Calculate your daily Dietary Reference Intakes (DRI) for vitamins, minerals, and macronutrients. Personalized RDA values based on age, sex, and activity.
The Dietary Reference Intake (DRI) Calculator provides personalized daily nutrient requirements based on the latest USDA/IOM Dietary Reference Intakes. DRIs include Recommended Dietary Allowances (RDAs), Adequate Intakes (AIs), and Tolerable Upper Intake Levels (ULs) for vitamins, minerals, macronutrients, and water — covering the nutritional needs of 97–98% of healthy individuals in each life-stage group.
Proper nutrition is foundational to health, yet dietary surveys consistently show that most adults fail to meet recommended intakes for several critical nutrients: over 90% of Americans consume inadequate fiber and potassium, 40% are deficient in vitamin D, and 50% consume below the RDA for magnesium. During pregnancy and lactation, nutrient demands increase substantially, and deficiencies can have lasting consequences for both mother and child.
This calculator evaluates age, sex, body weight, activity level, pregnancy, and lactation status to generate a complete personalized nutrient reference table. It covers 19 essential nutrients including key vitamins (A, C, D, E, K, B-complex), minerals (calcium, iron, magnesium, zinc, potassium), macronutrients (protein, fiber), and water intake. Each value is customized for your specific life stage with explanations of biological function.
Nutrient deficiencies cause a spectrum of health problems from fatigue and impaired immunity to osteoporosis and birth defects. Knowing your personalized DRI values helps you evaluate your diet, identify gaps, and make informed supplementation decisions. The DRI is especially important during pregnancy, for athletes, vegetarians, older adults, and anyone with restricted diets.
Dietary Reference Intakes are set by the Institute of Medicine (IOM) / National Academies: • RDA = Recommended Dietary Allowance (meets needs of 97–98% of population) • AI = Adequate Intake (used when RDA cannot be determined) • UL = Tolerable Upper Intake Level (maximum safe daily intake) Protein: 0.8 g/kg (sedentary), 1.0 g/kg (moderate), 1.4 g/kg (high activity) Water: 3.7 L/day (men), 2.7 L/day (women) including food sources
Result: Personalized DRI: 19 nutrients with pregnancy-adjusted values
A 30-year-old pregnant female at 65 kg with moderate activity receives increased recommendations for folate (600 mcg DFE, up from 400), iron (27 mg, up from 18), protein (71 g), and calcium (1000 mg). Key focus areas: prenatal vitamin with at least 400 mcg folic acid, iron supplementation if dietary intake insufficient, and adequate vitamin D (600 IU).
The DRI framework encompasses four reference values: (1) EAR (Estimated Average Requirement) — meets needs of 50% of the population, used for planning group diets, (2) RDA (Recommended Dietary Allowance) — meets needs of 97–98%, the target for individuals, (3) AI (Adequate Intake) — used when insufficient data for RDA, and (4) UL (Tolerable Upper Intake Level) — maximum safe daily amount. The EAR is used to assess population-level deficiency, while the RDA guides individual recommendations.
Pregnancy increases needs for folate (+50%), iron (+50%), protein (+54%), and several vitamins. Lactation increases needs for vitamin A (+86%), vitamin C (+60%), and calories (+500 kcal/day). Athletes need more protein (1.2–2.0 g/kg), iron (especially female endurance athletes), and potentially sodium and potassium. Vegans require supplemental B12, may need supplemental iron, zinc, calcium, omega-3 (DHA/EPA), and iodine.
The % Daily Value (%DV) on US nutrition labels is based on a 2,000-calorie reference diet using DRIs. A %DV of 5% or less is considered low; 20% or more is high. Note that %DV for some nutrients uses different reference values than the age-specific DRI — for example, the %DV for calcium uses 1300 mg (the highest RDA across all age groups), while your personal RDA may be 1000 mg.
The RDA (Recommended Dietary Allowance) is set when sufficient scientific evidence exists to determine the intake level meeting the needs of 97–98% of healthy individuals. The AI (Adequate Intake) is used when evidence is insufficient for an RDA — it's based on observed intakes in healthy populations and is assumed to be adequate. Nutrients with AIs include vitamin K, potassium, sodium, and water.
Most nutrition experts recommend food-first, supplement-second. However, certain populations benefit from supplementation: pregnant women (prenatal vitamin with folic acid and iron), adults >50 (vitamin B12 and vitamin D), vegans (B12, potentially iron and zinc), and people with limited sun exposure (vitamin D). A multivitamin can serve as nutritional insurance but doesn't replace a balanced diet.
Yes, significantly. Calcium needs increase after age 50 (women) and 70 (men) to 1200 mg/day. Vitamin D increases to 800 IU after age 70. Vitamin B12 absorption decreases with age (recommend supplements or fortified foods after 50). Iron needs decrease in women after menopause (18 → 8 mg/day). Protein needs may increase in elderly (from 0.8 to 1.0–1.2 g/kg) to prevent sarcopenia.
The RDA of 0.8 g/kg/day is the MINIMUM to prevent deficiency, not necessarily optimal. Current evidence suggests 1.0–1.2 g/kg for sedentary adults, 1.2–1.6 g/kg for active adults and older adults (to prevent sarcopenia), and 1.6–2.2 g/kg for athletes and those building muscle. Spread protein intake across meals (25–40 g per meal) for optimal muscle protein synthesis.
No — different countries set their own reference values based on local dietary patterns, food fortification, and population health data. US DRIs are set by the National Academies/IOM. The WHO sets different values for developing countries. European DRIs (from EFSA) differ in some nutrients. Japanese and Australian values also vary. Differences are usually modest (10–20%) but can be significant for some nutrients like vitamin D.
In the US adult population: vitamin D (~40% deficient), fiber (~95% below AI), potassium (~97% below AI), magnesium (~50% below RDA), vitamin E (~90% below RDA from food alone), calcium (~40% below RDA), and iron (~10% of premenopausal women). Globally, iron deficiency is the most common nutritional deficiency, affecting ~2 billion people.