The general perception is that female athletes involved in aesthetic or weight dependent sports, restrict caloric intake and are thereby not taking in enough calories for the energy they expend. Therefore the purpose of this study was to determine the energy balance (energy intake minus total energy expenditure), occurrence of restrictive eating, and knowledge of the female triad in 23 University of Calgary students (age (20.4 ± 3.0 yr.); weight (59.3 ± 6.6 kg.); height (166.6 ± 5.1 cm.)) enrolled in the Program of Dance over two university semesters. The tools used in this study were the Eating Disorder Inventory-2 (EDI-2) survey, the EDI-2 Symptom Checklist (SC), the Athlete Triad Survey, the Health Status Survey, the 7-day activity analysis, the 3-day nutritional analysis and several anthropometrics. Distribution of calories revealed 14% protein, 61% carbohydrates, and 26% fats, with a daily caloric intake of 1697 ± 492 kcal (819–2814) during the first semester, and 16% protein, 57% carbohydrates, and 28% fats, with a daily caloric intake of 1713 ± 505 (516–2394) during the second semester. Self-reported activity records revealed a total energy expenditure of 3093 ± 578 kcal (2149–4477) during the first semester, and 3156 ± 513 kcal (2187–4336) during the second semester, resulting in a negative energy balance both semesters (−1415 ± 801 kcal; −1463 ± 838 kcal), respectively. In the group 22% reported previous stress fractures, 41% experienced menstrual disturbances, and 22% had practiced some form of restrictive eating at one point in their lifetime. The highest mean scores for EDI-2 were drive for thinness (7.2, 61.9%ile; 6.7, 58.7%ile), perfectionism (6.5, 58.3%ile; 5.9, 55.4%ile), and body dissatisfaction (11.9, 57.5%ile; 12.6, 59.5%ile) for both semesters, respectively. Funding Source: University Research Development Grant.