How to Use Hybrid Athlete Macro Split
The Hybrid Athlete Macro Split calculates daily protein, carbohydrate, and fat targets adjusted for athletes who train both endurance and strength in the same week. Enter your total weekly training load and the ratio of endurance to strength sessions; the tool returns macros that shift carbohydrate targets with your session balance while holding protein as a floor regardless of session type.
What It Does
Use the calculator with intent
The Hybrid Athlete Macro Split calculates daily protein, carbohydrate, and fat targets adjusted for athletes who train both endurance and strength in the same week. Enter your total weekly training load and the ratio of endurance to strength sessions; the tool returns macros that shift carbohydrate targets with your session balance while holding protein as a floor regardless of session type.
Athletes, coaches, and AI agents who need a quick, reproducible answer with named limitations rather than a generic estimate.
Interpreting Results
The hero number is your daily calorie or primary macro target adjusted for hybrid demands. The secondary stats typically break out protein, carb, and fat targets separately. For hybrid athletes, carbohydrate is the variable that changes most between heavy-endurance and heavy-strength weeks — focus there first, and keep protein constant as a floor regardless of session type.
Input Steps
Field by field
- 1
Enter inputs
Enter your values using the sliders and steppers. Defaults represent a reasonable midpoint.
- 2
Read outputs
Read the hero number first. Secondary stats provide context and ranges.
- 3
Follow
Follow the methodology link for formulas, coefficients, and citations.
- 4
Adjust parameters
Adjust each input one at a time to see how the hero number responds.
Run the split with your current training ratio, then swap the endurance-to-strength ratio to the opposite extreme — if carbohydrate targets shift by more than 50 g/day, your actual weekly training balance is the main driver of your macros.
Common Scenarios
Use realistic starting points
FAQ
Questions people ask next
The short answers readers usually want after the first pass.