I've read the "sticky" message with FAQs about calorie recommendations but it didn't address this issue, so I thought I'd post it here (I wrote about this in a recent blog message as well)
For years, I was under the impression that I could calculate my “maintenance” calorie intake by multiplying my current weight by 12 (since I’m sedentary). After all, this is the common equation quoted on most websites and in most books — and some are even more generous.
One medical website (American Cancer Society) even has a calculator that tells me:
“You need approximately 2891 calories per day to maintain your current weight, based on your current activity level…. To take off 1 pound per week, you need to create a “deficit” of 500 calories per day. You can do this by eating 250 fewer calories a day (for example, cut out a 20-ounce bottle of regular soda) and burning an extra 250 calories through physical activity (for example, walk for 2.5 miles).”
According to this equation, I could consumer 2,391 calories a day and still lose a pound a week.
Something about this was just too good to be true, so I started do a bit more research and found that there’s another “equation” that gives a far different result.
The second method of figuring out your caloric needs is by calculating your Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR). Using the Harris-Benedict formula, my BMR is 1,602 calories. Then, using figures found on many websites, I multiplied my BMR by 1.2 to arrive at the number of calories I need to maintain my current weight.
That came to 1,923, give or take a fraction of a calorie. For my one-pound-a-week loss, I can eat no more than 1,423 calories a day.
How can one formula say I can eat 2,391 calories a day but another tell me to restrict my diet to 1,423 calories? Am I not understanding the advice?


, and calories to maintain once we get to goal.
Each one of us has a unique metabolism and it might be completely different than another person's, even at the same height, weight, age, and gender. Unless we're locked in a lab and all our metabolic functions measured for a week, no one can predict what specific calorie level will work for each of us.