Last updated: June 2026
Macro Split by Goal: The Best Protein, Carb, and Fat Ratio
A macro split is the percentage of your daily calories that comes from each macronutrient — protein, carbohydrates, and fat. Setting the right split for your goal determines how your body uses the food you eat: whether it goes toward building muscle, fueling performance, managing hunger, or supporting hormonal health. This article shows the optimal ratio for each fitness goal, explains the logic behind each choice, and walks through how to calculate your own gram targets.
Calculate Your Body Recomposition Macros
Get your exact gram targets for the recomposition macro split — protein, carbs, and fat tailored to your weight and activity level.
The Official Baseline: Acceptable Macronutrient Distribution Ranges
The Acceptable Macronutrient Distribution Ranges (AMDR), established by the Dietary Guidelines for Americans and used by most national health bodies, define the broad range of macronutrient intakes compatible with good health:
| Macronutrient | AMDR Range | Calories per Gram |
|---|---|---|
| Carbohydrates | 45–65% of total calories | 4 kcal/g |
| Fat | 20–35% of total calories | 9 kcal/g |
| Protein | 10–35% of total calories | 4 kcal/g |
The AMDR reflects general population needs, not fitness-specific goals. People who train consistently for body composition changes — fat loss, muscle gain, or recomposition — typically need more protein and a different carb-to-fat ratio than these baseline ranges suggest. The AMDR is a floor, not an optimum.
Macro Split by Goal: The Comparison Table
This is the table most resources omit: a clean, goal-by-goal comparison showing the protein/carb/fat split that best serves each objective.
| Goal | Protein | Carbohydrates | Fat | Key Priority |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fat loss (cutting) | 30–35% | 35–40% | 25–30% | High protein to preserve muscle; moderate carbs to fuel training |
| Muscle gain (bulking) | 25–30% | 45–55% | 20–25% | Carbs prioritised to fuel heavy training volume; protein sufficient but calories elevated |
| Body recomposition | 30–35% | 35–45% | 25–30% | High protein for muscle retention; carbs timed to training; moderate fat |
| Maintenance | 20–25% | 45–55% | 25–30% | Balanced; closer to AMDR defaults; no specific body composition driver |
| Endurance performance | 20–25% | 55–65% | 20–25% | Carbs dominate to fuel sustained aerobic output and glycogen stores |
Related Reading
Is 40/30/30 a Good Macro Split?
The 40/30/30 split (40% carbs, 30% protein, 30% fat) is one of the most commonly searched macro ratios and the source of significant confusion online. The short answer: yes, for most fitness goals, 40/30/30 is a reasonable and practical starting point.
Here is what each number means in practice for someone eating 2,000 calories per day:
| Macro | Percentage | Calories | Grams |
|---|---|---|---|
| Carbohydrates | 40% | 800 cal | 200g |
| Protein | 30% | 600 cal | 150g |
| Fat | 30% | 600 cal | 67g |
At 2,000 calories, 150g of protein equates to approximately 0.75–1.0g per pound for most people in the 150–200 lb range — which overlaps with the minimum threshold for muscle retention (0.8g/lb). This is why 40/30/30 works well for fat loss and body recomposition: protein is elevated enough to protect muscle without being excessive, carbs are sufficient for moderate training performance, and fat is high enough to support hormonal function.
For heavier individuals or those with higher training volume, protein in grams may need to increase, which would shift the protein percentage up (and carbs or fat down slightly). The ratio is a starting point, not a rigid formula.
Why Protein Percentage Alone Is Misleading
Expressing protein as a percentage of calories can be misleading because it is tied to total calorie intake. A person eating 1,500 calories at 30% protein gets 112g of protein. A person eating 2,500 calories at 30% protein gets 188g. The percentage is identical; the actual intake is very different.
For muscle building and recomposition goals, it is more useful to set protein as a fixed gram target based on bodyweight (0.8–1.0g/lb), then allocate the remaining calories to carbs and fat according to your training volume and personal preference. The percentage follows from the math; it should not be the starting point.
How to Calculate Your Macro Grams from a Percentage Split
Step-by-step for a 2,200-calorie daily target using a 30/45/25 split (protein/carbs/fat):
- Protein: 30% of 2,200 = 660 calories ÷ 4 = 165g protein
- Carbohydrates: 45% of 2,200 = 990 calories ÷ 4 = 248g carbs
- Fat: 25% of 2,200 = 550 calories ÷ 9 = 61g fat
Check: (165 × 4) + (248 × 4) + (61 × 9) = 660 + 992 + 549 = 2,201 calories. Rounding causes the 1-calorie variance — this is expected and immaterial.
Adjusting Your Macro Split for Activity Level
Training volume is the primary driver of carbohydrate needs. Higher volume = more glycogen burned = more carbs needed to replenish. As training volume increases, carbs should take a larger share of total calories at the expense of fat (never at the expense of protein).
| Weekly Training Volume | Recommended Carb % | Fat % | Protein % |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0–2 sessions/week (sedentary) | 30–35% | 30–35% | 30–35% |
| 3–4 sessions/week (moderate) | 40–45% | 25–30% | 25–30% |
| 5–6 sessions/week (high) | 45–55% | 20–25% | 25–30% |
| Daily training + cardio (athlete) | 55–65% | 20–25% | 20–25% |
The minimum fat threshold regardless of activity level is approximately 20% of total calories, or 0.3g per pound of bodyweight. Dropping below this level can suppress testosterone and oestrogen production, impairing both recovery and body composition outcomes.
The Recomposition Macro Split Specifically
Body recomposition requires the highest relative protein intake of any fitness goal because it combines calorie restriction (which increases the risk of muscle catabolism) with the muscle-building stimulus of resistance training (which requires protein as a substrate). The recomp split therefore prioritises protein more than a standard bulking or maintenance split does.
A starting point for most recomposition trainees: 30–35% protein, 35–40% carbs, 25–30% fat. In gram terms for a 180 lb person eating 2,400 calories:
| Macro | % | Calories | Grams |
|---|---|---|---|
| Protein (33%) | 33% | 792 cal | 198g (~1.1g/lb) |
| Carbohydrates (37%) | 37% | 888 cal | 222g |
| Fat (30%) | 30% | 720 cal | 80g (~0.44g/lb) |
These carbs can be further refined using carb cycling — higher on training days, lower on rest days — which is a more advanced but effective approach to recomposition nutrition.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is a 50/25/25 macro split good for building muscle?
50% carbs / 25% protein / 25% fat is a reasonable split for muscle gain during a bulk because elevated carbs fuel heavy training and recovery. The question is whether 25% protein provides enough grams. At 3,000 calories and 25% protein, you get 188g — adequate for a 170–190 lb person. If you are larger or eating fewer total calories, shift protein to 28–30% to ensure sufficient gram targets.
Does the macro split matter if calories are correct?
For scale weight (losing or gaining bodyweight), calories are primary. For body composition — specifically how much of that weight change is fat versus muscle — the macro split matters significantly. Two people in the same calorie deficit will have different amounts of muscle loss depending on protein intake. The split determines body composition outcomes; calories determine scale outcomes.
What macro split is best for beginners?
The simplest effective starting point for a beginner is 40% carbs / 30% protein / 30% fat. This provides sufficient protein for muscle growth, enough carbs to fuel training, and adequate fat for hormonal health. After 4–6 weeks of tracking, adjust based on training volume, progress, and how you feel during workouts.
How often should I change my macro split?
Change your split when your goal changes, your training volume changes significantly, or your body composition has shifted enough to alter your calorie and protein needs. Most people benefit from reassessing macros every 8–12 weeks. Do not adjust the split based on single-week scale fluctuations — these are typically water weight, not a response to macros.
Calculate the Recomposition Split for Your Stats
The body recomposition calculator converts your macro split into exact gram targets based on your weight, height, and activity level.
