Što je BMR i čemu služi

Što BMR pokazuje, zašto nije cijeli dnevni cilj i kako ga čitati bez pretjerivanja.

Author
CalCalc
Reviewed by
CalCalc
Last updated
April 8, 2026

Short answer

BMR is your basal metabolic rate, or the energy your body needs at rest. It is not your maintenance calories and it is not your fat-loss target. It is the starting layer of the estimate. Activity, body composition, and real-world weight trends still matter after that first number appears.

U ovom vodiču

Kako čitati BMR

Što BMR pokazuje

BMR je energija koja je tijelu potrebna u mirovanju. To nije vaš cijeli dnevni cilj, nego najniža baza od koje izračun tek kreće.

Kako tumačiti rezultat

BMR ima smisla samo kao dio šire računice. Nakon njega dolaze aktivnost, cilj i ono što vam se stvarno događa u svakodnevici.

Gdje je česta zabuna

Česta je greška uzeti BMR kao točnu osobnu dnevnu normu. U stvarnosti je to samo početna točka, a ne gotov odgovor.

Što ide nakon toga

Nakon BMR-a obično slijedi kalkulator dnevnog cilja. Zatim dolaze stranice proizvoda, porcije i vodič za kalorijski deficit.

BMR FAQ

Is BMR the same as maintenance calories?

No. BMR is resting energy use. Maintenance calories are higher because they include movement, exercise, and the energy cost of daily living.

Which BMR equation is usually used in calculators?

Many calculators use Mifflin-St Jeor because it has been one of the better-performing practical equations in comparative reviews. Some tools also offer lean-mass-based formulas when body-fat data are available.

Why can two people with the same BMR need different calorie intakes?

Because daily expenditure is shaped by movement, work, training, and sometimes body-composition differences that a basic equation cannot fully capture. BMR is only the resting layer.

Should I eat at my BMR to lose weight?

Usually not. For most people that would be more restrictive than necessary because BMR is lower than maintenance. A workable fat-loss target is generally set below maintenance, not at the resting floor.

Research and sources

  1. Mifflin MD, et al. A new predictive equation for resting energy expenditure in healthy individuals.

    PubMed

    Original paper describing the Mifflin-St Jeor equation.

  2. Frankenfield D, Roth-Yousey L, Compher C. Comparison of predictive equations for resting metabolic rate in healthy nonobese and obese adults: a systematic review.

    pure.psu.edu

    Systematic review concluding that Mifflin-St Jeor was the most reliable of the commonly used equations studied.

  3. Hall KD, et al. Quantification of the effect of energy imbalance on bodyweight.

    PubMed Central

    Shows why energy expenditure changes as body weight changes instead of staying fixed.

  4. Müller MJ, Bosy-Westphal A. Adaptive thermogenesis with weight loss in humans.

    PubMed

    Useful background on why measured expenditure can drop during weight loss beyond what a simple equation predicts.

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