The surprising truth about NEAT and why your daily walk might be more powerful than your gym session.
~400-500 kcal
~350-450 kcal
In the world of fitness, we often glorify the "intense" workout—the sweat-dripping, heart-pounding sessions that leave us exhausted. But when it comes to long-term weight loss and caloric expenditure, consistency often beats intensity.
NEAT stands for Non-Exercise Activity Thermogenesis. It includes everything you do that isn't sleeping, eating, or sports-like exercise. Walking to the store, cleaning the house, or hitting a daily step goal all fall under NEAT.
While a 45-minute intense workout burns a lot of calories in a short time, it often leads to "compensatory inactivity." This means you're so tired after the gym that you spend the rest of the day on the couch, actually lowering your total daily burn.
Calculations change whether you're a "Sofa Surfer" or a "Step Master." Get your accurate TDEE based on your real movement.
Calculate My Daily BurnThe global gold standard for 2025 isn't choosing one over the other—it's the hybrid model. Scientific consensus suggests that for optimal body composition, you should aim for:
By using a TDEE Calculator, you can input these different activity levels to see exactly how much your calorie needs increase when you add 2,000 steps versus one gym session.