Macro Calculator protein carbs fats dialed in
A precision macronutrient calculator with goal-based splits, gram and percentage targets, and four diet presets. Built for lifters who want exact numbers — not generic 40/30/30 defaults.
What Is the Macro Calculator?
The Macro Calculator is a precision tool that breaks your daily calorie target into the three macronutrients that shape body composition: protein, carbohydrates, and fat. Where calorie counters tell you how much energy to consume, this calculator tells you where each calorie should come from — and that distinction determines whether your physique changes.
Built at ffmicalculatore.com for athletes, lifters, and serious dieters, this tool factors in bodyweight, training level, and your specific goal (cut, maintain, lean bulk, recomp, keto) to deliver gram-level macro targets you can hit with a food scale and a bit of discipline.
Fill in your stats on the left and run the analysis to view your daily macro report.
Macro Formula Explained
The calculator runs three layered equations. First, BMR via Mifflin-St Jeor. Second, TDEE from activity multiplier. Third, the calorie target adjusted by goal, then split into macronutrient grams using your selected diet preset.
TDEE = BMR × ACTIVITY_MULTIPLIER
TARGET = TDEE ± GOAL_ADJUSTMENT (cut −500, bulk +300)
PROTEIN = TARGET × P% / 4 | CARBS = TARGET × C% / 4 | FATS = TARGET × F% / 9
Protein and carbs each provide 4 calories per gram; fat provides 9 calories per gram. That density gap is why fat targets always look smaller than carb targets even at similar percentages.
The Three Macronutrients Explained
Every gram of food you eat falls into one of three macros (or alcohol, but that's a different story). Each macro plays a distinct role in body composition, performance, and recovery.
Diet Preset Splits
Different goals call for different macronutrient ratios. Here are the four most validated splits and when to use each one.
Which Split Should You Pick?
Balanced (30/45/25) is the default starting point for most lifters. It supports moderate training volume, hormone production, and lifestyle flexibility.
High Protein (40/35/25) is the recomp split for advanced lifters trying to gain muscle and lose fat simultaneously. Higher protein protects muscle in a deficit.
Low Carb (35/25/40) works well for endurance athletes adapting to fat oxidation, or anyone with insulin sensitivity issues. Not optimal for max-effort lifting.
Keto (25/5/70) is a therapeutic protocol — useful for specific medical contexts but suboptimal for most strength athletes who depend on glycolytic fuel for high-volume training.
How to Use the Macro Calculator
Goal-Based Macro Adjustments
Your goal determines the calorie target before macros are calculated. Here's how each goal modifies the math.
| Goal | Calorie Adjust | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Cut | TDEE − 500 kcal | Steady fat loss while preserving muscle |
| Aggressive Cut | TDEE − 750 kcal | Short-term fast fat loss with risk of muscle loss |
| Maintain | TDEE ± 0 | Recomposition and physique maintenance |
| Lean Bulk | TDEE + 300 kcal | Slow, clean muscle gain with minimal fat |
| Mass Bulk | TDEE + 500 kcal | Faster muscle gain with some unavoidable fat |
Protein Targets by Goal
Protein needs are the most goal-sensitive macro. Here's the evidence-backed range for each phase.
| Phase | Protein Target | Reasoning |
|---|---|---|
| Cutting | 2.0 to 2.4 g/kg | Higher protein protects muscle in a deficit |
| Maintenance | 1.6 to 2.0 g/kg | Sufficient for recovery and recomp |
| Bulking | 1.6 to 2.2 g/kg | Adequate stimulus for muscle protein synthesis |
| Endurance | 1.4 to 1.8 g/kg | Lower hypertrophy demand, higher carb need |
| General Health | 1.2 to 1.6 g/kg | Above the RDA for active sedentary adults |
Common Macro Mistakes to Avoid
- Hitting calories but ignoring macros. 2,500 kcal of pizza is not the same as 2,500 kcal of chicken, rice, and avocado. Body composition responds to macros, not just calories
- Underestimating protein needs. The default RDA (0.8 g/kg) is for sedentary adults. Lifters need 2x to 3x more for muscle preservation and growth
- Eating too little fat. Dropping below 0.5 g/kg of bodyweight tanks testosterone and disrupts hormone production. Never go ultra-low-fat for more than a few weeks
- Cutting carbs unnecessarily. Most lifters perform better at moderate-to-high carb intakes. Carbs fuel training and refill glycogen — drop them only with good reason
- Using volumetric measurements. "One cup of rice" varies by 25 to 40% in actual weight. Use a food scale for accuracy
- Not adjusting after weight changes. Lose or gain 3+ kg and your macros need recalculating. Static targets don't track moving bodyweight
Tips for Hitting Your Macros
- Plan meals the night before. Pre-logging tomorrow's food eliminates 90% of macro guesswork
- Eat protein at every meal. 30 to 50g per meal across 3 to 5 meals optimizes muscle protein synthesis
- Use a food scale, every time. Cups and spoons are 20 to 40% off. Grams don't lie
- Build meal templates. 3 to 5 staple meals you eat repeatedly makes daily tracking effortless
- Time carbs around training. Pre and post-workout carb-heavy meals support performance and recovery
- Track for 2 weeks at maintenance before adjusting. If weight is stable, your numbers work. Adjust by ±10% if needed
- Hit protein first, fat second, fill remaining calories with carbs. This priority order produces the most consistent body comp results
Who Should Use the Macro Calculator?
- Bodybuilders and physique athletes setting precise targets for prep or off-season
- Strength athletes fueling for performance while managing weight class
- Recreational lifters moving from "eat clean" to actual numerical targets
- Coaches programming nutrition for clients with diverse goals
- Endurance athletes calibrating fuel for long training blocks
- Anyone in a fat-loss plateau who suspects their macros are off
- People exploring keto, low-carb, or high-protein diets who need exact gram targets