Skip to content

★★★★★ 1,000,000+ Happy Customers

Free Shipping On Orders $99+

Take the quizLink to /en-de/pages/supplements-quiz

Your cart is empty

Continue shopping or browse the categories below to add items to your cart.

How to Drink More Calories to Achieve your Weight Gain Goal

How to Drink More Calories to Achieve your Weight Gain Goal

In theory, bulking seems like it would be incredibly easy and – more importantly – lots of fun. The reality, though, is that eating all those extra calories that you need to gain weight can be an overwhelming, time-consuming and expensive venture.

 

Just to put this into perspective, consider this:

 

An average-sized guy might need to eat close to 3000 calories each day to gain any noticeable weight. That averages out to about 95oz of chicken breast each day.

 

The solution, then, is to drink your calories. But how?

 

Know Your Numbers

 

Whether you're going to be eating or drinking your calories to achieve your weight gain goal, you need to exactly how much you're supposed to be eating every day. And for that, you'll need to do some math. Sorry.

 

Weight gainer protein shake next to a tape measure, a plastic spoon, two chocolate bars, and a scoop of protein powder

 

First, you need to calculate you Basal Metabolic Rate – the amount of calories that you spend just being alive.

 

To do that, use whichever formula is appropriate for you:

Women: BMR = 655 + (4.35 x weight in pounds) + (4.7 x height in inches) - (4.7 x age in years)

Men: BMR = 66 + (6.23 x weight in pounds) + (12.7 x height in inches) - (6.8 x age in years)

 

But, you don't sit around all day doing nothing. And everything that you do burns calories. So, we need to account for that.

 

This number is known as the Total Daily Energy Expenditure and is calculated by multiplying your BMR by one of the following activity factors:

 

Sedentary (little or no exercise): 1.2

Lightly active (light exercise/sports 1-3 days/week): 1.375

Moderately active (moderate exercise/sports 3-5 days/week): 1.55

Very active (hard exercise/sports 6-7 days a week): 1.725

Extra active (very hard exercise/sports & physical job or 2x training): 1.9

 

The resulting number is the amount of calories that you need to eat every day just to maintain your current weight. Which isn't what you want.

 

So, take your TDEE and add 10 percent. That's the amount of calories you need to eat every day to gain weight.

 

Milking It

 

Now that you know your caloric needs, the next step is actually eating that much. And, as mentioned, that can be a real challenge.

 

Because liquids are, well... liquid, it's much easier to drink high-calorie beverages than it is to eat the same amount of fuel.

 

Milk – whether from cows or coconuts – is a great way to easily add calories to your regular routine. That same drink can also be bulked up with the use of nut butters and other additives.

 

While any protein powder is also an easy way to add nutrition and calories to your liquid snack, it's important to choose wisely.

 

Naked Mass product image with a man putting a scoop of Naked Mass into a Naked Nutrition shaker bottle

 

A clean mass gainer, like Naked Mass, is exactly what you need. Rather than just one source of protein, Naked Mass uses both fast-acting whey and slow casein to give you a steady stream of protein over several hours.

 

Plus, Naked Mass contains quality carbs that will help you gain weight while also keeping your energy levels up throughout the day.

Related Articles

The Ultimate Travel Workout Guide: How to Stay Fit and Keep Your Routine While Traveling

Travel can disrupt even the most consistent fitness routines. That’s usually when people fall into the all-or-nothing trap and decide it’s easier to “just start again when I get home.” Everyone’s been there. I’ve certainly been there. But staying fit while traveling doesn’t have to mean working out like you do at home, and it doesn’t have to mean a...

Link to theThe Ultimate Travel Workout Guide: How to Stay Fit and Keep Your Routine While Travelingarticle

10 Resistance Band Exercises to Build Strength Anywhere, Anytime

Resistance bands are one of the simplest tools you can add to your training, yet they’re also among the most effective.  They create constant tension on the muscles, they’re gentle on the joints, and they fit in a backpack or desk drawer. Whether you’re working out at home, traveling, or leveling up your gym routine, bands make it easy to...

Link to the10 Resistance Band Exercises to Build Strength Anywhere, Anytimearticle

How Heel-Elevated Squats Help You Train Better, Build More Muscle, and Move With Better Form

For many people, squatting deeply or maintaining good form can feel uncomfortable, unstable, or harder than it should be. Sometimes the issue is ankle mobility, sometimes it’s balance, and sometimes it’s just the way your body is built. Heel-elevated squats offer a potential solution. By raising your heels a small amount, using plates, a wedge, or lifting shoes, you instantly...

Link to theHow Heel-Elevated Squats Help You Train Better, Build More Muscle, and Move With Better Formarticle

Banded Squats Explained: How Different Resistance Styles Transform Your Squat

The squat is one of the best exercises we have for building strength, power, and lower-body muscle. But that doesn’t mean it has to stay the same every time you train.  A resistance band can completely change how a squat feels and what it does for your body. By adjusting how the band is attached, you can shift the resistance...

Link to theBanded Squats Explained: How Different Resistance Styles Transform Your Squatarticle