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Overview
Formula

01What this calculator tells you

This calculator estimates how many grams of carbohydrate to eat per day. You can enter your daily calorie target directly, or let the calculator estimate it from your age, sex, height, weight and activity using the Mifflin-St Jeor equation. Then pick a carb goal — low, moderate or high — and it converts calories into grams and shows all three ratios side by side.

Carbohydrate is your body’s main energy source, and how much you need depends on your total calories and how active you are. The federal Dietary Guidelines for Americans recommend most calories come from nutrient-dense carbs like whole grains, fruit and vegetables. To size up your protein and overall energy too, see our BMR calculator.

Converts calories to carb grams at 4 kcal per gram.
Shows low (20%), moderate (50%) and high (60%) targets together.
Flags the ~130 g/day minimum and the added-sugar limit.

02How much of your diet should be carbs?

The NIH Office of Dietary Supplements and the Institute of Medicine set the Acceptable Macronutrient Distribution Range for carbohydrate at 45-65% of calories. Where you sit in that band depends on your goals and activity.

Approach
Carbs (% calories)
Who it suits
Lower-carb
10-25%
Some weight-loss or metabolic plans (with guidance)
Moderate
45-55%
Most people; general health and steady energy
Higher-carb
55-65%
Endurance athletes and heavy training
Minimum floor
~130 g/day
The IOM baseline for brain glucose
Quality matters as much as quantity: the Harvard Nutrition Source stresses whole, fibre-rich carbs over refined ones.
Simple vs complex carbs (and fiber) +×

Not all carbohydrate is equal. Complex carbs from whole grains, beans and vegetables digest slowly and come packed with fibre; simple sugars spike blood glucose and add little else. The Dietary Guidelines suggest keeping added sugars under 10% of daily calories, and the NHS recommends basing meals on higher-fibre starchy foods.

  • Aim for roughly 14 g of fibre per 1,000 calories.
  • Choose whole grains, fruit, vegetables and legumes first.
  • Treat sugary drinks and sweets as occasional extras.
  • People with diabetes should count carbs with their care team — see the CDC.
Frequently asked questions +×
Q How many carbs should I eat per day?
Most adults do well on 45-65% of calories from carbs — about 225-325 g on a 2,000-calorie diet. Your target scales with your calories and activity.
Q How do you calculate carb grams from calories?
Multiply calories by your carb percentage and divide by 4. Example: 2,000 × 0.50 ÷ 4 = 250 g.
Q What is the minimum carbs per day?
About 130 g/day per the Institute of Medicine — roughly the glucose the brain uses.
Q How many carbs are in a 2,000-calorie diet?
Around 225-325 g at the 45-65% range; this calculator shows the grams for low, moderate and high ratios.
This calculator provides general nutrition estimates for informational purposes only and is not medical advice. Individual carbohydrate needs vary with health conditions, medications and goals. People with diabetes, kidney disease or other conditions should consult a doctor or registered dietitian before changing their carb intake.

03Related calculators

Working through a related project? Try our Starbucks Calorie Calculator, Protein Intake Calculator, and BMI Calculator.

01The carb formula

Carbohydrate supplies about 4 calories per gram, so converting a calorie target into grams is straightforward: take the share of calories you want from carbs and divide by 4. The only extra step is knowing your total daily calories, which you can enter directly or estimate from your body and activity.

Daily energy (TDEE)
TDEE = Mifflin-St Jeor BMR × activity factor
Carb calories
carb kcal = TDEE × carb%
Carb grams
carb grams = carb kcal ÷ 4

Where:

  • TDEE= total daily energy expenditure — the calories you burn in a day.
  • BMR= basal metabolic rate: 10×kg + 6.25×cm − 5×age + 5 (male) or −161 (female).
  • carb%= the fraction of calories you want from carbohydrate (0.45-0.65 typical).

02Worked example

Take a moderately active person whose daily energy is 2,000 calories, aiming for a moderate 50% carb split:

Step 1 · Carb calories
2,000 × 0.50 = 1,000 kcal
Step 2 · Convert to grams
1,000 ÷ 4 = 250 g
Step 3 · Sanity check
250 g > 130 g minimum

So this person needs about 250 g of carbohydrate a day. At a low 20% split it would be 100 g, and at a high 60% split about 300 g — which is why the calculator shows all three. To balance it with fluids, our water intake calculator estimates your daily hydration target.

Carb Intake Calculator

yrs
cm
kg
Enter your details and carb goal, then press Calculate.
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grams of carbs per day
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Daily calories--
From carbs--
Grams of fiber (aim)--
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Elena Castillo ✓ Fact-checked
Updated Jul 2026 · 6 min read · Reviewed by the InfoCalculator editorial team