The Banting Ratio Calculator estimates your optimal low-carb, high-fat Banting ratio and macronutrient targets from body data, activity, and goals.
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About the Banting Ratio Calculator
The Banting Ratio (BR) is the energy from fat divided by the energy from protein and carbohydrate combined. It offers a quick signal of how carbohydrate-restricted a meal or day is. A higher ratio usually indicates fewer carbs relative to fat, which many users associate with stronger low-carb “intensity.”
This calculator turns your macronutrient entries into a single number that is easy to track. It also classifies your result into practical ranges, from carb-liberal to very low-carb or ketogenic-focused. The tool is educational, not medical. It helps you align meals with a Banting-style approach by giving you a comparable measure from day to day.

How the Banting Ratio Method Works
William Banting popularized a low-carbohydrate approach in the 19th century. Modern low-carb methods adapt this idea by tracking macronutrients. The Banting Ratio expresses how much of your energy comes from fat compared with protein plus carbohydrates. It complements other tracking methods, like grams or percentages, by packaging them into one number.
- Banting Ratio (BR) definition: fat energy divided by protein-plus-carbohydrate energy.
- Energy density: fat has about 9 kilocalories per gram, while protein and carbs each have about 4.
- Net carbohydrates: total carbohydrates minus fiber, often used for low-carb planning.
- Intensity tiers: ranges that suggest how carb-restrictive a meal or diet is.
- Use per meal or per day: BR can be computed at any time scale and averaged or weighted by energy.
Think of BR as a lens. It does not replace food quality or total calories, but it helps you quantify how “Banting” a plan is. Use it alongside your goals, appetite, and health guidance.
Formulas for Banting Ratio
There are several correct ways to compute the same ratio. Choose the version that matches your labels and tracking preferences.
- Core definition: BR = energy from fat ÷ (energy from protein + energy from carbohydrate).
- From grams: energy from fat = fat grams × 9; energy from protein = protein grams × 4; energy from carbohydrate = carbohydrate grams × 4.
- Using net carbs: replace carbohydrate grams with net carbohydrate grams (total carbs − fiber), then multiply by 4.
- From percentages: if you know percent energy from fat, protein, and carbs, divide fat percent by (protein percent + carb percent).
- Per-day weighting: for multiple meals, compute total daily energy from each macro first, then calculate a single daily BR.
Example: A meal with 35 g fat, 25 g protein, and 10 g net carbs gives fat energy = 315, protein energy = 100, carb energy = 40 (all in kilocalories). BR = 315 ÷ (100 + 40) = 2.25. That is a high-intensity, very low-carb pattern.
What You Need to Use the Banting Ratio Calculator
You only need basic macronutrient data, which appears on nutrition labels or in food databases. If you do not have net carbs, you can use total carbs and fiber to compute them.
- Fat (grams per meal or per day)
- Protein (grams)
- Total carbohydrate (grams)
- Dietary fiber (grams), to calculate net carbs if desired
- Number of servings (optional), if scaling recipes or batch cooking
Most people will see BR fall into common ranges: 0.5–1.0 is mixed or balanced, 1.0–1.5 low-carb, 1.5–2.0 very low-carb, and 2.0 or higher ketogenic-focused. Edge cases include zero carbs and protein (undefined denominator), unusually low total energy, or foods with sugar alcohols. For sugar alcohols, many users subtract erythritol from carbs entirely and count other polyols partially; labels vary by region.
Using the Banting Ratio Calculator: A Walkthrough
Here’s a concise overview before we dive into the key points:
- Choose meal or day view so you know what time frame you are calculating.
- Enter fat grams, protein grams, and total carbohydrate grams from labels or a database.
- Enter fiber grams if you want the tool to compute net carbs.
- Select whether to use total carbs or net carbs for the calculation.
- Add servings if the data is per serving and you plan to eat more than one.
- Submit to get your Banting Ratio, intensity tier, and a short summary.
These points provide quick orientation—use them alongside the full explanations in this page.
Case Studies
Case 1: Post-workout dinner. A person prepares salmon with avocado and greens. Macros: 35 g fat, 25 g protein, 10 g net carbs. Energy: fat 315, protein 100, carbs 40. BR = 315 ÷ (100 + 40) = 2.25. That places the meal in the ketogenic-focused range and suggests high low-carb intensity. What this means: This meal strongly emphasizes fat over carbs and protein and will likely keep carbohydrate intake low for the evening.
Case 2: Weekend brunch. A plate includes eggs, toast, fruit, and yogurt. Day total: 70 g fat, 90 g protein, 200 g total carbs, 30 g fiber, so 170 g net carbs. Energy: fat 630, protein 360, carbs 680. BR = 630 ÷ (360 + 680) ≈ 0.61. This sits in a carb-liberal to balanced range, with low low-carb intensity. What this means: The day is not low-carb; reducing bread or sugary items would raise the ratio if that matches the goal.
Accuracy & Limitations
The ratio is simple and practical, but like any summary value, it has limits. Packaging, rounding rules, and food variety can shift results. Keep these points in mind:
- Nutrition labels round values, which can skew small meals or snacks.
- Energy factors (fat = 9, protein = 4, carbs = 4) are averages and can vary slightly by food.
- Alcohol provides energy but is not included unless you account for it separately.
- “Net carb” rules differ across regions and products, especially for sugar alcohols.
- Medical ketogenic therapy uses stricter protocols than a general Banting-style plan.
Use BR as a guide, not a diagnosis. Combine it with how you feel, your activity level, your health targets, and professional advice. Trends over time matter more than any single calculation.
Units & Conversions
Unit consistency improves accuracy. Food labels may list grams and energy in different forms. These quick conversions help you enter data correctly and interpret results across sources.
| Item | Conversion | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Energy density (fat) | 1 g fat ≈ 9 kcal | Use for fat energy in the ratio. |
| Energy density (protein) | 1 g protein ≈ 4 kcal | Use for protein energy in the ratio. |
| Energy density (carbohydrate) | 1 g carbohydrate ≈ 4 kcal | Use net carbs if that matches your approach. |
| Energy units | 1 kcal ≈ 4.184 kJ | Some regions list energy in kJ. |
| Mass units | 1 g ≈ 0.0353 oz | Convert for recipes or scales showing ounces. |
| Kitchen volume | 1 cup ≈ 240 mL | Handy for liquids and yogurt; verify package sizes. |
When reading labels, keep grams consistent for all macros. Convert only once, then calculate energy. If you use kilojoules, the ratio is unchanged because both numerator and denominator scale equally.
Common Issues & Fixes
Most calculation hiccups come from label interpretation or missing data. These quick fixes address common errors and keep your ratio within sensible ranges.
- Denominator equals zero: add back actual protein or carb grams; a true zero is unrealistic for meals.
- Total vs net carbs: subtract fiber to get net carbs if that is your plan, or use total carbs consistently.
- Sugar alcohols: subtract erythritol entirely; count other polyols partially if your label includes them.
- Recipe scaling: multiply all macros by servings before calculating.
If your BR swings wildly, double-check entries for unit mismatches. Also confirm that fiber was not subtracted twice when using “net carbs” labels.
FAQ about Banting Ratio Calculator
What Banting Ratio should I aim for?
Many low-carb eaters target 1.0–1.5, very low-carb plans often sit at 1.5–2.0, and ketogenic-focused plans are frequently 2.0 or higher. Choose a range that matches your goals and tolerance.
Should I use total carbs or net carbs?
Use net carbs (total carbs minus fiber) if you track low-carb intensity closely, since fiber contributes little to blood glucose. If in doubt, pick one method and be consistent.
Does the ratio replace calorie or protein targets?
No. BR summarizes macro balance, not total intake. Most people still set reasonable protein and energy targets to support body composition and activity.
Can I include alcohol?
Alcohol provides about 7 kcal per gram, but it is not protein, carbohydrate, or fat. You can track it separately; including it in the denominator would reduce BR and may not reflect your intent.
Banting Ratio Terms & Definitions
Banting Ratio (BR)
A measure of fat energy divided by protein-plus-carbohydrate energy, used to estimate the low-carb intensity of a meal or diet.
Net Carbohydrate
Total carbohydrate minus dietary fiber. Many low-carb approaches use net carbs to reflect digestible carbohydrate.
Energy Density
Energy provided per gram of a macronutrient. Standard factors are 9 kcal/g for fat and 4 kcal/g for both protein and carbohydrate.
Intensity Tier
A categorical range (for example, low-carb or very low-carb) that interprets the Banting Ratio for practical planning.
Macronutrient
Protein, fat, and carbohydrate, which supply energy and are required in larger amounts than micronutrients.
Ketogenic-Focused
A pattern with very low carbohydrate and higher fat that may support nutritional ketosis for some people.
Balanced Range
A Banting Ratio roughly between 0.5 and 1.0, indicating a mixed diet without strong low-carb emphasis.
Sugar Alcohol
A carbohydrate type (polyol) used as a sweetener, often partially absorbed. Examples include erythritol, xylitol, and sorbitol.
Disclaimer: This tool is for educational estimates. Consider professional advice for decisions.
References
Here’s a concise overview before we dive into the key points:
- William Banting’s “Letter on Corpulence, Addressed to the Public” (Project Gutenberg)
- FAO: Food energy—methods of analysis and conversion factors
- USDA FoodData Central: Nutrient database for foods and ingredients
- Johns Hopkins Medicine: The Ketogenic Diet—An Overview
- Dietary Reference Intakes for Energy, Carbohydrate, Fiber, Fat, Fatty Acids, Cholesterol, Protein, and Amino Acids (National Academies Press)
These points provide quick orientation—use them alongside the full explanations in this page.