Cutting Macros for 260 lb Males

Calculate your exact cutting macros as a 260 lb male. Get personalized calories, protein, carbs, and fat targets for effective fat loss while preserving muscle.

At 260 lbs, you have a significant advantage: your higher baseline metabolism means you can eat more while still losing fat. A well-structured cut at this weight typically allows for 2860-3380 calories daily while still creating a meaningful deficit. The key is leveraging this metabolic headroom without getting impatient—consistent adherence beats aggressive restriction every time.

3,274

Daily Calories

229g

Protein

1.4 lbs

Weekly Loss

~15 wks

To Goal

Your Example Cutting Spec

Calculated for a 260 lb male, 30 years old, 20% body fat, targeting 239 lbs with a 18% deficit.

3,274

Calories

229g

Protein

1.0g/lb target

414g

Carbs

51% of cals

78g

Fat

21% of cals

TDEE

3,993 cal

Daily Deficit

-719 cal

Lean Body Mass

208 lbs

Get Your Personalized Numbers

These are example calculations. Your exact macros depend on your unique stats, activity level, and goals.

The Science Behind These Numbers

These macros are calculated using the Cunningham equation (when body fat is known) or Mifflin-St Jeor equation as a fallback. Here's what each number means:

Calorie Target

Your TDEE (3,993 cal) minus a 18% deficit. This creates a 719 calorie daily deficit, translating to approximately 1.4 lbs of fat loss per week.

Protein Target

Set at 1.0g per pound of target body weight. Research shows 0.8-1.2g/lb preserves muscle during a deficit. Higher protein also increases satiety and has a high thermic effect.

Fat Target

Minimum 0.3g per pound bodyweight to maintain hormone production. Fat is essential for testosterone, estrogen, and overall hormonal health during a caloric deficit.

Carb Target

Remaining calories after protein and fat are set. Carbs fuel your training and preserve muscle glycogen. Prioritize them around workouts for best performance.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Cutting calories too drastically too soon

At 260 lbs, your metabolism can support higher calories even in a deficit. Starting at 1500 calories because "that's what worked for a friend" wastes your metabolic advantage and sets you up for plateaus later when you actually need to drop calories.

Inconsistent protein intake

At your target of 239 lbs, you need 227-263g of protein daily—not just on training days. Muscle protein synthesis doesn't take days off, and neither should your protein intake.

Weighing daily and reacting to fluctuations

Body weight can fluctuate 2-5 lbs daily from water, sodium, and food volume. A 260 lb person might weigh 4 lbs different on consecutive mornings with identical fat mass. Track weekly averages, not daily numbers.

Keys to Success

Leverage your higher TDEE

At 260 lbs, you can likely eat 2860-3380 calories and still lose fat. Don't leave calories on the table—eating more (within your deficit) improves adherence and workout performance.

This is the visual change zone

At 20% body fat, you're in the range where visible changes happen fastest. Each percentage drop reveals more definition. Take progress photos every 2 weeks—you'll be amazed at the transformation.

Build your protein-first habit

At every meal, ask: "Where's my 60g of protein?" This simple habit ensures you hit your 239g daily target across 4 meals. Protein first, then fill in carbs and fats.

Weekly weigh-ins beat daily stress

Pick one day (ideally after a rest day) and weigh yourself first thing in the morning. This weekly average approach eliminates the anxiety of daily fluctuations and shows true fat loss trends.

Your Week-by-Week Focus

Weeks 1-2: Establish your baseline. Track everything, even if imperfectly. Learn your hunger patterns, identify trigger foods, and build the daily habits that will carry you through.

Weeks 3-6: This is where consistency pays off. You should see 1-1.5 lbs per week on average. Take progress photos—you're changing more than the scale shows.

Weeks 7+: Assess and adjust. If progress has stalled for 2+ consecutive weeks, reduce calories by 150-200 or add low-intensity cardio. If progress is on track, change nothing.

What You Get with CutSpec

Personalized calorie target based on your exact TDEE
Optimal protein for maximum muscle preservation
Balanced carb and fat distribution
Weekly progress tracking with trend analysis
Smart refeed day recommendations
Diet break alerts to prevent metabolic adaptation
Reverse diet protocol when you reach your goal
No daily food logging required

Frequently Asked Questions

How many calories should a 260 lb man eat to lose weight?

A 260 lb man with moderate activity typically needs 3120-3640 calories for cutting. This creates a 15-20% deficit from maintenance, allowing for 1.7-2.5 lbs of fat loss per week while preserving muscle.

How much protein does a 260 lb male need while cutting?

At 260 lbs, aim for 215-263g of protein daily (based on target weight of ~239 lbs). Higher protein during a cut helps preserve muscle mass and increases satiety.

How long will it take to cut from 260 lbs to 239 lbs?

Losing 21 lbs at a safe rate of 1-1.5 lbs per week takes approximately 17 weeks. Faster cuts risk muscle loss; slower cuts are more sustainable.

What's the best macro split for a 260 lb male?

A good starting point is 30-35% protein, 35-40% carbs, and 25-30% fat. Prioritize protein at 239g minimum, keep fat at 78g for hormonal health, and fill remaining calories with carbs.

Related Guides

Ready to Start Your Cut?

Get your personalized cutting protocol in under 60 seconds. No account required to calculate - save your spec when you're ready to track.