Physiq Macro Calculator

Bulking Macros for a 230 lb Female (Vegetarian)

If you are a 230-pound woman (104 kg) looking to build muscle using vegetarian, your starting daily target is 3183 calories.

219gm protein · 417gm carbs · 71gm fat

This reflects a 294-calorie surplus above your estimated 2889-calorie TDEE. Use the pre-filled calculator below to adjust for your exact height, age, and activity level.

Who This Is For

230-pound womans pursuing bulking with a vegetarian macro approach.

Macro Rationale

A controlled surplus of 294 calories above your estimated TDEE supports muscle protein synthesis without excessive fat gain. Protein is kept high throughout the surplus to ensure muscle is the primary beneficiary of the extra energy, not stored fat. Training quality and progressive overload do the rest.

Vegetarian macros provide a structured split aligned with your goal and activity demands.

Daily Target Calories

3183cal/day
Target3183

Your macros are based on your body stats, goal, and activity level. Eating style shapes meal suggestions; keto, carnivore, and PSMF also change how carbs and fat are set.

Moderate Protein / High Carb / Moderate Fat

Daily Target Macros

219gm

Protein

219gm

417gm

Carbs

417gm

71gm

Fat

71gm

Protein: 219gm (1.0gm per lb body weight)

How we calculated this

Calories are based on BMR (1751) × activity for a TDEE of 2889, then adjusted by 10% for your goal.

Protein uses total body weight because body fat % was missing or outside the supported range.

Fat starts at 0.30g per lb body weight and generally stays above 20% of calories.

Carbs fill the calories remaining after protein and fat are set.

Vegetarian uses the algorithm output as-is.

Sample Meal Plan

Breakfast

  • Oatmeal1.7× (1 cup cooked (~240g))302.6 cal · P11.5 C51.7 F5.8
  • Greek Yogurt1.7× (1 cup (~245g))229.8 cal · P38.3 C17.3 F0
  • Avocado Toast1.7× (1 slice)383.1 cal · P9.5 C38.3 F23
Total: 915 cal · 59.3g P · 107.3g C · 28.7g F

Lunch

  • Chickpea Salad2.5× (1 cup (~240g))632.5 cal · P34.5 C86.3 F17.3
  • Steamed Broccoli2.5× (1 cup (~91g))115 cal · P11.5 C17.3 F0
  • Asparagus2.5× (6 spears (~90g))69 cal · P8.6 C11.5 F0
Total: 816 cal · 54.6g P · 115g C · 17.3g F

Dinner

  • Steamed Broccoli2.5× (1 cup (~91g))115 cal · P11.5 C17.3 F0
  • Black Beans2.5× (1/2 cup (~86g))327.8 cal · P23 C57.5 F2.9
  • Tempeh2.5× (4 oz (~113g))603.8 cal · P57.5 C28.7 F28.7
Total: 1047 cal · 92g P · 103.5g C · 31.6g F

Snack

  • Rice Cakes (2)1.2× (2 cakes (~20g))100.4 cal · P2.9 C20.1 F0
  • Cottage Cheese1.2× (1/2 cup (~113g))129 cal · P20.1 C7.1 F2.9
  • Apple1.2× (1 medium (~182g))136.3 cal · P0 C35.9 F0
Total: 366 cal · 23g P · 63.1g C · 2.9g F

Daily plan total: 3144 cal · 228.9g P · 388.9g C · 80.5g F

Live target: 3183 cal · 219g P · 417g C · 71g F

Sample plan built to hit your targets. Not medical advice.

Adjust Your Macros

Pre-filled for this profile. Change any value and recalculate from the same macro engine.

Body Stats

If you know your body fat %, we can calculate more accurate macros.

Goal

Your goal affects calories and macro targets.

Activity Level

Your activity level affects calories, protein needs, and carb needs.

Eating Style

Your eating style affects meal suggestions and food choices. Keto, carnivore, and PSMF also change how carbs and fat are set (PSMF adds a large deficit versus TDEE).

Dietary Restrictions & Preferences

These help us avoid foods that do not fit your needs.

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 scale weight is not rising after 2–3 weeks, add 100 calories. If gaining faster than 0.5–1 lb/week, trim 100 calories.
  • Current target: 3183 cal/day. Track gym performance alongside scale weight — stalled lifts are often a sign calories need adjusting upward.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many calories should a 230 lb woman eat to build muscle?

A practical starting target is 3183 calories/day — a 294-calorie surplus above your estimated TDEE of 2889. This provides a meaningful signal for muscle growth 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 230 lb woman eat per day?

At 230 lb, a daily target of 219gm of protein (0.95g 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.

How fast should a 230 lb woman expect to gain muscle at 3183 calories?

Realistic natural muscle gain is slow — typically 0.25–0.5 lb of muscle per month for trained individuals, more for true beginners. Scale weight may increase faster than that because the surplus adds glycogen, water, and some fat alongside muscle. At a 294-calorie surplus, expect to track body composition (measurements, how clothes fit, strength progress) rather than relying on scale weight alone. Strength gains are often the earliest and most reliable signal that the surplus is working.

How does a vegetarian approach differ for a 230 lb woman?

A vegetarian split at 230 lb adjusts the carb-to-fat ratio to align with your dietary preferences and activity. The overall calorie target (3183) and protein floor (219gm) remain the primary drivers of results — strategy primarily determines how those calories are distributed, which affects food choices and adherence.

How do macros scale for heavier individuals like a 230 lb woman?

At 230 lb, total intake needs are higher than most generic macro guides suggest. Your estimated maintenance of 2889 calories reflects the greater metabolic demand of a larger body. Protein at 219gm scales proportionally with bodyweight — this is more total grams than a lighter person needs, but the per-pound ratio (0.95g/lb) is similar. Heavier individuals often also have a larger absolute margin for calorie adjustments — a 200-calorie change at 3183 calories is proportionally smaller than the same change at 1,800 calories.

Supporting Guides