Can I eat over my 1600 calories and loose weight if my exercise adds more calories for me to eat
ashleyann2020
Posts: 1 Member
My goal is 1600 but today I exercised and got about 300 calories added so bringing it to 1900 if I eat that much will I still be a “deficit” to loose weight?
0
Answers
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It depends on many factors.
What is your height and weight? Do you know what your maintenance calories are? How accurate is your calorie counting and tracking?1 -
The theory is that yes.
In fact it is exactly the way MFP was designed to operate.
Details say: trust but verify.
Size and length of deficit, accuracy of logging, how much you have to lose, what percentage of the total your deficit and exercise correspond to, how close to population averages your body operates at, how well you log and how accurately your exercises were estimated .... all that will affect things more or less
And you will only know based on time and results (actual vs expected)
A single day a bit over or a bit under will have negligible effect.
Multiple in a row different story!
If the numbers come from a tracker and my selected deficit was large I would probably eat them all and evaluate in 3 to 6 weeks
If the exercise was from MFP and higher duration with lower intensity level in nature and my deficit small I might be tempted to not eat back more than half provisionally and again evaluate as per above.
To take it to extremes if deficit 1000 and 300 Cal exercise is 40 minutes Zumba I would eat it all
If deficit was 250 and 300 exercise was two hours walking at 2mph then I would not eat more than half.
During my initial loss I ate all of my Fitbit calories with my only exercise being walking (albeit moderate+ in nature). But I also averaged the results over 365 (and not 1 or 5 or even 35) days5 -
Theoretically - yes.
When you use the set up with MFP - and put in all your stats and choose to lose weight - it calculates your maintenance and then subtracts calories based on what rate of weight loss you entered and gives you that as your goal. When it asks your activity level - it means just your regular daily activity - not intentional exercise. So, then if you DO intentionally exercise and log it - it will add those calories so that your deficit isn't TOO large.
Good place to start is to eat back all of those calories (or at least 50%) and then make any adjustments based on your hunger/energy level and your weight loss data.
I lost ~25lbs when I was actively losing weight and I ate back largely 100% of my workout calories consistently.
This works if you are fairly accurate with your caloric consumption and burn --- but if those things are more/less correct....you should def still see weight loss.0 -
Unlike other sites which use TDEE calculators, MFP uses the NEAT method (Non-Exercise Activity Thermogenesis), and as such this system is designed for exercise calories to be eaten back. However, many consider the burns given by MFP to be inflated for them and only eat a percentage, such as 50%, back. Others are able to lose weight while eating 100% of their exercise calories.
https://support.myfitnesspal.com/hc/en-us/articles/360032625391-How-does-MyFitnessPal-calculate-my-initial-goals-0 -
You probably can, but I wouldn't. Just personal preference: How bad do you want it, how fast do you want it, and is it more than the 300 calorie snack.0
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I turned that feature off.0
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dontlikepeople wrote: »You probably can, but I wouldn't. Just personal preference: How bad do you want it, how fast do you want it, and is it more than the 300 calorie snack.
Re: "How fast do you want it." There's often a cost to fast weight loss. I'm a senior who want to lose fat, not fat+muscle. So for me, It's worth it to figure out what a reasonable estimate of exercise calories is.4 -
dontlikepeople wrote: »You probably can, but I wouldn't. Just personal preference: How bad do you want it, how fast do you want it, and is it more than the 300 calorie snack.
Re: "How fast do you want it." There's often a cost to fast weight loss. I'm a senior who want to lose fat, not fat+muscle. So for me, It's worth it to figure out what a reasonable estimate of exercise calories is.
You'd be surprised how few calories we need to maintain muscle so long as we are staying active, but there is nothing wrong with airing on the side of caution. I just know that I, personally, would not add the calories back in, and have had great results.0 -
dontlikepeople wrote: »dontlikepeople wrote: »You probably can, but I wouldn't. Just personal preference: How bad do you want it, how fast do you want it, and is it more than the 300 calorie snack.
Re: "How fast do you want it." There's often a cost to fast weight loss. I'm a senior who want to lose fat, not fat+muscle. So for me, It's worth it to figure out what a reasonable estimate of exercise calories is.
You'd be surprised how few calories we need to maintain muscle so long as we are staying active, but there is nothing wrong with airing on the side of caution. I just know that I, personally, would not add the calories back in, and have had great results.
That's more dependant on how much fat you have to lose. The closer you are to "lean", the more you have to worry about muscle loss. Despite public opinion, as long as you have plenty of fat to lose, it's true that your body will preferentially use stored fat and spare muscle.2 -
sollyn23l2 wrote: »dontlikepeople wrote: »dontlikepeople wrote: »You probably can, but I wouldn't. Just personal preference: How bad do you want it, how fast do you want it, and is it more than the 300 calorie snack.
Re: "How fast do you want it." There's often a cost to fast weight loss. I'm a senior who want to lose fat, not fat+muscle. So for me, It's worth it to figure out what a reasonable estimate of exercise calories is.
You'd be surprised how few calories we need to maintain muscle so long as we are staying active, but there is nothing wrong with airing on the side of caution. I just know that I, personally, would not add the calories back in, and have had great results.
That's more dependant on how much fat you have to lose. The closer you are to "lean", the more you have to worry about muscle loss. Despite public opinion, as long as you have plenty of fat to lose, it's true that your body will preferentially use stored fat and spare muscle.
I swear to everything, people go on the internet for the sole purpose of arguing.
Yes, the lower your calories the more inactive you are, the more chance you have of losing muscle.
There are very few fitness competitors on this forum. To each their own. If you want to lose slow, go for it! I ate 1600 calories and kept plenty.0
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