Skip to main content
🔬 Advanced 🔥 Popular

Калькулятор ОМВ – Базовий Метаболізм

Calculate your Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR) to find how many calories your body burns at rest.

Як користуватися цим калькулятором

  1. Введіть Weight (kg)
  2. Введіть Height (cm)
  3. Введіть Age
  4. Введіть Gender
  5. Натисніть кнопку Розрахувати
  6. Прочитайте результат, відображений під калькулятором

What is Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR)?

Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR) is the number of calories your body needs to maintain basic physiological functions at complete rest — breathing, circulation, cell repair, hormone production, and organ function. It represents approximately 60–70% of your total daily energy expenditure (TDEE) and is the largest single component of your calorie budget.

BMR is measured under strict conditions: 8+ hours of sleep, no food for 12 hours, and lying completely still in a thermoneutral environment. In practice, Resting Metabolic Rate (RMR) is more commonly measured — it's slightly higher than BMR (3–10%) because it doesn't require the same controlled conditions.

Key BMR determinants:

BMR Formulas: Harris-Benedict, Mifflin-St Jeor, and Katch-McArdle

Multiple validated equations estimate BMR from easily measurable variables. Each has different accuracy profiles:

Mifflin-St Jeor Equation (1990) — Most accurate for general population:

Original Harris-Benedict Equation (1919) — Widely known, slightly less accurate:

Katch-McArdle (uses lean body mass — best for athletes):

For runners and athletes, Katch-McArdle is the most accurate because it directly accounts for lean mass rather than estimating it from height/weight. A 70 kg runner with 10% body fat has significantly higher BMR than a 70 kg sedentary person with 25% body fat, and only Katch-McArdle captures this difference.

ProfileMifflin (kcal)Katch-McArdle (kcal)
Lean 70kg man, 40yr, 178cm1,6801,750 (if 10% BF)
Average 70kg man, 40yr, 178cm1,6801,620 (if 22% BF)

BMR by Age and Body Composition

Here are reference BMR values by age and profile, using the Mifflin-St Jeor equation. These give a sense of typical values and how factors interact:

ProfileHeightWeightAgeBMR (approx)
Young adult male178cm75kg25~1,850 kcal
Middle-age male178cm80kg45~1,820 kcal
Older male178cm80kg65~1,720 kcal
Young adult female165cm60kg25~1,440 kcal
Middle-age female165cm65kg45~1,420 kcal
Older female165cm65kg65~1,340 kcal
Male marathon runner175cm65kg35~1,770 kcal
Female marathon runner165cm52kg35~1,280 kcal

How Runners Can Use BMR

Understanding BMR is essential for runners managing nutrition, body composition, and energy availability. Key applications:

Adaptive Thermogenesis: Why Diets Stop Working

One of the most important — and most ignored — aspects of metabolism is adaptive thermogenesis (also called metabolic adaptation). When you restrict calories, your body doesn't simply maintain the same calorie burn at reduced intake. It adapts by reducing non-exercise activity thermogenesis (NEAT), slowing thyroid hormone production, and reducing the thermic effect of food.

The result: metabolic rate can drop by 100–400 kcal/day below what BMR equations predict, explaining why many dieters hit plateaus and why weight regain after calorie restriction is so common.

Research by Leibel et al. (1995) found that a 10% reduction in body weight reduces metabolic rate by an average of 15% beyond what the new body weight predicts — meaning a lighter person has a lower-than-expected metabolic rate, making further weight loss increasingly difficult.

Strategies to minimize adaptive thermogenesis:

BMR for Athletes: Special Considerations

Standard BMR equations are developed from general population data and may underestimate needs for highly trained athletes. Several factors elevate athlete BMR above predictions:

For competitive runners, adding 100–200 kcal to your Mifflin-calculated BMR before applying activity multipliers gives a more accurate starting point for nutrition planning.

"Базальний рівень метаболізму відображає енергію, необхідну для підтримання основних фізіологічних функцій у стані спокою, і становить приблизно 60–75% від загального добового витрачання енергії."

Всесвітня організація охорони здоров'я, Human Energy Requirements — FAO/WHO/UNU Expert Report

💡 Чи знаєте ви?

Останнє оновлення: March 2026

Frequently Asked Questions

How is BMR calculated?

BMR is most accurately estimated using the Mifflin-St Jeor equation: Men: 10×weight(kg) + 6.25×height(cm) − 5×age + 5; Women: 10×weight(kg) + 6.25×height(cm) − 5×age − 161. For athletes, the Katch-McArdle formula using lean body mass is more accurate.

What is the difference between BMR and TDEE?

BMR is calories needed at complete rest — your metabolic floor. TDEE is total daily energy expenditure including all activity, exercise, and thermogenesis. TDEE = BMR × activity multiplier, ranging from 1.2 (sedentary) to 1.9+ (very active athletes). A marathon runner training 10+ hours/week has TDEE 50–70% above their BMR.

Can I increase my BMR?

Yes. The most effective way: build muscle mass through resistance training. Muscle tissue is metabolically expensive — each kg of muscle adds approximately 13 kcal/day to BMR. Over time, consistent strength training can meaningfully increase resting metabolism. Aerobic training also provides a smaller boost through EPOC and cardiovascular adaptations.

Does running increase BMR?

Running increases TDEE (total daily expenditure) significantly through the calories burned during runs and EPOC afterward. Its effect on resting BMR is smaller — primarily through the muscle maintenance it provides. Runners who also do strength training see greater BMR elevation than those who only run.

What is a normal BMR?

Average adult BMR: men 1,600–1,800 kcal/day; women 1,400–1,600 kcal/day. Athletes have higher BMR due to greater lean mass. Very small or sedentary individuals may have BMR below 1,400 kcal. BMR below 1,000 kcal/day is extremely unusual except in very small elderly individuals.

Should I eat below my BMR to lose weight?

No. Eating below BMR means your body has zero calories for any activity beyond basic organ function. Extended undereating below BMR causes muscle loss, hormonal disruption, immune suppression, and metabolic adaptation that makes future weight management harder. For weight loss, aim for a 250–500 kcal daily deficit below TDEE (not BMR).

How often does BMR change?

BMR changes with age (declines 2–3%/decade after 30), weight changes (proportional to lean mass change), fitness level (increases with muscle gain), and hormonal status (thyroid function especially). Measure your BMR estimate every 3–6 months if actively managing body composition.