
TDEE
2,289 kcal
Change needed
7 kg
Estimated timeline
14 weeks
This estimate starts with BMR, multiplies by activity level to estimate TDEE, then applies a goal-based calorie adjustment.
About This Fitness Goal Calculator
Reaching your fitness goals requires a combination of consistent exercise and proper nutrition. Whether you are planning fat loss, muscle gain, or general fitness, understanding your body's daily energy needs is the first useful step.
This fitness goal calculator estimates your Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR), Total Daily Energy Expenditure (TDEE), suggested calorie target, and an estimated timeline based on your selected goal.
Weight and body composition changes are rarely perfectly linear. Water weight, training consistency, sleep, stress, and genetics can all affect progress from week to week.
How to Use This Calculator
- 1
Enter your body metrics
Add your age, gender, weight, and height so the calculator can estimate your BMR and daily calorie needs.
- 2
Choose your activity level
Select the option that best matches your average weekly activity and training schedule.
- 3
Pick your primary goal
Choose whether you want to lose fat, gain muscle, or maintain while improving fitness.
- 4
Review your target and timeline
Use the result as a planning estimate, then adjust based on real progress over several weeks.
Frequently Asked Questions
How accurate is the fitness goal timeline?v
It is a planning estimate based on standard calorie and body weight formulas. Real results vary because metabolism, adherence, sleep, stress, and training quality all matter.
Can I build muscle and lose fat at the same time?v
Some people can, especially beginners or people returning to training. It usually requires enough protein, consistent resistance training, and a modest calorie target.
Is faster weight loss always better?v
No. Very aggressive deficits can increase hunger, reduce training performance, and make muscle retention harder.
What is a healthy weight loss rate?v
A common sustainable range is about 0.5 to 1% of body weight per week, depending on starting weight and health status.
