It will depend on your current weight. A person weighing 300 pounds may be able to consume over 2000 calories and still lose significant weight while a person weighing 150 pounds may be limited to 1500 calories/day to lose.
You have to burn 3,500 calories more than what you consume to lose 1 pound. So to lose 35 pounds you will have to burn 122,500 extra calories.
It depends on how fast you want to lose those 15 pounds by. To lose one solid pound of body weight, you need to burn 3,500 more calories than you consume. For 15 pounds, that means you need to burn 52,500 more calories than you consume. Here is the breakdown of the time it would take and the calories that would need to be cut out.... (this is also assuming that you are exercising and burning a considerable number of calories, daily, too.) * 1 month = 1750 calories less daily. * 2 months = 875 calories less daily. * 3 months = 580 calories less daily. * 6 months = 290 calories less daily. * 1 year = 145 calories less daily.
Consume less calories than you burn.
A calorie is a calorie, no matter what source you get it from. That is, if you consume more calories than you burn, then you will gain weight; if you consume less calories than you burn, then you will lose weight.
Near and around 1800 if your into sports and burn calories add more
To lose one solid pound of weight, you need to burn 3,500 more calories than you consume. To lose 45 pounds, then, you would need to burn (3,500 x 45) 157,500 more calories than you consume.
It depends on how long you want to take to lose the 50 pounds. To lose one solid pound fo weight, you must burn 3,500 more calories than you consume. That means, to lose 50 pounds, you must burn 175,000 more calories than you consume.
You have the right idea: proper strength training is important because it increases the amount of muscle you have, and muscle is your metabolic furnace that will burn additional calories 24 hours a day. For example, if you add ten pounds of muscle in the next year, your body might consume/burn an additional 350 to 500 calories daily.
To lose one solid pound of weight, you need to burn 3,500 more calories to consume. Then, to lose 52 solid pounds of weight, you would need to burn 182,000 calories.
The relationship of calorie consumption and calories burned is the following (kind of in depth): The calories you eat are obviously the calories you consume, right? Right. The calories you burn are, well, the calories you burn. If you consume 1,000 calories, but your body burns (oh say, 2,000 calories for sake of arguement) then you will easily not be affected weight-wise by the food. However, if you consume (eat) 5,000 calories, then you're going to put on a few pounds. 3,500 calories = a pound.
You have to burn more calories than you consume.
Primarily only if the meat is high in fat, and/or you do not burn off the calories that you consume throughout the day.