How many calories you need per day changes significantly across your lifetime. A 20-year-old man needs roughly 600–800 more calories daily than a 70-year-old man of the same weight doing the same activities. Understanding how calorie needs shift by age — and why — helps you eat appropriately for your life stage rather than using a one-size-fits-all number that may be years out of date.
Daily Calorie Needs by Age — Summary Tables
The figures below are based on the Mifflin-St Jeor equation, the most clinically validated method for estimating calorie needs in adults, applied to typical weight ranges and three activity levels. Use these as starting estimates — individual needs vary based on body size, muscle mass, and specific activity levels.
Daily Calorie Needs for Women by Age
| Age | Sedentary | Moderately Active | Very Active |
|---|---|---|---|
| 19–25 | 1,800–2,000 kcal | 2,000–2,200 kcal | 2,400 kcal |
| 26–30 | 1,800–1,950 kcal | 2,000–2,100 kcal | 2,350 kcal |
| 31–40 | 1,750–1,900 kcal | 1,950–2,100 kcal | 2,300 kcal |
| 41–50 | 1,700–1,850 kcal | 1,900–2,050 kcal | 2,200 kcal |
| 51–60 | 1,600–1,750 kcal | 1,800–1,950 kcal | 2,100 kcal |
| 61–70 | 1,550–1,700 kcal | 1,750–1,900 kcal | 2,000 kcal |
| 71+ | 1,500–1,600 kcal | 1,650–1,800 kcal | 1,900 kcal |
Daily Calorie Needs for Men by Age
| Age | Sedentary | Moderately Active | Very Active |
|---|---|---|---|
| 19–25 | 2,400–2,600 kcal | 2,600–2,800 kcal | 3,000 kcal |
| 26–30 | 2,300–2,500 kcal | 2,500–2,700 kcal | 2,900 kcal |
| 31–40 | 2,200–2,400 kcal | 2,400–2,600 kcal | 2,800 kcal |
| 41–50 | 2,100–2,300 kcal | 2,300–2,500 kcal | 2,700 kcal |
| 51–60 | 2,000–2,200 kcal | 2,200–2,400 kcal | 2,600 kcal |
| 61–70 | 1,900–2,100 kcal | 2,100–2,300 kcal | 2,400 kcal |
| 71+ | 1,800–2,000 kcal | 2,000–2,200 kcal | 2,300 kcal |
Get your precise calorie target based on your exact age, weight, height, and activity level — takes under 60 seconds.
Calculate My Daily Calories →Why Calorie Needs Decrease With Age
The decline in calorie needs across adulthood is real, measurable, and driven by several overlapping biological changes. Understanding the mechanisms helps you respond intelligently rather than simply eating less of the same foods.
Loss of Muscle Mass (Sarcopenia)
Muscle tissue is metabolically expensive — it burns approximately 13 kcal per kilogram per day at rest, compared to roughly 4.5 kcal per kilogram for fat tissue. Adults who do not do resistance training lose an average of 3–8% of their muscle mass per decade after age 30, accelerating to 10–15% per decade after age 60.
This muscle loss directly lowers Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR) — the calories your body burns at complete rest. A 65-year-old with the same body weight as their 30-year-old self but significantly less muscle mass will burn hundreds fewer calories per day without changing any behaviour.
Declining Basal Metabolic Rate
Even beyond muscle loss, BMR declines with age due to reduced organ metabolic activity, hormonal changes (particularly declining testosterone in men and oestrogen in women after menopause), and cellular-level metabolic slowdown. Research suggests BMR falls by approximately 1–2% per decade from age 30 even when muscle mass is maintained.
Reduced Physical Activity
Daily movement naturally tends to decrease with age — both formal exercise and incidental movement (NEAT). Studies show average daily step counts decline from approximately 9,000–10,000 in young adults to 5,000–6,000 in adults over 65. This reduction in NEAT alone accounts for hundreds of calories per day.
Hormonal Changes
The menopause transition in women (typically ages 45–55) causes significant hormonal shifts that affect fat distribution and metabolic rate. Declining oestrogen promotes fat storage, particularly abdominal fat, and many women experience an effective calorie requirement reduction of 200–300 kcal/day during and after this transition even without changes in diet or exercise.
Calorie Needs in Your 20s
Your 20s represent peak metabolic rate for most people. Muscle mass is typically at its highest, hormones are optimised for energy expenditure, and physical activity levels tend to be higher. Most people in their 20s can maintain healthy weight at 2,000–2,600 kcal (women) and 2,400–3,000 kcal (men) depending on activity.
The key risk in your 20s is establishing eating patterns suited to high activity levels — then maintaining those patterns as activity naturally decreases in your 30s and beyond, producing gradual weight gain.
Calorie Needs in Your 30s
The 30s mark the beginning of measurable metabolic slowdown. Most people experience a modest reduction in calorie needs of approximately 100–150 kcal per decade due to muscle loss and reduced activity. This does not require dramatic dietary change — but it does mean the diet that maintained weight at 25 may need modest adjustment.
The 30s are also when lifestyle factors — career demands, parenting, reduced sleep — begin suppressing NEAT significantly. People who were naturally active in their 20s often become significantly more sedentary in their 30s without noticing.
Calorie Needs in Your 40s
The 40s typically see an accelerating decline in calorie needs, particularly for women approaching perimenopause. Muscle loss becomes more significant if resistance training has not been maintained, and the hormonal changes of perimenopause begin affecting fat distribution and metabolic rate in many women from their mid-40s.
A moderately active woman in her 40s typically needs approximately 1,900–2,100 kcal per day to maintain healthy weight — roughly 200–300 kcal less than the same woman at 25 doing equivalent activity. For men, the equivalent decline is approximately 200 kcal/day compared to their 20s.
The Decade-by-Decade Calorie Adjustment
As a general rule of thumb for a moderately active adult who maintains consistent activity and body composition:
| Decade | Approximate change from previous decade |
|---|---|
| 20s → 30s | −100 to −150 kcal/day |
| 30s → 40s | −100 to −200 kcal/day |
| 40s → 50s | −150 to −200 kcal/day |
| 50s → 60s | −150 to −200 kcal/day |
| 60s → 70s | −100 to −150 kcal/day |
Calorie Needs in Your 50s
The 50s see the most significant hormonal shifts for women — the menopause transition typically occurs between ages 48–55 in most women, producing meaningful changes in metabolic rate, fat distribution, and appetite regulation. Many women find that dietary patterns that maintained weight throughout their 40s begin producing weight gain without any change in behaviour.
For men, testosterone levels decline at approximately 1–2% per year from the mid-30s, with more pronounced effects on muscle mass and fat distribution by the 50s. Both sexes benefit significantly from maintaining or starting resistance training in this decade to preserve metabolic rate.
Calorie Needs After 60
Adults over 60 face a specific nutritional challenge: calorie needs continue declining, but protein needs actually increase. Older adults require more protein per kilogram of body weight than younger adults to maintain muscle mass, because protein metabolism becomes less efficient with age (a phenomenon called anabolic resistance).
Current evidence suggests adults over 65 need approximately 1.2–1.6 g of protein per kg of body weight per day — significantly higher than the 0.8 g/kg official minimum recommendation, which was derived primarily from younger adult data.
This creates a nutritional challenge: eating fewer total calories while increasing protein percentage. The practical solution is replacing calorie-dense, low-protein foods (refined carbohydrates, processed snacks) with high-protein, nutrient-dense alternatives.
How to Adjust Calories as You Age — Practical Guidance
Prioritise Resistance Training at Every Age
The single most effective strategy for maintaining calorie needs as you age is preserving muscle mass through resistance training. Adults who maintain strength training throughout their 40s, 50s, and 60s have significantly higher metabolic rates than sedentary peers of the same age — often comparable to people a decade younger. Even starting resistance training at 65 produces meaningful improvements in muscle mass and metabolic rate within 12 weeks.
Increase Protein as Total Calories Decrease
As total calorie needs decline, protein should represent a larger proportion of those calories. A practical target for adults over 50 is ensuring at least 25–35g of protein per meal, from sources such as eggs, fish, poultry, legumes, Greek yoghurt, and cottage cheese.
Reassess Every Decade
If your weight has been stable for years and then begins gradually increasing without obvious dietary changes, your calorie needs have likely declined while your intake has stayed constant. A modest reduction of 100–200 kcal/day — removing one processed snack, switching from whole to semi-skimmed milk, reducing portion sizes slightly — is usually sufficient to restore balance.
Do Not Cut Calories Too Aggressively After 60
For adults over 65, being significantly underweight carries greater health risk than being modestly overweight. Aggressive calorie restriction in older adults accelerates muscle loss, reduces bone density, and impairs immune function. If weight management is a goal after 65, focus on protein intake and activity level rather than aggressive calorie reduction.
Calculate your exact daily calorie needs based on your current age, weight, height, and activity — personalised in seconds.
Calculate My Calorie Needs →Frequently Asked Questions
How many calories does a 50-year-old woman need per day?
How many calories should a 60-year-old man eat per day?
Why do I need fewer calories as I get older?
How can I speed up my metabolism as I age?
Do calorie needs change during menopause?
The Bottom Line
Daily calorie needs decline by approximately 100–200 kcal per decade from age 30 — a gradual but meaningful shift that explains why so many people experience progressive weight gain in midlife without changing their habits. Understanding this allows you to make small, proactive adjustments rather than reactive ones.
The most important factor is not cutting calories aggressively — it is maintaining muscle mass through resistance training, which preserves metabolic rate and keeps calorie needs higher as you age. Combined with adequate protein at every meal and attention to liquid calories and portion sizes, most people can manage their weight across decades without dramatic dietary change.
Find your exact daily calorie target — personalised to your age, height, weight, and activity level.
Calculate My Daily Calories →Sources & References
- U.S. Department of Agriculture & HHS. Dietary Guidelines for Americans, 2020–2025 (Appendix 2: Estimated Calorie Needs by age, sex, and activity level). dietaryguidelines.gov
- Mifflin MD, St Jeor ST, et al. “A new predictive equation for resting energy expenditure in healthy individuals.” American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 1990;51(2):241–247. The equation underlying these calorie estimates. PubMed: 2305711
- Pontzer H, et al. “Daily energy expenditure through the human life course.” Science, 2021;373(6556):808–812. Recent large dataset on how metabolic rate changes with age. PubMed: 34385400
Last reviewed against the above sources: June 2026.