How To Track Macros As A Beginner
- Jun 4
- 3 min read
If you’ve ever opened MyFitnessPal and immediately felt overwhelmed… you’re not alone.
Tracking macros can seem complicated at first. Numbers everywhere, weighing food, scanning barcodes and trying to figure out what on earth protein, carbs and fats actually mean.
But once you understand the basics, it becomes one of the most powerful tools for changing your physique, improving your relationship with food and finally understanding what your body needs.
So let’s simplify it.
What Are Macros?
“Macros” is short for macronutrients.
These are the 3 nutrients your body needs in large amounts:
Protein
Carbohydrates
Fats
Each one plays a different role in your body.
Protein
Protein helps support muscle growth, recovery, strength and keeping you fuller for longer.
Sources include:
Chicken
Greek yoghurt
Eggs
Protein yoghurt
Fish
Protein powder
Lean meats
Carbohydrates
Carbs are your body’s main source of energy.
They help fuel your workouts, daily movement and brain function.
Sources include:
Rice
Potatoes
Pasta
Fruit
Oats
Bread
Cereals
Fats
Fats are essential for hormones, health and overall wellbeing.
Sources include:
Avocado
Nuts
Nut butter
Olive oil
Salmon
Dark chocolate
Do You Need To Track Macros?
Not necessarily.
You can absolutely make progress without tracking.
But for beginners who:
feel confused around nutrition
constantly “eat healthy” but see no progress
under eat during the week then overeat on weekends
want to build muscle or lose body fat more efficiently
…tracking macros can be incredibly helpful.
It gives you awareness, structure and education around food instead of relying on guesswork.
Best Apps For Tracking Macros
The most popular apps are:
MyFitnessPal
Nutracheck
Cronometer
For most beginners, MyFitnessPal or Nutracheck are the easiest to use.
You simply:
Set your calorie and macro targets
Search or scan foods
Log what you eat throughout the day
That’s it.
How To Track Macros Correctly
1. Start Simple
You do NOT need to track perfectly from day one.
Your first goal is simply learning consistency.
Even tracking 80–90% accurately is far better than not tracking at all.
2. Weigh Your Food
Using a food scale helps massively when learning portion sizes.
Especially for:
rice
cereal
peanut butter
oils
pasta
Most beginners underestimate how much they’re actually eating.
3. Prioritise Protein
If you focus on one thing first, make it protein.
Protein helps:
muscle growth
recovery
satiety
body composition
A good starting point for most women is around 100–140g per day depending on body weight and goals.
4. Don’t Panic About Going Over
One meal won’t ruin your progress.
Neither will one higher calorie day.
Consistency over time matters far more than perfection.
The goal isn’t to become obsessed with numbers.
The goal is education and awareness.
Common Beginner Mistakes
Trying To Be Perfect
Tracking shouldn’t take over your life. Missing a few grams here and there genuinely does not matter.
Only Tracking Monday–Friday
This is a huge one.
Most people are actually fairly consistent during the week.
The weekends are usually where progress stalls.
Avoiding Social Events
Macros should support your life — not control it.
You can still eat out, enjoy meals with friends and have flexibility whilst making progress.
Final Thoughts
Macro tracking isn’t about restriction.
It’s about understanding.
When done properly, it teaches you:
portion sizes
food awareness
consistency
balance
how to fuel your body properly
And over time, many people find they rely on tracking less because they naturally build better habits and
awareness around food.
Like any skill, it feels awkward at first.
But the more you practise it, the easier it becomes.
And eventually, what once felt confusing becomes second nature.
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