Cutting Macros for a 160 lb Female (High Protein)
If you are a 160-pound woman (73 kg) looking to lose fat using high protein, your starting daily target is 1889 calories.
192gm protein · 162gm carbs · 53gm fat
This reflects a 333-calorie deficit below your estimated 2222-calorie TDEE. Use the pre-filled calculator below to adjust for your exact height, age, and activity level.
Who This Is For
160-pound womans actively cutting who want strong muscle preservation during a deficit. Typically people who have been training consistently and want to lose fat without sacrificing the strength or muscle they have built.
Macro Rationale
A measured deficit of 333 calories below your estimated 2222-calorie TDEE is enough to drive consistent fat loss without triggering aggressive muscle breakdown. Protein is elevated specifically to counter the muscle-loss risk that comes with calorie restriction — it is the most important macro to protect during a cut.
High-protein macros keep protein elevated during a deficit to protect lean muscle tissue. This is the most evidence-backed approach for body-composition-focused fat loss. Higher protein also increases satiety and has a greater thermic effect than carbs or fat, making the deficit effectively slightly larger than it appears on paper.
Daily Target Calories
~15% deficit from TDEE (2222 cal) for fat loss. high protein macro split.
Daily Target Macros
Protein
192gm
Carbs
162gm
Fat
53gm
Protein: 192gm (1.2gm per lb body weight)
Sample Meal Plan
Breakfast
- Protein Shake — 1 scoop + water (~30g)130 cal · P25 C3 F2
- Greek Yogurt — 1 cup (~245g)120 cal · P20 C9 F0
- Scrambled Eggs (3) — 3 large (~150g)213 cal · P18 C2 F15
Lunch
- Grilled Chicken Breast — 6 oz (~170g)213 cal · P42 C0 F5
- Strip Steak — 6 oz (~170g)286 cal · P40 C0 F14
- Ground Turkey (93%) — 5 oz (~142g)195 cal · P30 C0 F8
Dinner
- Ribeye Steak — 8 oz (~227g)440 cal · P46 C0 F28
- Black Beans — 1/2 cup (~86g)114 cal · P8 C20 F1
Snack
- Protein Shake — 1 scoop + water (~30g)130 cal · P25 C3 F2
- Cottage Cheese — 1/2 cup (~113g)90 cal · P14 C5 F2
Estimates. Not medical advice. Adjust portions to fit your exact targets.
Adjust Your Macros
Pre-filled for this profile. Change any value and recalculate.
Next step
Save these targets and start tracking today.
Log meals in seconds, stay aligned with your goal, and see real progress — not just a number on a page.
Free · Always
Adjustment Notes
- • Hold your targets for at least 2 full weeks before making changes — short-term weight fluctuations are water and digestion, not fat or muscle.
- • Adjust calories in 100–150 calorie increments, not large jumps. Small changes compound without disrupting adherence.
- • Recalculate every 10–15 lb of bodyweight change or every 6–8 weeks.
- • If your scale trend is flat for 2–3 weeks, reduce by ~100 calories from carbs or fats first — keep protein at current levels.
- • Current target: 1889 cal/day. If you are losing more than 1.5 lb/week consistently, add 100 calories — excessive loss rate increases muscle breakdown risk.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many calories should a 160 lb woman eat to lose fat?
A practical starting target is 1889 calories/day — a 333-calorie deficit below your estimated TDEE of 2222. This provides a meaningful signal for fat loss without being aggressive enough to risk significant muscle loss or excessive fat gain. Adjust in 100-calorie steps after 2–3 weeks of data.
How much protein should a 160 lb woman eat per day?
At 160 lb, a daily target of 192gm of protein (1.20g per lb bodyweight) supports body composition goals whether cutting, building, or maintaining. Protein has a higher thermic effect than carbs or fats, keeps hunger lower than either, and directly determines how much muscle your body can build or retain. Distribute across 3–5 meals for best use — a single large protein serving has diminishing returns compared to spread intake.
Will a 160 lb woman lose muscle during this 333-calorie deficit?
Muscle loss risk on a 333-calorie deficit is real but manageable. The most important protection is keeping protein at 192gm/day — elevated protein directly reduces muscle breakdown during a deficit. Continuing resistance training is the second most important factor; muscle is only retained if it is being used. A 333-calorie deficit is in a moderate range, which means weekly fat loss should be around 0.1 lbs — sustainable without requiring the body to cannibalize significant lean tissue.
How should a 160 lb woman distribute 192gm of protein across meals?
Spreading 192gm across 3–5 meals maximizes muscle protein synthesis compared to front-loading or back-loading protein in 1–2 large servings. A practical starting structure: ~52gm at breakfast, ~52gm at lunch, ~63gm at dinner, and ~25gm from a snack. High-protein foods like chicken breast (31gm/100g), Greek yogurt (10gm/100g), eggs (6gm each), and cottage cheese (11gm/100g) make the target achievable without supplements.
When should a 160 lb woman adjust their 1889-calorie macro target?
Adjust when your body sends a clear signal for 2–3 consecutive weeks: no scale trend movement (up or down as intended), stalled training performance, or persistent energy issues. A single bad week is noise — a consistent 3-week trend is a signal. Adjust in 100–150 calorie increments, not large jumps. At 1889 calories for a 160 lb woman, a 100-calorie change represents about 4–5% of total intake — meaningful but not disruptive to your food structure.
Related Calculators & Guides
- →150 lb Female Cutting (High Protein)
- →170 lb Female Cutting (High Protein)
- →160 lb Female Bulking (High Protein)
- →160 lb Female Maintenance (High Protein)
- →160 lb Female Cutting (Balanced)
- →160 lb Female Cutting (Keto)
- →160 lb Female Cutting (Carnivore)
- →Protein intake for 160 lb Female
- →2000 cal High Protein meal plan
- →Cutting Macros Guide
- →High Protein Macros Guide