How to start counting calories (without burning out)

Counting calories sounds clinical, but it is really just paying attention to what you eat. This guide shows you how to start in a relaxed, sustainable way — without weighing every grape or feeling guilty about lunch.

1. Get a rough calorie target

You do not need a perfect number to start. A rough estimate of the calories your body uses each day gives you a useful target to plan around. Most people land somewhere between 1,600 and 2,600 kcal per day depending on size, age and activity.

Use a TDEE or daily calorie intake calculator to get a starting figure. If you want to lose weight, subtract a modest amount (around 300–500 kcal/day) so the change is gentle and sustainable.

2. Plan first, log second

Trying to remember what you ate after the fact is the fastest way to give up. Instead, plan the day before you eat it. Drop breakfast, lunch, dinner and one or two snacks into a planner, see roughly where you land, then adjust.

GudFude is built around this flow: plan meals first, then tick each one off as you actually eat it. Totals update instantly, so you always know how many calories are left.

3. Use repeatable meals

You do not eat 50 different meals a week. Most people rotate between 8–15. Save the meals you eat regularly so logging takes seconds, not minutes.

  • A go-to breakfast (oats, eggs, yoghurt bowl)
  • Two or three lunches that work for your week
  • A handful of dinners you actually enjoy
  • Snacks you already buy regularly

4. Don't aim for perfect

Hitting your calorie target exactly every day is not the goal — staying close most days is. If you go over on a Saturday, do not skip Sunday. Just go back to your plan.

Tracking is a tool for feedback, not a test you can fail. Over a week or two, patterns emerge and your portions calibrate naturally.

5. Use a weekly view to spot patterns

Once you have a week of data, a weekly view tells you more than any single day. You will see which days run high (often Friday), where snacking sneaks in and which meals leave you most full for the calories.

GudFude provides estimates for general guidance only. It is not medical advice. If you have a medical condition, are pregnant, or have a history of disordered eating, please speak to a qualified clinician before changing how you eat.

Frequently asked questions

+Do I have to weigh everything?
No. Eyeballed portions and packaged serving sizes are accurate enough to make real progress. A small kitchen scale helps for foods like nuts, oils and cereal that are easy to underestimate, but it is optional.
+How long until I see results?
Most people notice changes within 2–4 weeks if they stay close to their plan on most days. Weight fluctuates daily; trends over a week are what matter.
+What if I miss a day of tracking?
Skip it and start again the next meal. One missed day does not undo your progress. Consistency over weeks is what builds the habit.
+Is calorie counting safe?
For most adults wanting to lose, maintain or gain weight, yes. If you have a history of disordered eating, are pregnant, or have a medical condition affecting weight, speak to a clinician before starting.