Article

Macros Explained: Protein, Carbs, and Fat (And How to Hit the Right Numbers)

If calories are the speed limit on your fat-loss highway, macros are the steering wheel. Calories say how much you change; macros say what changes — fat or muscle, energy or fatigue, hunger or satisfaction.

The three macronutrients

  1. Protein — the body's structural raw material. 4 kcal/g.
  2. Carbohydrate — the fastest fuel for hard training. 4 kcal/g.
  3. Fat — long-storage fuel and the building block of hormones. 9 kcal/g.

How much protein?

Protein is the only macro with a clear performance-based recommendation. The research is consistent: 1.6–2.2 g of protein per kg of bodyweight protects lean mass during a cut and builds it during a bulk. Below 1.2 g/kg, muscle loss accelerates in any deficit.

Practical examples (vegetarian-friendly)

  • 70 kg adult: 112–154 g protein per day (≈ 200 g paneer + 1 cup cooked dal + 250 g Greek yogurt + a scoop of whey).
  • 90 kg adult: 144–198 g protein per day (≈ 250 g tofu or tempeh + 1.5 cups cooked lentils + 250 g cottage cheese + 30 g almonds).

Prefer plant-based foods? See our dedicated vegetarian TDEE & macros guide for a full list of high-protein vegetarian foods and sample meal plans.

How much fat?

Set fat to at least 0.6–1.0 g/kg of bodyweight. Below 0.5 g/kg for an extended period, hormone production (especially testosterone and oestrogen) starts to drop. Fat also makes meals satiating and tasty — important for adherence.

Carbs fill the rest

After locking protein and fat, the remaining calories go to carbs. Active people typically benefit from 3–6 g/kg of carbs to fuel training and recovery. Non-active people can comfortably run lower.

Worked example

Take a 75 kg adult with a 2,400 kcal target:

  • Protein: 2.0 × 75 = 150 g → 600 kcal.
  • Fat: 0.8 × 75 = 60 g → 540 kcal.
  • Carbs: 2,400 − 600 − 540 = 1,260 kcal → 315 g.

That is a balanced split of roughly 25% / 53% / 22% protein/carbs/fat — a perfectly reasonable starting point for almost anyone.

Five popular macro splits

StyleP/C/FWhen to use
Balanced30 / 40 / 30Default; works for most people
High-protein40 / 40 / 20Aggressive cuts; muscle retention
Moderate25 / 50 / 25Endurance athletes
Low-carb30 / 20 / 50Insulin resistance, sedentary lifestyle
Keto25 / 5 / 70Specific therapeutic uses

Common myths

  • "Eating fat makes you fat." Eating more calories than you burn makes you fat. Fat is just dense.
  • "You can only digest 30 g of protein per meal." False. Your body absorbs all of it; the rate just varies.
  • "Carbs after 6pm turn to fat." Calorie balance does not care what time the clock says.
  • "Skipping carbs is the only way to lose fat." Most successful diets are not low-carb.

How to track macros without going crazy

  • Pick one weekday and one weekend meal you eat often. Measure once.
  • Use the same plates and bowls so portions are visual.
  • Aim for "close enough" — within ±5–10 g of each macro per day is excellent.
  • Track for 8–12 weeks then transition to intuitive eating with weekly weigh-ins.

Start in 30 seconds

Plug your numbers into our free macro calculator and pick a diet style. You'll have grams-per-day for protein, carbs, and fat instantly.