Matar paneer is one of the most popular North Indian curries. At 250 calories per bowl at home, it is moderate. At a restaurant: 350-400 calories because of extra cream, butter, and oil. The difference between home and restaurant matar paneer is not taste. It is 100-150 invisible calories of fat.
- Full calorie breakdown
- How matar paneer compares to roti
- Matar Paneer vs palak paneer
- Is matar paneer good for weight loss?
- How matar paneer fits in your daily calories
- Best time to eat matar paneer
- Who should (and shouldn't) eat matar paneer regularly
- How to reduce calories when eating matar paneer
- Frequently asked questions
This is the complete calorie breakdown for matar paneer. Every variant, every preparation method, every portion size that matters in an Indian kitchen. No generic database numbers. Real Indian servings, honestly measured.
Protein: 12g · Carbs: 14g · Fat: 17g · Fibre: 3g
That’s roughly 3.5x a homemade roti (72 cal)
Full calorie breakdown
The calorie count for matar paneer varies significantly depending on size, stuffing, and preparation method. Here’s every variant you’ll encounter, from the lightest to the heaviest.
| Variant | Serving | Calories | Protein |
|---|---|---|---|
| Matar paneer (home) | 200g | 230-260 | 12g |
| Matar paneer (restaurant) | 200g | 350-400 | 12g |
| Matar paneer (more peas, less paneer) | 200g | 170-200 | 8g |
| Matar paneer + 2 rotis | 200g+60g | 380-410 | 16g |
| Matar paneer + naan | 200g+90g | 560-600 | 17g |
| Palak paneer (comparison) | 200g | 240 | 10g |
| Paneer tikka (comparison) | 150g | 260 | 18g |
| Chana masala (comparison) | 200g | 210 | 9g |
The gap between Matar paneer (more peas, less paneer) (170 cal) and Matar paneer + naan (560 cal) is significant. Same food category, very different calorie cost. What you choose and how it’s prepared matters more than most people realise.
How matar paneer compares to roti
One matar paneer serving (250 calories) is equivalent to about 3.5 homemade rotis (72 cal each). That means a single serving replaces what would be 4 rotis on your plate. If you eat two servings, you’ve consumed the calorie equivalent of 8 rotis in one sitting.
This doesn’t make matar paneer ‘bad.’ It makes it calorie-dense, which means you need to account for it. If matar paneer is lunch, keep dinner lighter. If it’s a daily habit, the calories compound fast.
Matar Paneer vs palak paneer
Matar Paneer (250 cal) and palak paneer (240 cal) are close enough in calories that the choice should be about taste and nutrition profile, not calorie counting. The difference of 10 calories per serving is negligible in practical terms.
Matar paneer (250 cal) and palak paneer (240 cal) are almost identical in calories. Palak paneer has more iron from spinach. Matar paneer has more fibre from peas. Choose based on taste. The calorie difference is negligible.
Is matar paneer good for weight loss?
Matar Paneer at 250 calories is neither particularly light nor particularly heavy. It’s a moderate-calorie Indian food that fits comfortably in most diet plans when portion-controlled.
On a 1,500-calorie diet, one serving of matar paneer takes up about 17% of your daily budget. That leaves room for two other proper meals and a snack or two. Not restrictive at all.
The 12g protein per serving is a bonus. Protein helps with satiety, meaning you’re less likely to reach for snacks an hour after eating. For a carb-heavy Indian food, that’s a better protein showing than most.
Matar Paneer at 250 calories per serving is a solid choice for weight loss when portion-controlled. Track it, account for it, and it fits in any Indian diet plan.
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How matar paneer fits in your daily calories
Here’s what including matar paneer looks like at different calorie targets:
1200 cal/day (Aggressive weight loss): Easy fit. Only 21% of your budget. Plenty of room for other meals and snacks.
1500 cal/day (Steady weight loss): Easy fit. Only 17% of your budget. Plenty of room for other meals and snacks.
2000 cal/day (Maintenance): Easy fit. Only 12% of your budget. Plenty of room for other meals and snacks.
Best time to eat matar paneer
At 250 calories, matar paneer fits comfortably in any main meal. Breakfast, lunch, or dinner, it does not matter. What matters is what you eat alongside it. Pair with protein, add vegetables, and the meal is balanced regardless of timing.
Who should (and shouldn’t) eat matar paneer regularly
Good choice for: good protein from paneer (12g/bowl), peas add fibre and iron, satisfying and pairs with roti or rice. If any of these apply to you, including matar paneer in your weekly rotation makes nutritional sense beyond just calories.
Be careful if: You are on a strict calorie deficit. The issue with matar paneer is paneer is calorie-dense (265 cal/100g), restaurant versions add cream and butter heavily. This does not mean ‘never eat it.’ It means ‘account for it when you do.’
For most people eating a normal Indian diet, matar paneer is neither something to seek out nor something to avoid. It is a regular food that fits when you know the calorie count and plan accordingly.
How to reduce calories when eating matar paneer
Reduce paneer, increase matar. A paneer-heavy bowl: 300 cal. A matar-heavy bowl with less paneer: 180-200 cal. Peas are 81 cal/100g vs paneer at 265. The ratio matters.
Home > restaurant, always. Home matar paneer: 250 cal. Restaurant: 350-400 cal. The difference is 2-3 tbsp extra oil, butter, and cream the restaurant adds. Cook at home when you can.
Use low-fat paneer if available. Regular paneer: 265 cal/100g. Low-fat paneer: 180-200 cal/100g. Saves 30-50 cal per bowl without changing the taste dramatically.
Pair with roti, not naan. Matar paneer (250 cal) + 2 rotis (144 cal) = 394 cal. Matar paneer + 1 naan (320 cal) = 570 cal. The bread choice matters more than the curry choice.
Frequently asked questions
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Nutritional values based on IFCT (Indian Food Composition Tables) and USDA databases. Values vary with ingredients, size, and preparation. Informational content, not medical or dietary advice.