The most reliable way for how to calculate maintenance calories for desk job is to multiply your current bodyweight in pounds by 12. For a 180-pound person, that’s a starting point of 2,160 calories, not the inflated 2,500+ that most online calculators will give you. You've probably tried those calculators, selected "sedentary," and found the number was completely wrong. You either gained weight or felt like you were starving just to maintain. That's because those tools are built for the average person, and your desk job makes you anything but average in terms of daily energy expenditure.
Let’s be honest: you’re frustrated because you’ve followed the rules and they haven’t worked. The fitness industry loves complex formulas like the Mifflin-St Jeor or Harris-Benedict equations, but they fail to account for the biggest variable for office workers: near-zero Non-Exercise Activity Thermogenesis (NEAT). That’s the energy you burn from fidgeting, walking to the printer, or taking the stairs. When you sit for 8-10 hours a day, your NEAT plummets, and those standard formulas become wildly inaccurate.
Our simple formula-Bodyweight (lbs) x 12-14-provides a much more realistic starting range.
For a 150-pound person, this gives a range of 1,800 to 2,100 calories. This isn't a magic number. It's a data-driven starting point for a one-week experiment to find what works for *your* body.
You've seen the dropdown menu on every calorie calculator: Sedentary, Lightly Active, Moderately Active. You correctly choose "Sedentary," and the calculator spits out a number that feels too high. It is. Here's the math that proves why it's sabotaging your progress.
Your Total Daily Energy Expenditure (TDEE), or your maintenance calories, is made up of four parts:
Online calculators estimate your BMR and then multiply it by an "activity factor" to get your TDEE. For "Sedentary," they typically use a multiplier of 1.2. But for someone who truly sits all day, driving to an office to sit at a desk and then driving home to sit on the couch, the real multiplier is closer to 1.1.
Let's see the damage. A 40-year-old, 200-pound male has a BMR of roughly 1,850 calories.
That's a difference of 185 calories per day. Over a week, that's 1,295 calories you're overeating while thinking you're at maintenance. That's how you slowly gain a pound every three weeks despite "eating right." The calculator isn't lying, but its definition of sedentary doesn't match the reality of a modern desk job.
Forget estimations and formulas. The only way to know your true maintenance calories is to test them in the real world. This 7-day protocol turns your body into a laboratory. It requires precision for one week, but the data you get is priceless.
Use the formula from before. Be honest about your activity level. If you only make it to the gym twice a week, don't use the 14x multiplier. Let's use an example: a 160-pound person who works a desk job and lifts 3 times per week.
This is your target number. For the next seven days, your only goal is to hit this number as closely as possible, every single day. We're not trying to lose or gain weight yet; we are establishing a baseline.
This is the most important step. Sloppy tracking gives you sloppy data.
Don't change your routine. Don't add extra cardio. Don't start a new diet. Keep everything-your workouts, your sleep, your stress levels-as consistent as possible. We need to isolate the variable we're testing: calories.
On the morning of Day 8, take your final weight. You now have seven days of weigh-ins. Do not look at the difference between Day 1 and Day 7. That's meaningless due to daily fluctuations. Instead, calculate the average weight for the week.
Now, compare your starting weight on Day 1 to your average weight for the week.
Based on your results, make a single adjustment. If you gained a pound, reduce your daily calories by 250-300 and run the experiment for another week. If you lost a pound, increase by 250-300. This iterative process of testing and adjusting is the only path to finding the number that is 100% accurate for you.
When you start this 7-day test, your brain will fight you. Your daily weight will fluctuate, and it will make you want to quit. This is normal. Your weight can easily swing 2-4 pounds in a single day based on your salt intake, carb consumption, hydration levels, and stress. This is water weight, not fat.
Your job for this one week is to be a robot. Ignore the daily noise on the scale and trust the process. The only number that matters is the weekly average. Good progress isn't a straight line down; it's a jagged line that trends in the right direction over time. If you can embrace this reality, you'll stop the cycle of starting and stopping that has kept you stuck.
For 3-4 weightlifting sessions per week, using the Bodyweight x 13 or 14 multiplier is a better starting point. Alternatively, you can use the 12x multiplier as your baseline for non-training days and add 200-300 calories on the days you lift to fuel performance and recovery.
Calories are king, but macros matter for body composition. A simple and effective starting point is to set protein first. Aim for 0.8-1.0 grams of protein per pound of bodyweight. Then, allocate 20-30% of your total calories to fats. Fill the remaining calories with carbohydrates.
Once you've used the 7-day protocol to find your true maintenance number, the next step is easy. To lose fat, create a deficit by subtracting 300-500 calories from your maintenance number. To build muscle, create a surplus by adding 200-300 calories.
Your BMR does decrease slightly as you age, primarily due to muscle loss. For individuals over 40 with a desk job, starting with the Bodyweight x 12 multiplier is even more critical. It provides a conservative and realistic baseline that prevents accidental overeating.
Food tracking apps are not 100% accurate, but they are consistent. User-generated entries can be wrong, so always try to use verified entries (often marked with a green check). The goal isn't perfect accuracy down to the last calorie, but consistent tracking so you can make informed adjustments based on your weekly results.
All content and media on Mofilo is created and published for informational purposes only. It is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition, including but not limited to eating disorders, nutritional deficiencies, injuries, or any other health concerns. If you think you may have a medical emergency or are experiencing symptoms of any health condition, call your doctor or emergency services immediately.