How Many Calories Per Day Do You Need? A Simple Guide for Indians
The short answer
If you are searching for how many calories per day you need, here is the honest version: there is no single number that fits everyone. Your calorie need depends on your age, gender, weight, height, and how active you are during the day. As a rough starting point, many moderately active Indian women need somewhere around 1800 to 2100 calories a day to stay the same weight, and many moderately active Indian men need around 2200 to 2600. These are averages to get you started, not rules. Your real number is the one that keeps your weight steady over two to three weeks, and this guide will show you how to find it without a lab or a fancy device.
Important: This article is general guidance for healthy adults. If you have diabetes, thyroid, PCOS, heart disease, or any medical condition, or are pregnant or breastfeeding, please consult a doctor or dietitian before changing how much you eat.
What a calorie actually is
A calorie is just a unit of energy. Your body spends energy all day, even when you are resting, to run your heart, brain, breathing, and every other system. On top of that, you spend energy digesting food and moving around. The total is what you "need." Eat about that much and your weight stays steady. Eat less over time and you lose weight. Eat more and you gain. That is the whole idea, and everything else is detail.
The reason people find this confusing is that food labels and diet plans throw out one number as if it applies to all of us. It does not. A 25-year-old man who does physical work and a 55-year-old woman with a desk job can easily need a thousand calories apart. So instead of chasing a single figure, it helps to understand the three things that move your number up or down.
The three things that decide your calorie need
Your body size and composition. A larger body burns more energy at rest than a smaller one, simply because there is more of it to run. Muscle also burns a little more than fat, which is one reason strength work is useful. This is why two people of the same weight can have slightly different needs.
Your age. As you get older, your resting burn usually drifts down, partly because muscle mass tends to fall over the decades. It is gentle, not dramatic, but it is real. Someone at 50 often needs a bit less than they did at 25 for the same weight and activity. Staying active and keeping some strength work slows this down.
Your activity level. This is the biggest lever most people can control. A day spent sitting at a desk burns far less than a day on your feet. Add deliberate exercise on top and the number climbs further. Honest self-assessment matters here, because most of us overestimate how active we really are.
A simple way to estimate your number
You do not need a formula to get close. Use these everyday brackets as a starting estimate, then adjust based on what the scale tells you.
If you are mostly sedentary, meaning a desk job and little walking, a rough maintenance estimate is about 26 to 28 calories per kilogram of body weight. If you are lightly active, walking a fair amount or doing light activity most days, use about 29 to 31 per kilogram. If you are quite active, on your feet a lot or exercising most days, use about 32 to 35 per kilogram. So a 70 kilogram person with a desk job lands around 1850 to 1950 calories to maintain, while the same person who walks and trains regularly might need 2200 or more.
This is only a first guess. The real test comes from watching your own body. Eat around your estimate for two to three weeks, weigh yourself at the same time each week, and look at the trend, not a single morning. If your weight is holding steady, you have found your maintenance level. If it is drifting up or down and you did not intend that, adjust by about 200 calories and watch again. Your body is the most accurate calculator you will ever own. When our tools go live, you will also be able to check your BMI with the free BMI calculator and estimate a personal target with the calorie calculator, which does this maths for you.
Calories to lose weight, and calories to gain
Once you know your rough maintenance number, the rest is straightforward.
To lose weight gently, eat a little less than maintenance, usually about 400 to 500 calories less per day. That tends to give a steady loss of roughly half a kilo a week. Steady is the goal, because slow fat loss is far easier to keep off than the weight lost in a crash diet, which almost always returns. A gentle deficit also protects your energy, mood, and muscle. Avoid dropping below about 1200 calories a day for women or 1500 for men without a professional guiding you, since very low intakes are hard to sustain and often backfire.
To gain weight in a healthy way, do the reverse: eat a little more than maintenance, around 300 to 500 extra calories a day, and pair it with strength work so the gain is more muscle than fat. If your goal is to add weight sensibly, our guide on healthy ways to gain weight walks through Indian foods that help.
Notice that both goals start from the same place: knowing your maintenance number. That is why the estimate above is worth the two or three weeks it takes to confirm.
Why the same plate is a different calorie amount for everyone
Two people can eat the identical thali and get very different results, and it is not magic. Portion size is the first reason. Two rotis and a small bowl of rice is a very different amount of energy than four rotis and two bowls. The second reason is what goes into the cooking. The same sabzi made with a spoon of oil versus four spoons can differ by a couple of hundred calories. The third is everything around the meal: the sugar in three or four teas, the namkeen with evening chai, the cold drink, the weekend eating out. These extras are where most hidden calories live, and they are usually the reason a "healthy" diet still adds weight.
This is also why counting calories for a short while can be eye-opening. You do not have to count forever. A couple of weeks of honest logging teaches you what a portion really costs, and after that most people can eat by habit. A simple food scanner or food log inside a wellness app makes this far less tedious than doing it by hand. For a ready framework built around Indian home food, the weight loss diet chart in Hindi shows sensible portions you can copy.
Calories are not the only thing that matters
Calories decide whether you gain or lose weight, but they do not decide how you feel while doing it. The same number of calories from dal, vegetables, curd, and whole grains will keep you fuller and steadier than the same number from biscuits and fried snacks. Protein matters especially, because it keeps you full, protects muscle in a deficit, and takes a little more energy just to digest. Many Indian plates run low on protein, so nudging up dal, curd, paneer, eggs, or lean meat often makes a calorie target far easier to hold. If you eat vegetarian, our list of vegetarian protein sources is a good place to start.
Sleep, stress, and movement matter too. Poor sleep and high stress push many people to eat more without noticing, and they can also mask fat loss on the scale for a week or two. So while calories are the engine, the quality of your food and the rhythm of your day decide whether the journey feels sustainable or miserable.
Common mistakes with calorie counting
The first mistake is treating the number as exact. Every calorie figure, on a label or in an app, is an estimate. Aim to be roughly right and consistent rather than perfectly precise. The second is forgetting drinks and oil, which are the easiest calories to overlook and often the largest hidden source. The third is judging progress by a single day. Weight naturally swings a kilo or more day to day from water and food in your gut, so always read the weekly trend. The fourth is cutting too hard, too fast. A brutal deficit feels productive for a week and then collapses into bingeing. Gentle and steady wins.
If your weight genuinely will not move after two honest weeks in a deficit, do not spiral. Recheck your portions and drinks, make sure your activity estimate was not too generous, and if it still will not budge, that is a sensible moment to speak with a doctor or dietitian, especially if you have a thyroid or other condition.
The bottom line
There is no universal calorie number, and anyone who gives you one without asking about your body and your day is guessing. Start with a rough estimate from your weight and activity, eat around it for two or three weeks, and let your own trend tell you the truth. To lose weight, drop about 400 to 500 calories below that. To gain, add a few hundred and train. Then spend your energy on the parts that actually make it sustainable: honest portions, enough protein, better sleep, and daily movement. For a fuller routine that fits a busy Indian life, our practical weight loss guide for Indian men and our honest guide to choosing a weight loss app both build on the same foundation.
If you would rather not do the maths alone, SuperLiving pairs a simple food log and scanner with 20+ coaches who guide you in Hindi and Hinglish around Indian home food, so your calorie target turns into an actual plan you can follow. You can start with SuperLiving for free and find your number with someone in your corner.
Frequently asked questions
How many calories per day do I need? It depends on your age, gender, weight, height, and how active you are, so a single number for everyone is misleading. As a rough guide, many moderately active Indian women need around 1800 to 2100 calories a day to maintain weight, and many moderately active Indian men need around 2200 to 2600. The most reliable number is your own trend: if your weight is steady over two to three weeks, that is roughly your maintenance level.
How many calories should I eat to lose weight? To lose weight gently, eat a little less than your maintenance level, often about 400 to 500 calories less per day. That tends to produce a steady loss of about half a kilo a week, which is safer and more lasting than a crash. Do not drop below roughly 1200 calories a day for women or 1500 for men without medical supervision.
Do calorie needs change with age? Yes. As you get older your body generally burns a little less at rest, partly because muscle mass tends to fall. Someone in their 50s usually needs fewer calories to maintain the same weight than they did in their 20s at the same activity level. Staying active and keeping some strength work helps protect muscle and keeps your needs a little higher.
Are calorie needs different for men and women? On average yes. Men usually have more muscle and a larger body size, so they tend to need more calories than women of the same age and activity level. This is only an average, though. A tall, active woman can easily need more than a short, sedentary man.
Is counting calories necessary to lose weight? Not always. Counting helps you learn portion sizes and spot hidden calories in oil, sugar, and drinks, which is useful for a few weeks. But many people do well by fixing habits instead, such as smaller rice and roti portions, more vegetables and protein, and cutting sugary drinks. Pick whichever approach you will actually keep doing.
Why am I not losing weight even in a calorie deficit? The most common reason is that the deficit is smaller than it feels, usually from underestimated oil, sugar in tea, snacks, and weekend meals. Water retention, poor sleep, and stress can also hide fat loss for a couple of weeks. Track honestly for two weeks, watch the trend rather than a single day, and if weight still will not move, it is worth talking to a doctor or dietitian.
SuperLiving provides lifestyle and wellness support and is not a substitute for medical care. For any medical condition, please consult a qualified doctor or dietitian.