
Calculate protein needs, calorie surplus, and workout plans for optimal muscle building

Founder & CEO, Toolraxy
Faiq Ur Rahman is a web designer, digital product developer, and founder of Toolraxy, a growing platform of web-based calculators and utility tools. He specializes in building structured, user-friendly tools focused on health, finance, productivity, and everyday problem-solving.
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Building muscle requires more than just lifting weights—it demands precision in nutrition, training, and recovery. This muscle gain calculator determines your optimal daily protein intake based on your body weight, activity level, and muscle-building goals. Using the Mifflin-St Jeor equation, the tool calculates your Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR) and Total Daily Energy Expenditure (TDEE), then recommends a calorie surplus tailored to your desired gain rate. Whether you’re a beginner looking to add lean mass or an experienced lifter fine-tuning your nutrition, this calculator provides protein targets, workout split recommendations, and realistic monthly gain projections based on exercise science principles.
Step 1: Enter your current body weight and select kilograms or pounds.
Step 2: Input your height and select centimeters or feet.
Step 3: Enter your age in years.
Step 4: Select your gender from the dropdown menu.
Step 5: Choose your activity level based on weekly exercise frequency:
Sedentary: Little or no exercise
Light: Exercise 1-3 days per week
Moderate: Exercise 3-5 days per week
Active: Exercise 6-7 days per week
Very Active: Hard exercise daily
Step 6: Select your muscle gain goal:
Slow & Steady: 0.25kg per week
Moderate Gain: 0.5kg per week
Fast Gain: 0.75kg per week
Extreme Gain: 1kg per week
Step 7: Click “Calculate” to see your daily protein target, maintenance calories, and bulking calories.
Step 8: Toggle to Workout Planner mode to get recommended workout splits based on your experience level and available training days.
Step 9: Click on any workout split in the grid to load those recommendations.
Step 10: Use the “Monthly” button to project your monthly muscle gain potential.
This calculator uses evidence-based formulas from exercise physiology and sports nutrition research to estimate protein requirements, energy expenditure, and muscle growth potential.
Basal Metabolic Rate represents the calories your body needs at complete rest. The calculator uses the Mifflin-St Jeor equation, considered the most accurate for the general population:
For men: BMR = 10 × weight(kg) + 6.25 × height(cm) – 5 × age(years) + 5
For women: BMR = 10 × weight(kg) + 6.25 × height(cm) – 5 × age(years) – 161
Total Daily Energy Expenditure accounts for your activity level:
TDEE = BMR × Activity Multiplier
Activity multipliers:
Sedentary: 1.2 (little or no exercise)
Light: 1.375 (exercise 1-3 days/week)
Moderate: 1.55 (exercise 3-5 days/week)
Active: 1.725 (exercise 6-7 days/week)
Very Active: 1.9 (hard exercise daily)
To build muscle, you need to consume more calories than you burn. The calculator adds a surplus based on your selected goal:
Slow & Steady: +250 calories per day (0.25kg gain/week)
Moderate Gain: +500 calories per day (0.5kg gain/week)
Fast Gain: +750 calories per day (0.75kg gain/week)
Extreme Gain: +1000 calories per day (1kg gain/week)
Protein intake for muscle growth is calculated using multipliers based on activity level:
Sedentary: 1.6g per kg body weight
Light activity: 1.8g per kg
Moderate activity: 2.0g per kg
Active: 2.2g per kg
Very Active: 2.2g per kg
These values fall within the research-supported range of 1.6-2.2g per kg for individuals engaged in resistance training.
Standard Mode: Uses the base protein multiplier based on activity level.
Advanced Mode: Applies an additional 10% protein increase for fast or extreme gain goals to support the higher muscle protein synthesis demands of accelerated growth.
The workout planner provides evidence-based training splits based on experience level and available days:
Beginner (0-6 months experience):
3 days: Full Body (3x/week)
4 days: Upper/Lower (4x/week)
5+ days: Upper/Lower + Full Body
Intermediate (6-24 months experience):
3 days: Push/Pull/Legs (3x/week)
4 days: Upper/Lower (4x/week)
5 days: Bro Split (5x/week)
6 days: Push/Pull/Legs (6x/week)
Advanced (2+ years experience):
4 days: Upper/Lower (4x/week)
5 days: Bro Split (5x/week)
6 days: Push/Pull/Legs (6x/week)
The progress bar estimates your gain rate relative to optimal ranges based on:
Selected goal (0.25-1kg per week)
Experience level (beginners gain faster, advanced gain slower)
Realistic physiological limits (0.25-0.5% body weight per week)
Scenario: A 30-year-old male weighing 75kg (165lbs) at 180cm (5’11”) with moderate activity level (3-5 days/week) selecting moderate gain goal (0.5kg/week).
Step 1: Calculate BMR using Mifflin-St Jeor
BMR = 10 × 75 + 6.25 × 180 – 5 × 30 + 5
BMR = 750 + 1,125 – 150 + 5
BMR = 1,730 calories
Step 2: Calculate TDEE with moderate activity multiplier (1.55)
TDEE = 1,730 × 1.55 = 2,682 calories
Step 3: Add surplus for moderate gain (+500 calories)
Bulking calories = 2,682 + 500 = 3,182 calories per day
Step 4: Calculate protein needs with moderate activity multiplier (2.0)
Protein = 75kg × 2.0 = 150 grams per day
Results:
Daily protein target: 150 grams
Maintenance calories: 2,682 per day
Bulking calories: 3,182 per day
Weekly gain potential: 0.5kg (moderate range)
Recommended workout split: Upper/Lower (4x/week) or Push/Pull/Legs (3x/week)
Muscle hypertrophy, the scientific term for muscle growth occurs when muscle protein synthesis exceeds muscle protein breakdown over an extended period. This anabolic state requires three essential components: mechanical tension (resistance training), nutritional support (adequate protein and calories), and hormonal optimization (testosterone, growth hormone, and insulin-like growth factor).
When you lift weights, you create microscopic damage to muscle fibers. The body responds by repairing and strengthening these fibers, adding contractile proteins (actin and myosin) to prepare for future stress. This adaptation process requires amino acids from dietary protein to build new tissue and energy from calories to fuel the repair process.
The protein recommendations in this calculator (1.6-2.2g per kg body weight) are based on extensive research. A 2018 meta-analysis in the British Journal of Sports Medicine concluded that protein supplementation significantly increases muscle mass and strength in healthy adults engaged in resistance training, with optimal intake around 1.6g/kg. Higher intakes up to 2.2g/kg may provide additional benefits during aggressive cutting phases or for very advanced athletes.
Protein timing also matters. Research suggests consuming 20-40g of protein every 3-4 hours maximizes muscle protein synthesis throughout the day. Pre- and post-workout protein intake (within the 4-6 hour window surrounding training) appears particularly beneficial for recovery and adaptation.
Building muscle requires energy beyond maintenance needs. Each pound of muscle contains approximately 600-700 calories of stored energy (primarily as protein and glycogen). However, the metabolic cost of building that muscle—the energy required for protein synthesis, cellular signaling, and tissue remodeling adds another 20-30%, meaning approximately 2,000-2,500 surplus calories are needed to gain one pound of pure muscle.
However, realistic weight gain always includes some fat. The surplus recommendations in this calculator (250-1,000 calories daily) balance muscle gain against fat accumulation:
250-500 calorie surplus (0.25-0.5kg/week): Optimal for most individuals. Maximizes muscle-to-fat gain ratio. Suitable for natural lifters who want quality gains with minimal fat.
750-1,000 calorie surplus (0.75-1kg/week): Aggressive bulk. Useful for underweight individuals or those with very high metabolisms. Will result in significant fat gain alongside muscle.
Muscle gain potential decreases with training experience due to diminishing returns:
Beginner (0-6 months): Can gain 1-1.5kg of muscle monthly with proper nutrition and training. Rapid adaptation phase as the body learns movement patterns and experiences “newbie gains.”
Intermediate (6-24 months): Gains slow to 0.5-1kg monthly. Progress requires progressive overload and more sophisticated programming.
Advanced (2+ years): Gains drop to 0.25-0.5kg monthly. Near genetic potential; small improvements require meticulous attention to all variables.
Genetic limit: Most men can gain 20-25kg of muscle over their lifetime; women 13-18kg. Half this potential is achieved in the first year, another quarter in year two, and the remainder over subsequent years.
Insufficient protein intake: Many lifters underestimate protein needs, especially during cutting phases when protein requirements increase to preserve muscle.
Excessive cardio: Too much cardiovascular exercise interferes with recovery and may burn calories needed for muscle growth.
Poor exercise selection: Isolation exercises build specific muscles, but compound movements (squats, deadlifts, presses) drive overall growth through systemic hormonal response.
Inconsistent surplus: Eating at maintenance most days with occasional surplus days doesn’t sustain growth. Consistency matters.
Ignoring progressive overload: Muscles adapt to stress. Without progressively increasing weight, volume, or intensity, growth plateaus.
Underestimating recovery: Training the same muscles daily without adequate rest prevents repair and growth.
Unrealistic expectations: Expecting 1kg weekly muscle gain leads to disappointment and potentially excessive fat gain from overshooting calories.
Research recommends 1.6-2.2g of protein per kg of body weight daily (0.73-1g per lb). This calculator uses 1.6-2.2g/kg based on your activity level, with higher intakes for more active individuals.
Add 250-500 calories to your maintenance level for steady muscle gain with minimal fat. This calculator adds 250-1,000 calories based on your selected goal, with conservative surpluses recommended for most people.
Beginners and overweight individuals can build muscle in a slight deficit (body recomposition), but optimal muscle gain requires a surplus. Advanced lifters need surpluses to overcome the energy cost of protein synthesis.
Research supports training each muscle group twice weekly. Upper/Lower (4x/week) and Push/Pull/Legs (6x/week) effectively achieve this frequency. Beginners benefit from Full Body (3x/week).
Beginners: 1-1.5kg monthly. Intermediate: 0.5-1kg monthly. Advanced: 0.25-0.5kg monthly. These rates assume optimal nutrition, training, and recovery. Genetic potential limits lifetime gains to 20-25kg for most men.
No. Whole foods provide complete nutrition. Protein powder offers convenience for meeting high protein targets, especially post-workout when rapid digestion is beneficial, but isn’t essential.
This muscle gain calculator provides estimates based on general population formulas and sports nutrition research. Individual results vary based on genetics, metabolism, training consistency, and adherence to nutritional recommendations. Consult a healthcare provider or registered dietitian before making significant changes to your diet or exercise routine, especially if you have underlying health conditions. The protein and calorie recommendations are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Always listen to your body and adjust based on how you feel and perform. Rapid weight gain can strain organs and joints; moderate, steady progress is recommended for long-term health and sustainable results.
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