Daily Calorie Deficit to Pounds

Enter your daily calorie deficit and instantly see how much weight you'll lose per day, week, month, and year. The fastest way to plan your daily eating.

🔥 Daily Calorie Deficit to Pounds

Enter your daily calorie deficit and instantly see how much weight you'll lose per day, week, month, and year. The fastest way to plan your daily eating.

Calories under your TDEE (maintenance) each day

Enter a positive number of calories

Helps estimate time to reach goal weight

Interactive Visualization

Formula: Weekly Loss = (Daily Deficit × 7) ÷ 3,500
See daily, weekly, monthly, and yearly projections at a glance.

*Conversion calculations are based on thermodynamic body weight modeling. Adjust targets based on actual physical feedback.

Establishing a Sustainable Daily Calorie Deficit

Your daily calorie deficit is the foundation of weight loss. To lose body fat, you must consume fewer calories than your Total Daily Energy Expenditure (TDEE). The golden rule of thumb is that a 500-calorie daily deficit results in approximately 1 pound of fat loss per week, which is widely considered safe and sustainable by medical professionals.

How to Choose Your Daily Target:

  • Conservative (250-300 kcal): Best for muscle preservation, high energy levels, and long-term sustainability.
  • Moderate (500 kcal): The standard target for steady, healthy weight loss of 1 pound per week.
  • Aggressive (750-1000 kcal): Should only be used temporarily and by individuals with higher starting body fat levels.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

TDEE (Total Daily Energy Expenditure) is the calories you burn in a day including all activities. Use our TDEE calculator, fitness trackers, or the Mifflin-St Jeor equation. Most adults range from 1,800-3,000 calories.
Yes! A 300 calorie deficit loses about 0.6 pounds per week. It's slower but very sustainable. Over a year, that's 31 pounds. Small deficits are easier to maintain and less likely to trigger binge eating.
Possible reasons: underestimating food intake, overestimating exercise burn, water retention, muscle gain, or metabolic adaptation. Track everything for 2 weeks. If still no loss, try increasing deficit by 100-200 calories.
Eat smaller portions, cut sugary drinks, increase vegetables, and add daily walking. These habits naturally reduce intake. Intermittent fasting (eating in an 8-hour window) also creates deficit without detailed tracking.