Introduction
Cholesterol is an important nutrient — your body uses it to build hormones, make vitamin D, and form healthy cell membranes. But too much dietary cholesterol, especially when combined with high saturated fat intake, can raise LDL (“bad”) cholesterol in the bloodstream and increase long-term cardiovascular risk.
To help support heart health while keeping things simple, Hoot gives you a clear, evidence-aligned daily cholesterol limit.
1. The Cholesterol Formula
Hoot sets a straightforward default:
Daily Cholesterol Limit:
300 mg/day
This target aligns with widely used clinical guidelines designed to support cardiovascular health for most adults.
2. Why We Use 300 mg
For decades, major health organizations recommended keeping dietary cholesterol below 300 mg/day.
While newer guidelines place more emphasis on saturated fat, the scientific consensus remains:
Many people still consume excess cholesterol
High dietary cholesterol combined with high saturated fat can significantly raise LDL
People with existing heart disease or elevated cholesterol may benefit from even lower intake
Everyday intake in the U.S. averages:
~337 mg/day for men
~217 mg/day for women
Hoot’s 300 mg limit helps users stay within a reasonable, heart-healthy range without imposing a strict or overly restrictive cap.
3. Where Dietary Cholesterol Comes From
Cholesterol is found only in animal-based foods, including:
Eggs
Meat and poultry
Shellfish
Dairy products (especially full-fat)
Organ meats (very high)
Butter and cream
Plant-based foods contain zero cholesterol, making legumes, nuts, seeds, tofu, and whole grains helpful options for lowering daily intake.
4. Can You Adjust Your Cholesterol Goal?
Yes — you can edit the daily cholesterol limit anytime by adjusting the final number directly.
To update it:
Go to:
Settings → Daily Plan → Cholesterol
Then enter your preferred milligram target.
You may want to:
Lower the limit (e.g., 150–200 mg)
for high LDL, cardiovascular risk, family history, or clinician recommendations.Use a higher or more flexible limit
if advised by a healthcare provider or based on dietary preferences.
Hoot does not automatically recalculate your cholesterol limit if your calories change — any adjustments must be entered manually.
5. How Cholesterol Fits Into Your Daily Plan
Cholesterol isn’t a macro and doesn’t contribute calories, but it plays an important role in heart health. That’s why Hoot tracks it separately from fat and saturated fat.
Pairing your cholesterol limit with:
Moderate saturated fat intake, and
Higher unsaturated fats (olive oil, nuts, fatty fish)
helps support better long-term heart health.
References
Cleveland Clinic — Daily Cholesterol Guidelines:
https://health.clevelandclinic.org/how-much-cholesterol-per-day
FDA — Daily Value Nutrition Label Standards (Cholesterol):
https://www.fda.gov/food/nutrition-facts-label/daily-value-nutrition-and-supplement-facts-labels
OpenHeart — Understanding Dietary Cholesterol:
https://openheart.net/cholesterol/