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How to Count Macros: A Step-by-Step Beginner’s Guide

Last updated: May 2026

Counting macros — tracking your intake of protein, carbohydrates, and fat — gives you a level of control over your nutrition that calorie counting alone doesn’t. It’s the method most serious athletes and fitness-focused individuals use to support a specific goal, whether that’s building muscle, losing fat, or both.

This guide walks through the entire process: calculating your targets, converting them to grams, and tracking accurately day to day.

What Are Macros?

Macros (short for macronutrients) are the three nutrients that provide calories:

Every food you eat is some combination of these three. Tracking macros means hitting specific gram targets for each one, not just a calorie total.

Step 1: Calculate Your TDEE

Your Total Daily Energy Expenditure (TDEE) is the calorie number that keeps your weight stable. Your macro targets are built on top of this number.

Use the Mifflin-St Jeor equation to estimate your Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR), then multiply by an activity factor:

Activity multipliers:

Your TDEE is your maintenance calories. Adjust up or down based on your goal.

Related Tool

TDEE Calculator: Find Your Maintenance Calories →

Related Reading

BMR vs TDEE: What’s the Difference and Which Should You Use? →

Step 2: Set Your Calorie Target Based on Your Goal

Adjust your TDEE based on what you’re trying to achieve:

GoalCalorie Target
Muscle gain (bulk)TDEE + 200–400 calories
Maintain weightTDEE
Fat loss (cut)TDEE − 300–500 calories

Step 3: Choose Your Macro Ratio

Once you have your calorie target, split it across the three macros. Common starting ratios by goal:

Muscle gain:

Fat loss:

Maintenance / performance:

Related Reading

Macros for Muscle Gain: Exact Protein, Carb, and Fat Targets →

Step 4: Convert Percentages to Grams

Tracking apps use grams, not percentages. Here’s how to convert:

  1. Multiply your calorie target by the macro percentage
  2. Divide by the calorie density of that macro (4 for protein/carbs, 9 for fat)

Example — 2,600 calories, 30% protein / 45% carbs / 25% fat:

MacroCaloriesGrams
Protein (30%)780 cal ÷ 4195g
Carbs (45%)1,170 cal ÷ 4293g
Fat (25%)650 cal ÷ 972g

These gram targets go directly into your tracking app as daily goals.

Step 5: Track Your Food

Two tools make accurate tracking possible:

A food scale: Volume measurements (cups, tablespoons) are notoriously inaccurate for dense foods like nut butter, rice, and meat. Weighing food in grams removes the guesswork. This is the single biggest upgrade you can make to your tracking accuracy.

A tracking app: MyFitnessPal and Cronometer both have large food databases and barcode scanners that make logging fast. Set your gram targets as custom goals in the app settings.

What to Log

Practical Tips for Accurate Tracking

Subtract fiber from carbs (net carbs). Fiber passes through your digestive system without being absorbed as glucose. Some people track net carbs (total carbs minus fiber) rather than total carbs for a more accurate picture of carbohydrate intake that affects blood sugar and energy.

Build meals around protein first. Hit your protein target and let carbs and fat fill in the remaining calories. It’s easier than trying to balance all three from scratch.

Related Tool

Protein Powder Calculator: How Many Scoops to Hit Your Target →

Prep meals in advance. Tracking is hardest when you’re hungry and rushed. Batch-cooking proteins and carbs at the start of the week makes hitting your numbers much simpler.

Don’t obsess over perfection. Being within 5–10g of your target for protein, carbs, and fat is effectively the same as hitting it exactly. Consistency over weeks matters far more than daily precision.

Related Reading

Calorie Surplus for Muscle Gain: How Much Is Enough? →

How Long Does It Take to Get the Hang of It?

Most people find that after 2–4 weeks of consistent tracking, they develop an intuitive sense of portion sizes and don’t need to weigh every single food. At that point, tracking becomes much faster and less disruptive to daily life.

Calculate Your Macro Targets

Skip the manual math. The bulk calculator works out your calorie target and macro breakdown based on your body stats, activity level, and goal — whether you’re building muscle, cutting, or maintaining.

Get Your Macro Targets in Seconds

Enter your stats and goal to get a personalized macro breakdown ready to plug into your tracking app.

Use the Bulk Calculator →
Dennis Kiplimo
Written by
Dennis Kiplimo

Dennis Kiplimo is a Registered Nurse and founder of Denstar Fitness. He publishes fitness calculators and writes about training, nutrition and health on Medium.

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