Macros for 260 lb Men (Bulking, Aggressive (15%) Surplus, Moderately Active)
Written and reviewed by
Andrew Menechian, Head of Fitness, FitCommit
PN1, PNC 1&2, Poliquin PICP 1&2 · Updated April 2026
Bulking at 260 lb as a moderately active male on the Aggressive (15%) surplus means 4,382 cal daily: 222g protein, 599g carbs, 122g fat. The 571 cal over your 3,811 TDEE is calibrated for about 1.1 lbs per week of gain, which at your 213 lbs lean mass ratio biases toward muscle rather than fat. Keep protein fixed. Let carbs float higher on training days, lower on rest. Expect some fat gain, it is the cost of meaningful muscle accrual. The real signal is the barbell: if main lifts are not moving up about 2 lbs every 2 to 3 weeks, your surplus is too small, not too big. Measure gains at the bar first, the scale second.
Comparing weights? See the same plan for a 250 lb man. Prefer a different goal? Try cutting macros at 260 lbs or maintenance macros at 260 lbs. Or see the same macros for a 260 lb woman.
4,382
Calories
~15% calorie surplus (Aggressive)
222g
Protein
888 cal (20%)
599g
Carbs
2396 cal (55%)
122g
Fat
1098 cal (25%)
Running a 571 cal/day surplus (10% above TDEE). Expect ~1.14 lbs of weight gain per week, building on 213 lbs of lean mass.
4 weeks
264.6 lbs
8 weeks
269.1 lbs
12 weeks
273.7 lbs
How These Macros Were Calculated
| Body Weight | 260 lbs |
|---|---|
| Estimated Lean Mass | 213 lbs (82% of body weight) |
| Lean Mass (kg) | 96.7 kg |
| BMR (Katch-McArdle) | 2,459 cal/day |
| TDEE (BMR x 1.55) | 3,811 cal/day |
| Target Calories | 4,382 cal/day |
| Daily Surplus | 571 cal/day (10% surplus) |
| Expected Weekly Change | 1.14 lbs gain per week |
BMR uses the Katch-McArdle formula (370 + 21.6 x lean mass kg), which accounts for lean mass and outperforms Harris-Benedict for accuracy across different body compositions. Lean mass estimated at 18% average body fat for men. Activity multiplier 1.55 = moderate exercise 3-5 days per week.
Macro Breakdown
| Macro | Grams | Calories | % of Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| Protein | 222g | 888 | 20% |
| Carbohydrates | 599g | 2396 | 55% |
| Fat | 122g | 1098 | 25% |
| Total | - | 4,382 | 100% |
Protein is set at 2.3g per kg of lean body mass (213 lbs lean mass for this man). Fat targets 25% of target calories with a unisex floor of max(0.5g per kg body weight, 20% of calories) applied if the percentage drops below it. Carbs fill the remaining calories, with a 50g minimum for brain function.
Meal Split Examples
3 Meals Per Day
- Per-meal calories1,461 cal
- Per-meal protein74g
- Per-meal carbs200g
- Per-meal fat41g
4 Meals Per Day
- Per-meal calories1,096 cal
- Per-meal protein56g
- Per-meal carbs150g
- Per-meal fat31g
5 Meals Per Day
- Per-meal calories876 cal
- Per-meal protein44g
- Per-meal carbs120g
- Per-meal fat24g
Research shows muscle protein synthesis is maximized with 30-40g protein per meal. 74g per meal in 3 meals is within the optimal range.
What These Macros Look Like in Food
Protein: 222g
- 9 x 100g chicken thighs (24g each)
- 37 large whole eggs (6g each)
- 10 scoops protein powder (22-25g each)
- 11 x 100g 85% ground beef (20g each)
Carbs: 599g
- 13 cups cooked white rice (45g each)
- 11 cups dry oats (54g each)
- 23 medium sweet potatoes (26g each)
- 22 medium bananas (27g each)
Fat: 122g
- 9 tbsp olive oil (14g each)
- 15 tbsp peanut butter (8g fat each)
- 8 half avocados (15g each)
- 9 oz mixed nuts (14g each)
These are rough equivalents. Most meals contain a mix of all three macros. Use a food tracking app for precise logging.
How Macros Shift at Nearby Weights
Same male, bulking goal, moderately active activity. Your row is highlighted.
| Weight | Calories | Protein | Carbs | Fat | TDEE |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 240 lbs | 4,098 | 205g | 563g | 114g | 3,563 |
| 250 lbs | 4,242 | 214g | 581g | 118g | 3,687 |
| 260 lbs | 4,382 | 222g | 599g | 122g | 3,811 |
Each 10 lb change shifts TDEE by roughly 124 calories at moderately active activity. Recalculate at your new weight after every 10-15 lb change.
Sample Day of Eating
A representative day hitting 4,382 calories, 222g protein, 599g carbs, 122g fat. Adjust portions to match your food preferences.
Breakfast
~1,315 cal
- 11 whole eggs
- 4 cups dry oats
- 1 medium banana
- 1 cup whole milk
Lunch
~1,534 cal
- 324g chicken thighs
- 5 cups cooked white rice
- 1 tbsp olive oil
- 1 cup cooked broccoli
Dinner
~1,533 cal
- 388g 85% ground beef
- 8 medium potatos
- 1 tbsp olive oil
- 1 cup cooked spinach
These are approximate servings. Exact macro hits require a food tracking app. Use this as a starting template and adjust portions to match your targets.
These numbers use an estimated 18% body fat.
FitCommit measures your actual lean mass with an AI body scan from your phone camera, so your macros reflect your real body composition.
3 Sample Meals Hitting These Macros
Each meal delivers roughly 1461 calories, 74g protein, 200g carbs, and 41g fat, which is a third of your 4382 cal daily target.
Oats and Peanut Butter Power Bowl
Calorie-dense breakfast that does not fight appetite later in the day.
Ingredients
- 299g rolled oats
- 296g whole milk (about 1 cups)
- 1 scoop (30g) whey protein
- 82g natural peanut butter
- 1 medium banana, sliced
- 1 tbsp honey
Instructions (8 min)
- Cook oats with whole milk on stovetop, 5 min.
- Stir in whey protein once off heat to avoid clumping.
- Top with peanut butter, banana, and honey.
- Eat warm.
Chicken Thigh Rice Bowl
Chicken thigh for density, white rice for fast carbs, olive oil for clean fat.
Ingredients
- 285g boneless skinless chicken thigh
- 714g cooked jasmine rice (about 5 cups)
- 82g olive oil
- 150g sautéed bell peppers and onion
- Soy sauce, garlic, ginger to taste
Instructions (15 min)
- Pan-sear chicken thighs in 1 tbsp olive oil, 6-7 min per side.
- Sauté peppers and onion in the same pan.
- Plate over rice, drizzle remaining olive oil.
- Add soy sauce, garlic, ginger.
Salmon Pasta with Olive Oil
Omega-3s, fast carbs, dense calories in a 20-minute one-pan meal.
Ingredients
- 336g salmon fillet
- 667g dry pasta (weight before cooking)
- 103g olive oil
- Lemon, garlic, parsley, parmesan to taste
Instructions (20 min)
- Cook pasta to package directions.
- Pan-sear salmon skin-side down in olive oil, 4 min, flip, 3 min.
- Flake salmon over drained pasta.
- Toss with remaining olive oil, lemon juice, garlic, parsley. Top with parmesan.
How to Hit These Macros Daily
Buy a digital food scale
A food scale eliminates the single biggest source of calorie miscalculation: eyeballed portions. A $15 scale pays for itself the first week by surfacing hidden 200 to 400 cal overshoots. Required for hitting 4382 cal precisely.
Plan 3 meals that total 4382 calories
Divide daily calories evenly: roughly 1461 cal per meal for a 260 lb man. Each meal targets about 74g protein, 200g carbs, and 41g fat.
Hit 222g protein first
Protein is the lock, carbs and fat are the flex. 222g across 3 meals is 74g each. Pick one anchor protein source per meal (chicken, beef, fish, Greek yogurt, eggs) and portion it before adding anything else. If you fall short on calories by bedtime, top up with carbs or fat, not extra protein.
Split carbs and fat around training
Put 150g of your 599g carbs in the meal 1-2 hours pre-workout and 180g in the post-workout meal. Spread fat evenly across remaining meals. Carb timing matters for training quality on a surplus.
Track every input for 14 days
Log every meal, snack, drink, and cooking oil for 14 days using any tracking app. No eyeballing. The calibration period surfaces blind spots: dressings, condiments, weekend drift. After 14 days, tracking becomes automatic.
Adjust by 100 cal weekly based on the scale trend
Step on the scale 5 mornings a week, average the readings. Compare to last week. If weight has not moved up in 2 weeks, add 100 cal to carbs. Gaining more than 0.75 lbs/week? Cut 100 cal. Never adjust on a single day's reading.
What This Looks Like In Practice
Meal timing and structure
On a bulk, 4 to 5 meals of 56g protein is easier to hit than 3 larger ones. At 4382 cal, a 3-meal structure forces 800 to 1,200 cal per sitting, which most people struggle with. Spread the load. Breakfast, mid-morning, post-workout, dinner, pre-sleep is a common template for a 260 lb man. The pre-sleep meal (30g casein or Greek yogurt) supports overnight muscle protein synthesis and adds 200 to 300 cal without fighting appetite during the day.
Training day nutrition
Training days drive the surplus for a 260 lb man. Load 150g of your 599g daily carbs 2 hours pre-workout for glycogen and stable intra-workout blood sugar. Post-workout, 180g of carbs with 40g protein opens the recovery window. On a bulk at 4382 cal (571 over your 3811 TDEE), training intensity is the signal that your surplus is calibrated right: if main lifts stall for 2 to 3 weeks, the surplus is too small, not the volume. The bar moves when the calories are there.
Common pitfalls to avoid
Most bulks fail three ways. First, going too fast: gaining more than 1% of body weight per week (more than 2.6 lbs for a 260 lb man) stacks fat faster than muscle. Second, under-eating protein on high-calorie days: hitting 4382 cal (571 over TDEE) with pasta and ice cream is easy, hitting 222g protein is the discipline. Third, never leaving the bulk: after 12 to 20 weeks, shift to maintenance for 6 to 8 weeks or start a mini-cut. Year-round bulks at moderately active activity turn into year-round fat gain.
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I eat more on training days at 4382 calories?
Cycling calories is not necessary for most people. Hitting your daily target consistently produces better results than complex cycling protocols. If you want to cycle, shift 10-15% of daily calories from rest days to training days while keeping the weekly total the same. For example, add 438 calories on training days and subtract 438 on rest days. Your weekly calorie total stays fixed.
Is 4382 calories per day too high for a 260 lb male?
4382 is a 15% surplus (Aggressive) over a 3811 TDEE. Andrew Menechian's framework caps the slider at 15% Aggressive because larger surpluses convert to fat faster than muscle. At 571 extra per day, weight should climb about 1.14 lbs per week, biased toward lean tissue rather than fat for a 260 lb man. If the scale moves faster than 0.75% of body weight per week, drop 100 cal or step back to a smaller surplus level.
How should I distribute 222g of protein across the day for muscle protein synthesis?
Research on muscle protein synthesis (MPS) shows a leucine threshold of roughly 2.5-3g per meal, which corresponds to about 25-40g of high-quality protein. For 222g total, 7 meals of 30g each fully saturates MPS at each feeding. Spacing protein feedings 3-5 hours apart keeps synthesis elevated through the day. A pre-sleep dose of 30-40g casein or Greek yogurt further extends overnight synthesis by 20-30%, which is especially valuable during a bulk when recovery drives muscle gain.
Can I swap carbs for fat or vice versa within my 4382 calorie target?
Yes, within limits. Keep protein fixed at 222g and swap carbs and fat based on preference and training. Each gram of fat is 9 cal, each gram of carbs is 4 cal, so 10g of fat swaps for about 23g of carbs. The floor is fat not dropping below 20% of total calories (97g) to protect hormones, and carbs staying above 50g for brain and glycogen function. Within those bounds, a higher-fat day and a higher-carb day both work, as long as protein is hit and total calories land at 4382.
Should I drink my calories or eat them at 260 lbs?
Liquid calories are the bulking shortcut when appetite caps out. A 600 cal mass gainer shake or a 700 cal oats-and-peanut-butter smoothie can close the gap on a 4382 cal target when solid meals become a chore. Drink them between meals, not with them. Keep the shake heavy on protein (30g+) and real carb sources (oats, rice milk) rather than sugar.
How were the macros calculated for a 260 lb male?
The calculation uses the Katch-McArdle BMR formula. A 260 lb man with an estimated 82% lean mass (213 lbs lean) has a BMR of 2459 calories. Multiplied by 1.55 for moderately active activity (Moderate exercise 3-5 days per week), the TDEE is 3811 calories per day. For bulking at the Aggressive (15%) level, the surplus brings the target to 4382 calories.
When to Recalculate These Macros
Not gaining weight after 2 consistent weeks
Add 100-150 cal/day from carbs. Your TDEE may be higher than the 1.55x estimate. Confirm you are tracking consistently before increasing further.
Gaining more than 1 lb per week
Reduce by 100-150 cal/day. Muscle growth rate is limited by biology. Excess surplus above that ceiling goes to fat. Target 0.25-0.5 lbs per week for a lean bulk.
Gained 10 or more lbs from this starting weight
Recalculate at your new weight. Higher mass means higher TDEE, so the same surplus percentage shrinks over time without adjustments.
Other Weights and Goals
Same Weight and Activity, Different Surplus Level
Aggressive (15%) (current)
260 lbs, male, bulking
Lean Gain (5%)
260 lbs, male, bulking
Normal (10%)
260 lbs, male, bulking
Same Weight and Goal, Different Activity Levels
Sedentary
260 lbs, male, bulking
Lightly Active
260 lbs, male, bulking
Moderately Active
260 lbs, male, bulking
Very Active
260 lbs, male, bulking
Extra Active
260 lbs, male, bulking
References
Primary sources behind the protein, fat, and calorie targets on this page. Reviewed by Andrew Menechian, Head of Fitness, FitCommit.
- Phillips SM, Van Loon LJ. Dietary protein for athletes: from requirements to optimum adaptation. J Sports Sci. 2011.Protein targets for lean mass retention during cuts (2.3-2.6g/kg LBM).
- Helms ER, Aragon AA, Fitschen PJ. Evidence-based recommendations for natural bodybuilding contest preparation: nutrition and supplementation. J Int Soc Sports Nutr. 2014.Cutting deficits, protein intake, and fat minimums for hormone protection.
- Aragon AA, et al. International Society of Sports Nutrition position stand: diets and body composition. J Int Soc Sports Nutr. 2017.ISSN position on macro distribution for body-composition goals.
- Morton RW, et al. A systematic review, meta-analysis and meta-regression of the effect of protein supplementation on resistance training-induced gains in muscle mass and strength in healthy adults. Br J Sports Med. 2018.Evidence ceiling on protein intake for muscle gain (~1.6g/kg body weight).
- National Institutes of Health, Office of Dietary Supplements. Protein and Amino Acids (Dietary Reference Intakes).Baseline RDAs for protein, carbohydrate, and fat across adult populations.
Get Your Exact Macros with FitCommit
These numbers use average body fat estimates. FitCommit's AI body scan measures your actual lean mass from your phone camera.
Precise lean mass = precise TDEE = macros that actually match your body, not an average.
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