Will eating over maintenance once a week cause weight gain?

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Replies

  • misnomer1
    misnomer1 Posts: 646 Member
    misnomer1 wrote: »
    If you work out 3-4 times a week with 10000 steps on rest days, then you're not sedentary. 1500 calories isn't maintenance for your height and weight, you would still be in a deficit. So an extra 500 calories once a week only averages out to an additional 71 calories every day, which most likely would STILL keep you in deficit. No, you are not going to gain weight on that.

    this is woo. there are a lot of possible combinations in MFP settings. one needs to understand how it works and make sure that all activities - dedicated cardio, daily life steps, lifting etc. are counted EXACTLY ONCE. there are multiple ways to achieve these settings.

    eg. i average 2500-5000 steps daily without intentional cardio. so i keep my activity setting at 'sedentary'. Any steps more than 5000, I manually log them as cardio to get the calorie offset. Similarly I manually log weight training to get an offset of a few calories. i have no apps or gear synced with MFP.
    lorrpb wrote: »
    Why do you consider yourself sedentary? 10000 steps a day would be active.

    I only do 10 000 steps on my rest days (3x a week). On the days that I work out, I do an hour of cardio combined with weight lifting, but otherwise average closer to 2000-3000 steps outside of the gym.

    I'm really not sure you understand what "sedentary" means, then. It has nothing to do with the amount of steps you take every day, but the total amount of physical activity you do weekly. You are telling us that you work out several times a week, and do 10000 steps on days you don't work out. That's nowhere near sedentary.
    Sedentary refers to your normal daily work/life routine. Intentional walking and exercise are logged in addition. Sedentary with 2000-3000 steps is appropriate for OP. Log the exercise and extra walking on rest days and eat back half the exercise cals. This is basic MFP process.

    what is suggested here ^^ is most simple and sound imo, but there are other ways to set up MFP as well.

    Right but OP said she doesn't log her activity and eat calories back so she should not be set at sedentary.

    Rather than setting activity levels higher and eventually missing activities sooner or later and messing all these calculations up, OP should tighten her logging.
  • ritzvin
    ritzvin Posts: 2,860 Member
    edited August 2017
    I'm 5'4, 115 pounds and I'd consider myself sedentary. I eat 1500 calories per day, but I work out 3-4x a week and average 10 000 steps on my rest days. If I eat 2000 calories once a week, would this lead to weight gain?

    To gain a pound = ~3500 extra calories above maintenance.
    So if you ate exactly maintenance (with maintenance being 1500 calories) the rest of the week, and 500 over on one day, you would gain ~1 lb every 7 weeks.

    With workouts, at 1500 cal/day: the rest of your week is probably at least somewhat below maintenance, so weight gain, if any, should be less than that.

    (edit: typo)
  • ritzvin
    ritzvin Posts: 2,860 Member
    edited August 2017
    And as others have said, if you are averaging 10000+ steps on your not-doing-anything-extra days (ie your normal everyday life/job), then sedentary is probably too low a setting (as in 'teacher' rather than 'desk job' per the quick MFP descriptions).

    ETA: (unless those steps come about because you intentionally take a walk on your rest days to get some exercise activity in, in which case you can optionally keep the sedentary setting and log the walk as exercise).
  • sijomial
    sijomial Posts: 19,809 Member
    sijomial wrote: »
    Why do you consider yourself sedentary? 10000 steps a day would be active.

    I only do 10 000 steps on my rest days (3x a week). On the days that I work out, I do an hour of cardio combined with weight lifting, but otherwise average closer to 2000-3000 steps outside of the gym.

    You do seem to be estimating low on everything.
    That's c. average of 6,000 steps a day when averaged out.
    Are you accounting for your exercise in any way? (Either TDEE or MFP methods.)

    No, just eating maintenance calories set as sedentary. I don't eat any exercise calories back which backfired on me since I've developed a binge eating problem that happens a few times a month. I will definitely up my daily calorie intake and recalculate my tdee.

    If you set your goal using a TDEE calculator your exercise is included - that's part of the reason why people shouldn't, or at least be cautious about, mixing the two different methods.

    Hope it works out OK for you, try not to react if you get fluctuations that seem out of step with your calorie increase. Best of luck.
  • lorrpb
    lorrpb Posts: 11,463 Member
    ritzvin wrote: »
    I'm 5'4, 115 pounds and I'd consider myself sedentary. I eat 1500 calories per day, but I work out 3-4x a week and average 10 000 steps on my rest days. If I eat 2000 calories once a week, would this lead to weight gain?

    To gain a pound = ~3500 extra calories above maintenance.
    So if you ate exactly maintenance (with maintenance being 1500 calories) the rest of the week, and 500 over on one day, you would gain ~1 lb every 7 weeks.

    With workouts, at 1500 cal/day: the rest of your week is probably at least somewhat below maintenance, so weight gain, if any, should be less than that.

    (edit: typo)

    This is true (bold). That might not sound bad, but it would be 7 pounds gained in a year. That might not sound bad, but it adds up over the years. I managed to become 150 pounds overweight, at the rate of 5-10 lbs gained per year. (Fortunately, it's all gone now, and I've been maintaining for nearly a year. )
  • Maxxitt
    Maxxitt Posts: 1,281 Member
    If you consistently "eat over maintenance" you will gain weight, assuming that your maintenance # is correct. The amount of weight you will gain over what period of time depends on how much your calories-in exceeded your calories-out. This process is why what I call "bracket creep" happens to some of us - those 3-5 pounds a year that add up over time.
  • ccruz985
    ccruz985 Posts: 646 Member
    No. You're working out consistently, it's once a week. You're good.