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You鈥檙e not actually that good at counting calories, and it鈥檚 actually not that good for you.
You鈥檙e not actually that good at counting calories, and it鈥檚 actually not that good for you. (Photo: Mart铆 Sans/Stocksy)

Counting Calories Doesn’t Work

Calorie counting can be a huge burden. Plus, you're probably terrible at it.

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You鈥檙e not actually that good at counting calories, and it鈥檚 actually not that good for you.
(Photo: Mart铆 Sans/Stocksy)

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If you look closely, you鈥檒l notice that most new diet聽trends are just iterations of聽old classics鈥攏o matter how groundbreaking they seem聽or how neatly they鈥檙e rebranded. Take food-tracking apps, for example. Sure, they can crunch your diet into a perfect breakdown of macronutrients, vitamins, and minerals with a single tap, but they鈥檙e really just a high-tech approach to the oldest diet plan in the book:聽counting calories.

In fact, most diets boil down to the聽old calories-in, calories-out聽approach to weight loss and weight maintenance, and聽many experts argue that it isn鈥檛 the best approach to sustainable healthy eating. It鈥檚 stress inducing, often feels restrictive, and is聽pretty hard to get right. Here鈥檚 why you should reconsider calculating your food intake.

Nutrition Labels Aren鈥檛 Always Accurate

In practice,聽counting calories means lots of label reading. It鈥檚 even聽common for calorie counters to rely more heavily on packaged foods and chain-restaurant meals than noncounters, says , a South Carolina鈥揵ased registered dietitian who counsels clients on a nondiet approach to food.聽鈥淭hey鈥檙e going for foods with known calorie numbers over home-cooked foods that they might need to calculate for themselves,鈥 she says.

The problem is,聽these numbers are only a rough estimate. In a from Tufts University,聽researchers measured the true calorie values for a variety of fast-food and frozen meals (using , which uses the heat of combustion measurements to give truly accurate calories). They found that fast-food-meal calorie counts were underreported by an average of 18聽percent, and frozen-meal calorie counts were underreported by an average of 8聽percent. While this might seem surprising, it鈥檚 actually within the for calorie reporting, which is 20 percent聽in either direction. In short, nutrition labels give聽you a far-from-perfect picture of how much you鈥檙e eating.

Calories Don鈥檛 Equal Satisfaction

The fact that many calorie counters rely on packaged foods poses another problem: a diet of processed foods is likely to make you hungrier. A conducted in May 2019 by the 聽(NIH) looked at this effect. The subjects鈥20聽healthy adults, ten men and ten women鈥攚ere split into two groups for the four-week trial. For the first two-week phase, one group was fed a diet of predominantly processed food, and聽the other group a diet of whole, minimally processed foods. For the second two-week phase, the groups swapped diets.

The meals in both phases were matched exactly for amounts of calories, fiber, fat, sugar, and other nutrients. At each meal, the subjects were told to eat until they were satisfied, no food logging or calorie counting allowed. Snacks were also available throughout the day, and the subjects were free to eat whenever they were hungry. One day鈥檚 lunch on the ultraprocessed diet was canned beef ravioli, Parmesan cheese, white bread, margarine, diet lemonade, and packaged oatmeal-raisin cookies; the same day鈥檚 lunch on the minimally processed diet was a spinach salad with chicken breast, apple slices, bulgur, sunflower seeds, and grapes聽tossed in an olive-oil-based vinaigrette.

鈥淧eople ate 500 more calories a day on聽the ultraprocessed food diet,鈥 says Kevin Hall, the聽lead聽author of聽the study and a researcher at the NIH. When people switched diets and were presented with minimally processed meals that contained the exact same calories and nutrients, 鈥渢hey spontaneously reduced their calorie intake.鈥

The study didn鈥檛 look at the mechanism of why this happens, but Hall points to the fact that ultraprocessed food聽has聽far less water than whole foods聽and thus less volume鈥攊t鈥檚 literally easier to chew and swallow, and the researchers did note that people ate faster on the ultraprocessed food diet. Though the study was small, it suggests that all calories don鈥檛 offer the same satisfaction.

The Stress Isn鈥檛 Worth It

So聽does it make sense to value calorie counts over your own satiety? Likely not. For one thing, this can be stressful. 鈥Calorie counting essentially requires you to disconnect from your body鈥檚 cues of hunger and cravings that are natural and healthy,鈥 says Breese Annable, a psychologist who specializes in disordered eating, chronic dieting, and body image. 鈥淵ou have to override those cues to 鈥榝ollow the plan.鈥欌 People can maintain that for a while聽but eventually overeat because they feel either physically or mentally and emotionally deprived. Then they go back to calorie counting, and the cycle continues.

Even if you do manage to stay faithful to your tracking app, you might find that you don鈥檛 get the results you hoped for. 鈥淲e know that people鈥檚 calorie estimates are woefully inaccurate,鈥 Hall says. 鈥淪o聽calorie counting聽is not advisable, because you鈥檙e not going to do a very good job.鈥

Every Day Is Different

The idea that everyone needs 2,000 calories a day is arbitrary.聽Your body size, age, gender, and genetics all play a role in how many calories you need, and those needs change daily based on sleep, stress levels, and physical activity.聽鈥淭racking apps base recommendations on formulas that supposedly predict your calorie and macronutrient needs,鈥 Hartley says. 鈥淭he problem is that no聽formula can precisely predict what all types of people need to eat. They just give you a ballpark.鈥

Even if you account for your physical activity in your calorie count鈥攃alculating how many calories you burned during your workout聽and adjusting your intake accordingly鈥攜ou鈥檙e probably getting it wrong. An activity tracker like a Fitbit聽or a聽smart watch might give you a daily count, but聽a from the University of Leeds, in England, found that different trackers give wildly different calorie-expenditure estimates, and that they are particularly bad at estimating calories burned during sedentary or less active periods. Plus, passive activities like walking, cleaning, and running errands make a big difference, too.

Sleep and stress both affect energy needs in complex ways we don鈥檛 fully understand. A聽 from Eastern Carolina University found that sleep deprivation can increase calorie needs in the short term聽but negatively affect hormone function and metabolism in the long term. And a聽 from Ohio State University聽found that calorie expenditure was lower in the 24 hours following a stressful event.

All of this to say: there鈥檚 a lot at play when it comes to how many calories your body needs on a given day, and it鈥檚 nearly impossible to accurately guess that number.

If You Must Track, Ditch the Numbers

Hartley doesn鈥檛 recommend calorie counting to her clients鈥攕he favors聽an intuitive-eating approach that avoids聽numbers鈥攂ut she acknowledges that tracking can be helpful. 鈥淚t鈥檚 so individual,鈥 she says. 鈥淔or some people, tracking food without numbers, along with other factors like emotions, hunger, fullness, and satisfaction, can bring awareness and help identify patterns in eating.鈥 Conscientious tracking also makes you more aware of what you eat, which Hall thinks can be useful for certain people. 鈥淚t can change your eating behavior for the better,鈥 he says.

For other people, tracking food, even without the numbers, can make聽them think about聽food all day. How do you draw the line? 鈥淚f you鈥檙e using a tracking app and noticing yourself聽stressing and obsessing about food, that鈥檚 not healthy,鈥 Hartley says. 鈥淚f food tracking takes away your ability to be flexible around food, that鈥檚 a problem. If you can鈥檛 go to an impromptu lunch with coworkers, or enjoy a food that just sounds really good, that might be a sign that the tracking is kind of ruling your life.鈥 Anyone who struggles with anxiety or disordered eating should steer clear. But聽as Annable explains, if you typically have a healthy relationship with food and your body, and you want to move toward聽more balanced nutrition, casual tracking might work聽for you.

Remember the Big Picture

Most people are hoping to do right by their body聽when they聽count calories, Annable explains,聽but it鈥檚 critical to think more holistically about health. 鈥淚f we鈥檙e doing something we think is physically healthy, but it鈥檚 creating upsetting emotions and a bad relationship with our body, it鈥檚 not truly healthy,鈥 she says. The less time you spend thinking about food, the better.

If you鈥檙e a longtime calorie counter looking to take a gentler approach to your eating habits, you don鈥檛 need to do it alone. 鈥淪ometimes it can be scary to go from rigid rules around food to having no structure at all,鈥 Hartley says. She recommends working with a dietitian, who can help you come up with a flexible structure to develop聽a more intuitive relationship with food, no calorie counting necessary.

Lead Photo: Mart铆 Sans/Stocksy

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