Maintenance Calories Calculator

Calculate how much you can eat per day. This maintenance calories calculator will calculate your BMR, then adjust for baseline activity, and add TEF (Thermal effect of food). Just enter your age, height, weight, and gender below.

  • Exercise: 15-30 minutes of elevated heart rate activity.
  • Intense exercise: 45-120 minutes of elevated heart rate activity.
  • Very intense exercise: 2+ hours of elevated heart rate activity.

What does this data mean?

First let’s break down what all of these terms mean in simplest terms.

  • Maintenance calories: The calories you need to eat to stay at your exact same weight / body fat percentage.
  • BMR (Basal metabolic rate): This is the calories your body burns by just existing. If you theoretically did not move all day, this is what your body would burn.
  • Adjusted baseline activity: This is the calories you burn by doing all those micro movements throughout the day. Doing the dishes, typing on the keyboard, getting up out of your chair, etc.
  • TEF (Thermal effect of food): These are the calories you burn from eating. It takes energy for your body to break down food, so it adds calorie burn to your total.

So what does all this mean? The total of these numbers, which we have shown above, is the amount of calories you can eat to stay at the exact same weight / body fat percentage.

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kCals

Maintenance Calories Calculator

Calculate how much you can eat per day. This maintenance calories calculator will calculate your BMR, adjusted baseline activity, TEF, and exercise.

Weight Loss

Weight Loss / Cut Calculator

This is a calculator to help you map out a weight loss phase or "cut". Enter in your information and we will break down your daily calorie deficit.

Weight Gain

Weight Gain / Bulking Calculator

This is a calculator to help you map out a weight gain phase or "bulk". Enter in your information and we will break down your daily calorie surplus.

FAQ

Porrada is a Portuguese term commonly used in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu (BJJ) and Brazilian culture to describe a tough, intense, and gritty style of training or fighting. The direct translation of porrada from Portuguese to English is "beating" or "brawl." It embodies the spirit of going all out, giving your maximum effort, and pushing through challenges. In BJJ, practicing porrada means training with high intensity and determination.

This website is a collection of resources curated by grapplers, for grapplers. Our goal is to provide you with all the information you need to succeed. Whether you want to learn about nutrition, training on the mats, lifting, or anything in between, we are here for you. We want to see you on the podium most of all, and we hope to help you do exactly that. If you have any questions, feel free to shoot us an email or DM us on any of our social profiles!

There are two main ways you can get started with training: 1) You can find a BJJ gym near you and do a trial day, or 2) you can create your own mini home gym and start training with friends. Option #2 is how our team at Porrada got started! We ordered 1-inch thick puzzle mats in a 10’x10’ square and began training using online resources. If you do start with the second option, we recommend eventually finding a gym down the road in your career. It will help you by allowing you to roll with more people and receive high-level instruction.

BJJ is quite similar to wrestling. Both start standing and use takedowns as a method to score points. Both use very similar mechanics overall. The main differences are that there are no pins (you can be on your back in Jiu-Jitsu), BJJ involves submissions, and the points system for each is very different. BJJ grants points for takedowns/sweeps, back control, mount, guard passes, and knee on belly. Wrestling grants points for takedowns, escapes, and back points (back exposure for freestyle).

BJJ is a very unique sport in many ways. There are so many incredible benefits to training Jiu-Jitsu. The biggest reasons we advocate for it are the mindset training and the added ability to defend yourself. In BJJ, you are forced to humble yourself over and over again, every single day. This sport is a great way to mature rapidly and generally become a better person (in our opinion). You will also have a better ability to defend yourself than 99% of the population—a pretty big bonus.

You’re never too old to start training! We see people on the mats of all ages and sizes. Large and small, old and young can, and should, train BJJ. If you are on the older side, it is perfectly acceptable to take it slow and learn at your own pace. You don’t always have to go full speed—don’t worry. There are typically also classes that separate people by goals. Certain classes are for those who want to compete, some are for general instruction, and some are specifically for self-defense teachings. There is a place for everyone on the mats.