Estimates the energy your body burns at complete rest over a day, using the Mifflin-St Jeor equation, together with the daily total once activity is taken into account.
Your basal metabolic rate is the energy you burn doing absolutely nothing: breathing, pumping blood, holding your temperature, running your organs. Spend the whole day in bed and you still spend this much.
Here is weight in kilograms, height in centimetres and age. This is the Mifflin-St Jeor equation, the one dietitians' associations now recommend.
A 30-year-old man, 170 cm, 65 kg.
Over 1500 kilocalories just to lie there. The daily total comes from multiplying by an activity factor.
Burning a kilogram of body fat takes a deficit of roughly 7200 kcal.
At 500 kcal a day, that is days: a fortnight per kilogram. This one calculation is enough to show why "lose 5 kg this month" is not a serious plan.
This is an estimate. Two people of identical build can differ by 10% either way.
The formula never looks at muscle. Muscle burns more energy than fat does, so a muscular person tends to run above the prediction and someone carrying more fat below it.