Singapore Calorie Calculator — How Many Calories Do You Need?
If you've ever tried to lose weight in Singapore, you've probably wondered: how many calories should I actually be eating? The answer isn't the same for everyone — it depends on your age, gender, weight, height, and how active you are. Use the calculator below to find your personalised number in under 30 seconds.
🧮 Your Personal Calorie Calculator
This calculator uses the Mifflin-St Jeor formula — the same clinical formula used by NutriKaki to set your in-app calorie target. Results are estimates and may vary based on individual metabolism.
Why Generic Calorie Apps Fail Singaporeans
Most popular calorie tracking apps — MyFitnessPal, Lose It, Cronometer — were built primarily for Western diets. Their food databases are enormous, but they rely on crowdsourced data. That means if another user guessed their Laksa was 300 calories and uploaded it, that's the number you see. For context, a full bowl of Laksa is closer to 600 to 650 calories. That's a 350 calorie error in a single meal.
Over a week of tracking your hawker meals this way, you could be off by 2,000 to 3,000 calories and not even know it. No wonder so many Singaporeans hit a weight loss plateau despite "tracking their food."
How Many Calories Are Actually in Your Hawker Meals?
Here are the real numbers — from the HPB Singapore food composition database — for the dishes most Singaporeans eat every day. These are clinical measurements, not guesses.
| Dish | Calories | Protein | Sodium |
|---|---|---|---|
| Yong Tau Foo (clear soup, 6–8 pcs) | ~220–310 kcal | ~18g | ~800mg |
| Sliced Fish Soup (clear broth) | ~280–350 kcal | ~28g | ~950mg |
| Steamed Chicken Rice (breast, less rice) | ~380–420 kcal | ~32g | ~980mg |
| Kopi-O Siew Dai (black coffee, less sugar) | ~15–25 kcal | — | — |
| Kopi (with condensed milk) | ~100–130 kcal | ~3g | ~60mg |
| Char Kway Teow | ~680–760 kcal | ~16g | ~1,800mg |
| Laksa (full bowl) | ~580–660 kcal | ~18g | ~1,640mg |
| Nasi Lemak (full set with chicken wing) | ~640–760 kcal | ~22g | ~1,200mg |
| Mee Rebus (full bowl) | ~450–530 kcal | ~20g | ~1,400mg |
| Wanton Mee (dry) | ~420–480 kcal | ~18g | ~1,100mg |
Look at the Kopi line. Many Singaporeans have two Kopis a day without thinking about it — that's 200 to 260 kcal from drinks alone. Switching both to Kopi-O Siew Dai saves roughly 200 kcal daily. Over a month, that's 6,000 kcal — nearly a kilogram of fat — from one small change.
How to Use Your Calorie Target with Hawker Food
Once you know your daily calorie target from the calculator above, here's how to think about structuring your meals at the kopitiam:
If your target is around 1,500 kcal/day
You need to be deliberate about every meal. Breakfast around 350 kcal (kaya toast + kopi-o + eggs), lunch around 420 kcal (steamed chicken rice, breast, less rice), dinner around 380 kcal (fish soup + veg), and one small snack. Clear soups and grilled proteins are your best friends. Avoid Nasi Lemak and Char Kway Teow on weekdays.
If your target is around 1,800 kcal/day
You have more flexibility. You can enjoy a bowl of Mee Rebus for lunch (around 500 kcal) and still have a comfortable dinner. One Nasi Lemak per week on a Saturday morning is completely fine. Focus on the easy wins: less rice every time, clear soup over coconut broth, one Kopi-O instead of two Kopis.
If your target is 2,000 kcal or above (maintenance or muscle gain)
At this level, hawker food is incredibly easy to eat within your target. Your main goal is getting enough protein — aim for at least 120g per day if building muscle. Prioritise high-protein hawker dishes: chicken rice, fish soup, Yong Tau Foo, and economy rice with a double protein serving.
Why Tracking Accuracy Is Everything
Knowing your calorie target is step one. Step two is being able to accurately log what you eat — and this is exactly where most Singaporeans hit a wall.
When you log a bowl of Mee Rebus on a generic app, you might find five different entries from five different users, ranging from 280 to 650 calories. How do you know which one is right? You don't. You're guessing. And consistent guessing in the wrong direction is what causes the dreaded weight loss plateau.
NutriKaki solves this by using the HPB Singapore food composition database — the same government-measured data that clinical dietitians in Singapore rely on. When you log Mee Rebus in NutriKaki, you get a measured, verified calorie count based on standardised local portions — not a crowdsourced guess.
Beyond the database, NutriKaki's AI coach understands your order. Tell it "chicken rice, breast, siu fan, no soup" and it adjusts for your exact combination. It understands siew dai, less oil, dabao, and all the local shorthand Singaporeans use every day at the kopitiam.
Frequently Asked Questions
This depends on your age, gender, weight, height, and activity level. HPB Singapore's general guidelines suggest around 1,800 kcal for women and 2,200 kcal for men as a rough baseline, but your personal target should be calculated using your individual measurements. Use the calculator at the top of this page for a personalised result.
First calculate your TDEE (Total Daily Energy Expenditure) using the calculator above. Then subtract 300 to 500 calories from that number. This creates a deficit that leads to approximately 0.3 to 0.5 kg of fat loss per week without being too restrictive.
Yes. Many hawker dishes like Yong Tau Foo (clear soup), Sliced Fish Soup, and Steamed Chicken Rice with less rice fit comfortably within a calorie deficit. The key is knowing the actual calorie counts — which is exactly what NutriKaki provides using verified HPB Singapore data.
BMR (Basal Metabolic Rate) is the calories your body burns at complete rest. TDEE (Total Daily Energy Expenditure) is your BMR multiplied by an activity factor. Your daily calorie target for weight loss should be based on TDEE minus a deficit — not BMR alone. Using BMR as your eating target would put most people in an extreme, unsustainable deficit.
Most popular apps rely on crowdsourced data, meaning random users upload their own estimates. This is wildly inaccurate for Singapore hawker food — entries for the same dish can vary by hundreds of calories. NutriKaki uses clinical, verified data from HPB Singapore, giving you accurate numbers for local dishes like Mee Rebus, Yong Tau Foo, and Kopi-O.
Calculator uses the Mifflin-St Jeor formula. Results are estimates for general wellness purposes only and do not constitute medical or dietary advice. Nutrition data for hawker dishes sourced from the HPB Singapore food composition database.