Podrobný sprievodca čoskoro
Pracujeme na komplexnom vzdelávacom sprievodcovi pre Macro Calculator. Čoskoro sa vráťte pre podrobné vysvetlenia, vzorce, príklady z praxe a odborné tipy.
The Macronutrient Calculator determines your optimal daily intake of protein, carbohydrates, and fat based on your Total Daily Energy Expenditure (TDEE) and fitness goals. Unlike simple calorie counting, macro tracking accounts for how calories are distributed across the three macronutrients, each of which plays a distinct metabolic role. Protein (4 cal/g) drives muscle repair and satiety, carbohydrates (4 cal/g) fuel high-intensity activity and brain function, and fat (9 cal/g) supports hormone production and nutrient absorption. This calculator uses established macro split ratios such as 40/30/30, 30/35/35, and zone-based approaches to produce gram targets for each macronutrient.
- 1First, your TDEE is calculated or entered directly — this is the total calories you burn per day including exercise.
- 2Select your goal: fat loss (typically a 500 cal deficit), maintenance, or muscle gain (typically a 250-500 cal surplus).
- 3The calorie target is adjusted from TDEE based on the selected goal.
- 4Choose a macro split ratio (e.g., 40% protein / 30% carbs / 30% fat) or let the calculator auto-select based on your goal.
- 5Protein grams are calculated: (Calories × Protein%) / 4. Carb grams: (Calories × Carb%) / 4. Fat grams: (Calories × Fat%) / 9.
- 6The calculator displays daily gram targets for each macro plus a per-meal breakdown based on your preferred meal frequency.
- 7Results include calorie subtotals per macro to verify the total matches your calorie target.
1,900 cal target (2,400 - 500). Protein: 1,900 × 0.40 / 4 = 190g (760 cal). Carbs: 1,900 × 0.30 / 4 = 143g (570 cal). Fat: 1,900 × 0.30 / 9 = 63g (570 cal). High protein preserves muscle during the deficit.
No calorie adjustment. Protein: 2,200 × 0.30 / 4 = 165g. Carbs: 2,200 × 0.40 / 4 = 220g. Fat: 2,200 × 0.30 / 9 = 73g. This balanced split works well for moderately active individuals.
3,100 cal target (2,800 + 300). Protein: 3,100 × 0.30 / 4 = 233g. Carbs: 3,100 × 0.45 / 4 = 349g. Fat: 3,100 × 0.25 / 9 = 86g. High carbs fuel intense training and replenish glycogen.
1,600 cal target. Protein: 1,600 × 0.30 / 4 = 120g. Carbs: 1,600 × 0.05 / 4 = 20g (keeps body in ketosis under 50g). Fat: 1,600 × 0.65 / 9 = 116g. Fat becomes the primary energy source.
Competitive bodybuilders planning contest prep diets with precise macro targets across cutting and bulking phases.
Registered dietitians prescribing medical nutrition therapy for diabetic patients who must control carbohydrate intake.
Endurance athletes periodizing carbohydrate intake around training blocks for optimal glycogen loading.
Individuals following ketogenic diets who need to keep carbs under 20-50 g/day while maintaining adequate protein.
Meal prep companies and personal chefs designing macro-counted meal plans for clients.
Diabetic Carb Management
Type 1 and Type 2 diabetics often need to prioritize carbohydrate counting over percentage-based splits. A typical starting point is 45-60g of carbs per meal, adjusted based on blood glucose response and insulin dosing. The macro calculator can be used to set a carb ceiling first, then allocate remaining calories to protein and fat.
Vegan / Plant-Based Diets
Plant-based eaters often need to increase their protein percentage by 10% because plant proteins have lower bioavailability (~85% vs. ~95% for animal protein). Combining legumes with grains ensures a complete amino acid profile. Fat targets can be harder to hit without dairy, so nuts, seeds, and avocado become essential.
Refeeds and Diet Breaks
During prolonged fat-loss phases, periodic refeed days (1-2 days of maintenance calories with extra carbs) can restore leptin levels, refill muscle glycogen, and improve adherence. During refeeds, carbs may jump to 50-60% while fat drops to 15-20%, keeping protein constant.
| Goal | Protein % | Carbs % | Fat % | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Balanced Maintenance | 30 | 40 | 30 | General fitness, moderate activity |
| Fat Loss / Cutting | 40 | 30 | 30 | Preserving muscle during deficit |
| Muscle Gain / Bulking | 30 | 45 | 25 | Fueling intense resistance training |
| Keto / Low-Carb | 30 | 5 | 65 | Ketosis-based fat loss |
| Endurance Athlete | 20 | 55 | 25 | Marathon, cycling, swimming |
| Zone Diet | 30 | 40 | 30 | Anti-inflammatory, moderate approach |
What is the best macro split for fat loss?
A 40% protein / 30% carb / 30% fat split is widely effective for fat loss because the high protein preserves muscle and increases satiety. However, total calorie deficit matters more than the exact split.
Do my macros need to be exact every day?
No. Hitting your targets within 5-10 grams each day is sufficient. Weekly averages matter more than any single day, so a slightly off day can be balanced the next.
How do I track macros?
Use a food tracking app like MyFitnessPal or Cronometer. Weigh food with a kitchen scale for accuracy. Most people only need to track strictly for 2-3 months before they develop good intuition.
Should I adjust macros on rest days vs. training days?
Many athletes use carb cycling: higher carbs on training days (to fuel performance) and lower carbs on rest days (shifting more calories to fat). Protein stays constant regardless.
What happens if my percentages don't add up to 100%?
The three macro percentages must sum to 100%. If they don't, the calorie math will be incorrect. The calculator enforces this constraint and will alert you if the total deviates.
Where does alcohol fit in macros?
Alcohol provides 7 calories per gram and is not a macronutrient. Most trackers subtract alcohol calories from fat or carb allowances. One standard drink is roughly 14g of alcohol or about 100 calories.
Pro Tip
Start by nailing your protein target first — it's the most impactful macro for body composition. Once protein is set, split the remaining calories between carbs and fat based on your preferences and how you feel during workouts.
Did you know?
The concept of macro tracking was popularized by bodybuilders in the 1990s under the term 'IIFYM' (If It Fits Your Macros), which challenged the idea that only 'clean' foods could build physiques — proving that body composition is primarily driven by calorie and macro totals, not food source.