Calculate your cat's daily calorie needs using the RER and MER formulas. Adjust for activity level, age, and weight management goals.
Knowing exactly how many calories your cat needs each day is the foundation of healthy feeding. Under-feeding leads to muscle loss and nutritional deficiencies, while over-feeding is the leading cause of feline obesity — a condition affecting over 60% of domestic cats in the United States.
Veterinarians use a two-step formula to determine calorie needs. First, the Resting Energy Requirement (RER) is calculated using the cat's body weight in kilograms raised to the 0.75 power, then multiplied by 70. This gives the baseline calories needed at rest. Next, a Maintenance Energy Requirement (MER) multiplier is applied based on the cat's life stage and activity level — ranging from 1.0 for obese-prone cats to 2.5 for growing kittens.
This calculator automates both steps. Enter your cat's weight and select the appropriate life stage or activity factor, and you'll get an accurate daily calorie target to guide your feeding plan.
Responsible pet owners, breeders, and veterinary professionals benefit from accurate cat calorie needs data when making care decisions, budgeting for expenses, or monitoring health benchmarks. Revisit this tool whenever your pet's needs, weight, or age changes to keep recommendations current.
Guessing portions leads to overweight or underweight cats. This calculator gives you a science-based calorie target so you can measure food precisely. Combined with the calorie density printed on your cat's food label, you can determine exactly how much to serve each day. Instant recalculation lets you explore different options and scenarios, ensuring your pet-care decisions are guided by accurate, reliable numbers.
RER = 70 × (body weight in kg)^0.75 MER = RER × activity factor Activity factors: Neutered adult: 1.2 Intact adult: 1.4 Inactive/obese-prone: 1.0 Weight loss: 0.8 Kitten (< 4 months): 2.5 Kitten (4-12 months): 2.0 Senior cat: 1.1 1 lb = 0.4536 kg
Result: 228 kcal/day
Weight in kg = 10 × 0.4536 = 4.536 kg. RER = 70 × 4.536^0.75 = 70 × 2.71 ≈ 190 kcal. MER = 190 × 1.2 = 228 kcal/day. This is the daily calorie target for a neutered adult cat weighing 10 pounds.
Cats are obligate carnivores with metabolisms adapted to high-protein, moderate-fat diets. They have limited ability to process carbohydrates compared to dogs or humans. Calorie calculations should be paired with appropriate macronutrient ratios — ideally 50%+ calories from protein.
Free-feeding dry food is the most common cause of feline obesity. Dry food is calorie-dense (300-400 kcal/cup), and many cats will eat beyond their needs when food is always available. Measured portions based on calculated calorie needs are far more effective for weight management.
For weight loss, veterinarians typically recommend feeding 80% of the calorie requirement calculated at the target weight. Weight loss should be gradual — no more than 1-2% of body weight per week. Rapid weight loss in cats can trigger hepatic lipidosis, a potentially fatal liver condition.
Resting Energy Requirement is the number of calories a cat needs at complete rest to maintain basic body functions like breathing, circulation, and cell repair. It's the metabolic baseline before any activity is factored in.
Maintenance Energy Requirement is the total daily calories needed to maintain current weight at the cat's normal activity level. It's calculated by multiplying RER by a factor that accounts for life stage, activity, and reproductive status.
The 0.75 exponent reflects metabolic scaling — smaller animals have faster metabolisms relative to body size. This allometric formula is used across veterinary medicine and provides more accurate results than simple linear calculations.
For weight loss, use the target (ideal) weight to calculate calories. For maintenance, use actual weight. Your vet can help determine your cat's ideal weight based on body condition scoring.
Indoor cats that sleep most of the day are inactive. Cats that play regularly and explore are moderately active. Outdoor cats that hunt and roam are highly active. Most indoor-only cats fall in the neutered/inactive range.
Recalculate every time your cat's weight changes by 1+ lb, when transitioning between life stages (kitten to adult, adult to senior), or when you change activity level. At minimum, recalculate annually at your vet visit.
Yes, select the kitten factor (2.0-2.5 depending on age). Kittens need significantly more calories per pound than adults because they're growing rapidly. Feed kittens 3-4 small meals per day rather than 2 larger ones.