What Is Thermic Effect of Food? Simply Explained
The Thermic Effect of Food (TEF), also known as diet-induced thermogenesis, refers to the increase in metabolic rate above basal levels that occurs after a meal, representing the energy cost of processing ingested food.
On This Page
Definition
Thermic Effect of Food (TEF)
The Thermic Effect of Food (TEF), also known as diet-induced thermogenesis, refers to the increase in metabolic rate above basal levels that occurs after a meal, representing the energy cost of processing ingested food.
Why it matters
Understanding TEF is crucial for weight management because it contributes to your total daily energy expenditure (TDEE). By influencing TEF through strategic dietary choices, particularly those rich in lean protein, individuals can slightly increase their caloric burn, potentially aiding in creating a larger caloric deficit necessary for weight loss or maintaining a healthy weight.
How it works
Eating triggers energy-intensive processes: mechanical breakdown in the mouth and stomach, enzymatic digestion in the gut, active transport of nutrients across the intestinal wall, and metabolism and storage by various organs. TEF varies by macronutrient. Protein is highest at 20-30% of its caloric value. Carbohydrates sit at 5-10%. Fat is lowest, 0-3%. A mixed diet averages around 10% of total intake. **Calculation:** TEF is computed as a percentage of total calories. `TEF = (Total Calories Consumed) × (TEF Percentage Factor)`. The factor varies with the macronutrient composition of the food.
Example
Calculating TEF for a High-Protein Meal
Meal's Total Calories
600 calories
Calories from Protein (50g)
200 calories
Calories from Carbohydrates (60g)
240 calories
Calories from Fat (18g)
160 calories
Using typical TEF percentages (25% for protein, 7.5% for carbohydrates, 2% for fat): Protein TEF = 200 * 0.25 = 50 calories. Carbohydrate TEF = 240 * 0.075 = 18 calories. Fat TEF = 160 * 0.02 = 3.2 calories. The total TEF for this 600-calorie meal is 50 + 18 + 3.2 = 71.2 calories, illustrating how macronutrient composition significantly influences the energy expended during digestion.
Key Takeaways
TEF is the energy cost associated with digesting and processing food, contributing a small but significant portion to your total daily calorie burn.
Protein has the highest thermic effect among macronutrients, requiring more energy for its digestion and metabolism than carbohydrates or fats.
Strategically incorporating adequate lean protein into your diet can subtly enhance your TEF, supporting overall energy expenditure and weight management goals.
Related Terms
Try These Tools
Run the numbers next
FAQ
Questions people ask next
The short answers readers usually want after the first pass.
Sources & References
- Diet induced thermogenesis — National Library of Medicine (PubMed) - Westerterp, K. R.
- The role of protein in weight loss and maintenance — National Library of Medicine (PubMed) - Paddon-Jones D, Westman E, et al.
Related Content
Keep the topic connected
How to Use TDEE Calculator
Estimate your daily calorie needs with our TDEE Calculator guide. Learn how to accurately calculate Total Daily Energy Expenditure to achieve weight loss, maintenance, or gain goals effectively.
What Is TDEE? Total Daily Energy Expenditure Explained
TDEE is the total calories your body burns in 24 hours — BMR + activity + digestion. Learn its 4 components, how to calculate it, and why it's the foundation of every diet.
What Is BMR? Simply Explained
Understand BMR (Basal Metabolic Rate), the minimum calories your body needs at rest. Learn how it impacts weight loss, how to calculate it, and why it's crucial for setting effective calorie goals.