Question about calories
royalgigi80
Posts: 10 Member
When I workout, the calorie tracker adds calories to my total for the day. Should I try to eat my original goal calories (before the workout) or do I need to eat what the program suggests? Will it effect weight loss either way? Thanks!
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You'd be wise not to eat ALL of those calories added (after exercise) as they can be overestimated. If you're burning calories though, you can and should typically eat some of them back.
EX: You're allotted 1400 calories per day to lose 1 pound per week and you burn 300 exercising.
This is 1700 calories you can consume that day (in theory) and still be on track to lose a pound that week. To make up for overestimation of exercise calories though, the consensus around these forums is to usually only eat back about half of your exercise calories.
Half of 300 is 150 so you'd be safe to eat 1550 calories that day. I know I may have oversimplified this process but I didn't want to miss any steps. Be sure that you're accurately logging what you eat so that you're not underestimating those calories as well.
Hope this helps.0 -
It's up to you. If i'm hungry I do. But MFP overestimates calories burned. So I only eat back 25-50% of what they give me for my exercise.0
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If you are using MFP as designed then you eat exercise calories back. MFP doesn't assume any exercise, that way people who can't exercise will still lose weight also.
BUT - keep in mind that calorie burns are estimates. Many MFP users just eat back a portion (50-75%).
When you say tracker (?) what brand, what are the settings? I have a FitBit One and have negative adjustments enabled, it will take calories away if I don't live up to my activity level. A FitBit is pretty good for step based workouts. Find the group (here on MFP) for your specific tracker to get a more accurate idea.
http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/group/1290-fitbit-users0 -
The calorie tracker I use is just the MFP one for now but the fitbit does sound like a more accurate option. Thanks for the great feedback!0
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_incogNEATo_ wrote: »You'd be wise not to eat ALL of those calories added (after exercise) as they can be overestimated. If you're burning calories though, you can and should typically eat some of them back.
EX: You're allotted 1400 calories per day to lose 1 pound per week and you burn 300 exercising.
This is 1700 calories you can consume that day (in theory) and still be on track to lose a pound that week. To make up for overestimation of exercise calories though, the consensus around these forums is to usually only eat back about half of your exercise calories.
Half of 300 is 150 so you'd be safe to eat 1550 calories that day. I know I may have oversimplified this process but I didn't want to miss any steps. Be sure that you're accurately logging what you eat so that you're not underestimating those calories as well.
Hope this helps.
Wonderful--yes very helpful. Thanks!
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If you are using MFP as designed then you eat exercise calories back. MFP doesn't assume any exercise, that way people who can't exercise will still lose weight also.
BUT - keep in mind that calorie burns are estimates. Many MFP users just eat back a portion (50-75%).
When you say tracker (?) what brand, what are the settings? I have a FitBit One and have negative adjustments enabled, it will take calories away if I don't live up to my activity level. A FitBit is pretty good for step based workouts. Find the group (here on MFP) for your specific tracker to get a more accurate idea.
http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/group/1290-fitbit-users
The calorie tracker I use is just the MFP one for now but the fitbit does sound like a more accurate option. Thanks for the great feedback!
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royalgigi80 wrote: »
It sounds too easy, right? Some days I eat every single one of my exercise calories back because I am hungry. Some days I barely touch them. It all works out over time.0 -
If you get a tracker, make sure it's one with a heart rate monitor. That will be the most accurate you can get. Still won't be perfect, but it's closer than anything else I've found.0
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royalgigi80 wrote: »
It sounds too easy, right? Some days I eat every single one of my exercise calories back because I am hungry. Some days I barely touch them. It all works out over time.
Encouraging to hear that it works out over time--I don't want to obsess about every little calorie but definitely want to see progress! Thanks!
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bump0
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royalgigi80 wrote: »When I workout, the calorie tracker adds calories to my total for the day. Should I try to eat my original goal calories (before the workout) or do I need to eat what the program suggests?
If (and only if) you enable negative calorie adjustments in your diary settings, eating back your adjustments means you're eating TDEE minus deficit.
You can learn more in the Fitbit Users group: http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/group/1290-fitbit-users0
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