How to Use Body Recomposition Planner
This calculator analyzes your personal metrics and activity level to provide tailored recommendations for your daily caloric intake and macronutrient split. Its purpose is to guide your nutrition plan, ensuring you consume enough protein for muscle synthesis while maintaining a slight deficit or maintenance for fat reduction, a key for effective body recomposition.
What It Does
Use the calculator with intent
This calculator analyzes your personal metrics and activity level to provide tailored recommendations for your daily caloric intake and macronutrient split. Its purpose is to guide your nutrition plan, ensuring you consume enough protein for muscle synthesis while maintaining a slight deficit or maintenance for fat reduction, a key for effective body recomposition.
This tool is ideal for fitness enthusiasts ranging from beginners looking to kickstart their transformation to intermediate lifters struggling to break plateaus. It particularly benefits individuals who want to improve their body composition without drastic weight fluctuations, those aiming to look 'toned' or 'leaner,' and anyone seeking a data-driven approach to optimize their diet for simultaneous muscle gain and fat loss.
Interpreting Results
Start with Suggested daily calorie deficit. Then compare Target scale weight and Fat to lose before deciding what changes the answer most.
Input Steps
Field by field
- 1
Weight Kg
Enter current body fat percentage, target body fat, and training experience. Recomposition (simultaneous fat loss + muscle gain) is most effective for beginners, detrained individuals, or those returning after a break of 3+ months.
- 2
Body Fat Percent
Realistic recomposition rates: beginners lose 0.5–1% body fat per month while gaining 0.5–1 lb muscle per month simultaneously. Intermediate and advanced trainees typically cannot recomposition at meaningful rates — they need dedicated cut/bulk cycles.
- 3
Target Body Fat Percent
All three conditions must be met for recomposition to work: adequate protein (0.8–1.0g/lb), consistent resistance training (3–4x/week), and a slight caloric deficit (150–300 calories below maintenance).
- 4
Weeks
The scale is misleading during recomposition — muscle adds weight as fat is lost. Use progress photos, waist circumference, and strength gains as your primary progress metrics. Scale weight may not change for 4–8 weeks.
- 5
Resistance Training Days
If your planner timeline exceeds 12 months to reach your goal, a structured cut first (10–16 weeks) followed by a maintenance phase is likely faster than recomposition for intermediate lifters.
Run one base case and one sensitivity case before trusting a single output.
Common Scenarios
Use realistic starting points
Baseline assumptions
Weight Kg
84
Body Fat Percent
24%
Target Body Fat Percent
18%
Weeks
20
Start with suggested daily calorie deficit and compare it with target scale weight before changing anything.
Higher Weight Kg
Weight Kg
100.80
Body Fat Percent
24%
Target Body Fat Percent
18%
Weeks
20
Watch how suggested daily calorie deficit shifts when weight kg changes while the rest stays steady.
Lower Body Fat Percent
Weight Kg
84
Body Fat Percent
20.4%
Target Body Fat Percent
18%
Weeks
20
Watch how suggested daily calorie deficit shifts when body fat percent changes while the rest stays steady.
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FAQ
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The short answers readers usually want after the first pass.
Sources & References
- International Society of Sports Nutrition Position Stand: protein and exercise — Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition
- The effects of protein and amino acid supplementation on performance and training adaptations during ten weeks of resistance training — Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition