Why women's calorie needs fluctuate throughout the month โ and how to work with your biology instead of against it
Standard TDEE calculators treat the female body like a static system โ input your stats, receive your number, eat that amount every day. But for women with menstrual cycles, this single-number approach misses a fundamental biological reality: your calorie needs change throughout the month, driven by predictable hormonal shifts that affect metabolic rate, appetite, energy availability, and even exercise performance.
Understanding how your cycle interacts with your metabolism doesn't just explain the frustrating scale fluctuations you might have noticed โ it gives you a framework to eat smarter, train better, and stop fighting biology you're never going to overcome with willpower alone.
The menstrual cycle divides into two phases: the follicular phase (day 1 of menstruation through ovulation, roughly days 1โ14) and the luteal phase (from ovulation to the next period, roughly days 15โ28). These two phases are hormonally distinct โ and metabolically different.
Multiple studies using indirect calorimetry have measured resting metabolic rate (RMR) across the cycle and found a consistent pattern: RMR is lowest in the late follicular phase (just before ovulation) and rises by approximately 2.5โ11% during the luteal phase. In absolute terms, this represents roughly 90โ300 extra calories burned per day in the second half of the cycle.
| Cycle Phase | Days (avg. 28-day cycle) | Key Hormones | RMR Effect |
|---|---|---|---|
| Menstruation | 1โ5 | Low oestrogen, low progesterone | Baseline / slightly elevated |
| Follicular (mid) | 6โ13 | Rising oestrogen | At or below baseline |
| Ovulation | ~14 | Oestrogen peak, LH surge | Baseline โ lowest point |
| Luteal (early) | 15โ21 | Rising progesterone, moderate oestrogen | +2โ5% above baseline |
| Luteal (late) | 22โ28 | Peak progesterone, falling oestrogen | +5โ11% above baseline |
The appetite surge that many women experience in the week before their period is driven by progesterone โ the dominant hormone of the luteal phase. Progesterone promotes insulin secretion, which causes mild blood sugar fluctuations, which trigger hunger. At the same time, the drop in oestrogen at the end of the luteal phase reduces serotonin levels, which increases cravings for carbohydrate-dense and sugar-rich foods specifically.
Research has measured food intake across the cycle and consistently finds that women consume 100โ500 more calories per day in the late luteal phase than in the follicular phase โ without any change in dietary intentions. This is a hormonal response, not a failure of discipline.
Beyond resting metabolic rate and appetite, cycle phase affects how your body responds to training โ which matters for TDEE because exercise quality influences total calorie burn.
The follicular phase โ particularly the week before ovulation โ is generally the highest-performance window in the cycle. Oestrogen supports muscle protein synthesis, improves carbohydrate utilisation, and reduces perception of effort. Many women report feeling strongest and most energetic during this phase. High-intensity training, heavy lifting, and PR attempts are best placed here.
In the luteal phase, progesterone partially counteracts oestrogen's anabolic effects. Core body temperature rises slightly (by 0.3โ0.5ยฐC), which can make high-intensity exercise feel harder and may impair endurance performance. Strength performance is generally well-maintained. The increased body temperature and higher resting metabolic rate mean more calories are burned during this phase even at the same exercise intensity.
Many women track daily weight and observe swings of 1โ3 kg (2โ7 lbs) throughout the month. This is almost entirely water retention driven by hormonal effects on fluid regulation โ not fat gain or loss. Oestrogen promotes water retention before ovulation; progesterone has a mild diuretic effect mid-luteal phase; the drop in both hormones at the end of the cycle triggers a brief fluid release.
The research doesn't yet support precise day-by-day calorie prescriptions tied to cycle phase โ the hormonal effects vary too much between individuals and cycle lengths. But some practical adjustments make biological sense and are supported by available evidence:
Set a slightly higher weekly calorie average during the luteal phase (1โ2 weeks before your period) and a slightly lower one during the follicular phase. A 100โ200 kcal/day adjustment in each direction is a reasonable starting point. This works with your biology instead of against it โ allowing more food when you genuinely need more, less when you don't.
Given that the luteal phase carbohydrate cravings have a physiological basis, proactively adding complex carbohydrates (rather than reacting to cravings with simple sugars) can satisfy the underlying drive while supporting energy levels. Prioritise whole grains, starchy vegetables, and legumes during the late luteal phase.
The simplest approach: calculate a single TDEE and eat at it consistently, but accept that weight will fluctuate by 1โ3 kg throughout the month due to water retention. Track weekly averages only. Don't adjust your eating plan based on daily scale readings.
| Approach | Best For | Complexity |
|---|---|---|
| Fixed TDEE, weekly weight tracking | Most women; simplest and most sustainable | Low |
| Phase-adjusted calories (+/โ 100โ200 kcal) | Women who track carefully and have regular cycles | Moderate |
| Carb cycling with cycle phases | Athletes and those focused on performance optimisation | High |
As cycle regularity decreases during perimenopause, the predictable hormonal patterns described above become irregular. Oestrogen levels decline overall, which shifts fat distribution toward the abdomen, reduces muscle protein synthesis efficiency, and decreases insulin sensitivity. These changes effectively lower TDEE and increase the effort required to maintain body composition.
The interventions that counteract these changes are the same as those for age-related TDEE decline: resistance training to preserve lean mass, higher protein intake, and adequate sleep to support hormone regulation. Recalculating TDEE more frequently โ every 3โ4 months during perimenopause โ is advisable as the hormonal environment shifts.
Want to calculate your TDEE accurately as a woman โ with the right activity level and macro split for your goals?
Use our www.calculator-tdee.com to find your personal number and build a nutrition plan that actually accounts for your biology.
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