Déficit calórico: a única regra de perda de peso cientificamente comprovada
Resposta rápida: O déficit calórico (Calorie Deficit) significa consumir menos calorias do que o corpo gasta, e é o único princípio fundamental para perder peso, independentemente do tipo de dieta. Um déficit seguro é de 500-750 kcal por dia, equivalente a uma perda de 0,45-0,68kg por semana (1-1,5 libra). Método de cálculo: determine seu TDEE (Gasto Energético Total Diário) e subtraia 500-750 kcal para obter sua ingestão-alvo. Uma restrição excessiva (déficit acima de 1000 kcal) provoca perda muscular, adaptação metabólica e desnutrição. Recomenda-se combinar com treino de força para proteger a massa muscular e manter uma ingestão de proteínas de 1,6-2,2g/kg de peso corporal.
Disclaimer: Este conteúdo é apenas informativo e não constitui aconselhamento médico. Aviso legal completo.
What Is a Calorie Deficit and Why Does It Matter?
A calorie deficit occurs when you consume fewer calories than your body needs to maintain its current weight (your Total Daily Energy Expenditure, or TDEE). Every diet that produces weight loss — keto, paleo, vegan, Mediterranean, intermittent fasting — works because it creates a calorie deficit, not because of any magical food combination.
This is supported by decades of metabolic research. A landmark 2009 study by Sacks et al. published in the New England Journal of Medicine assigned 811 overweight adults to four different diet compositions (varying fat, protein, carbohydrate ratios). After 2 years, all groups lost similar amounts of weight — the only predictor of success was adherence to the calorie target.
How to Calculate Your Calorie Deficit
Step 1: Estimate your TDEE
Your Total Daily Energy Expenditure = Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR) × Activity Multiplier
- Sedentary (office job, little exercise): BMR × 1.2
- Lightly active (exercise 1-3 days/week): BMR × 1.375
- Moderately active (exercise 3-5 days/week): BMR × 1.55
- Very active (exercise 6-7 days/week): BMR × 1.725
Step 2: Subtract 300-500 calories
A deficit of 500 cal/day = ~1 lb/week loss. For most people, a 300-500 calorie deficit is sustainable without excessive hunger or fatigue. Going below 1,200 cal/day (women) or 1,500 cal/day (men) is not recommended without medical supervision.
Use WAYJET's Calorie Estimator to photograph your meals and track your daily intake automatically — no manual logging required.
Perguntas frequentes
How big should my calorie deficit be for safe weight loss?
A moderate deficit of 300-500 calories per day is recommended for sustainable weight loss, resulting in 0.5-1 pound per week. Larger deficits (1,000+ calories) may lead to faster initial weight loss but increase the risk of muscle loss, nutrient deficiencies, metabolic slowdown, and are much harder to maintain long-term. The CDC recommends a rate of 1-2 pounds per week as safe and sustainable.
Do I need to count calories to lose weight?
Not necessarily. While counting calories provides precision, many people successfully lose weight through portion control, mindful eating, or following structured meal plans that automatically create a deficit. Strategies like using smaller plates, eating protein at every meal, and filling half your plate with vegetables can reduce calorie intake without tracking every number.
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