Eating your Exercise Calories?

MPD6944
MPD6944 Posts: 75 Member
Do you eat your exercise calories? If so do you still lose weight? I've been sort of eating mine but not all and have not lost weight. Just wondering if I should just stick to my calories or if I should eat all of my exercise calories - which way to go??
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Replies

  • Eoghann
    Eoghann Posts: 130 Member
    So long as you're taking in less calories than you're burning you will lose weight.

    So yes eat back at least some of your exercise calories.
  • MPD6944
    MPD6944 Posts: 75 Member
    So does that mean if I am eating 1200 calories a day I need to burn more than that a day?
  • Eoghann
    Eoghann Posts: 130 Member
    Even if you were completely sedentary you would be burning more than 1,200 calories a day.

    MFP does all the calculations for you, just make sure the calories remaining figure doesn't get to 0.
  • diannethegeek
    diannethegeek Posts: 14,776 Member
    So does that mean if I am eating 1200 calories a day I need to burn more than that a day?

    No. You have to take into account all of the calories your body burns every day just keeping you alive, as well as the calories you burn doing everyday things like brushing your teeth.

    MFP is designed for you to eat back the extra calories you burn through workouts, assuming that your profile is set up accurate and you have an accurate estimate of how much you eat and how much you burn. If you're relying on MFP or gym machine estimates for your calories burned through exercise then you may want to eat 50-75% of those calories.

    http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/818082-exercise-calories-again-wtf
  • TeaBea
    TeaBea Posts: 14,517 Member
    So does that mean if I am eating 1200 calories a day I need to burn more than that a day?

    Your body is using calories 24/7. Your heart, lungs, kidneys, etc. all use calories.....the vast majority of women use more than 1200 calories in a 24 hour period doing nothing (BMR).

    MFP gave you a calorie deficit BEFORE exercise. That way people who can't/won't exercise still lose weight. The trick to eating calories back is to find a good estimate for your workouts....and to not "double-dip" so to speak. Even sedentary people get "extra" credit for some activity.
  • APLAWING
    APLAWING Posts: 36
    I don't eat my excercise cals because I am not sure how accurate the calories burned are to start with! I usually do 35 min cardio on the elliptical 5x a week & the machine says I burn 350-375, MFP says close to 600(which I'm certain is wrong)... So I just log what the machine says because it measures my heart rate. I don't eat them though, just in case it's off.
  • xShreddx
    xShreddx Posts: 127 Member
    Good question and I've wondered the same thing. For the past few days, I've netted about 7-800 calories under target. I hope I'm not "starving" my body so it in turn banks fat. Any further direction would help!
  • hobbeskastiel
    hobbeskastiel Posts: 221 Member
    I never consider my exercise calories as more food I can eat. I consider it more calories I burned. Faster weight loss. If I were fit and didn't need to lose weight then I would eat the extra calories to keep myself at a specific weight. After all, when I reach my goal I have no plans to stop working out.
  • MPD6944
    MPD6944 Posts: 75 Member
    Thanks everyone, I think I am getting it....I work with a trainer for 30 min. 2x a week and a barbell class at the gym 1x a week and also have been doing cardio (treadmill or elliptical - 30 min. 4x a week). You would think with me only eating around 1200 calories a day (ok one day I went up to 1400 calories) the weight would just be falling off of me...but oh no, it still fluctuates up and down and I swear my trainer thinks I am lying about how much I am eating but I am not. So frustrated!
  • RGv2
    RGv2 Posts: 5,789 Member
    I never consider my exercise calories as more food I can eat. I consider it more calories I burned. Faster weight loss. If I were fit and didn't need to lose weight then I would eat the extra calories to keep myself at a specific weight. After all, when I reach my goal I have no plans to stop working out.

    Just looking at your profile, you can get away with not eating back exercise cals due to your weight loss goals.

    That would be pretty horrible advice for those within a much smaller window (less than 100ish) to lose. Those extra calories are needed for nutrition, fuel, etc...

    OP only has 11lbs to go. To say "that's faster weight loss" to someone in that situation can be pretty irresponsible. What you could lose in a week at this point might take the OP 2 months.
  • RGv2
    RGv2 Posts: 5,789 Member
    Thanks everyone, I think I am getting it....I work with a trainer for 30 min. 2x a week and a barbell class at the gym 1x a week and also have been doing cardio (treadmill or elliptical - 30 min. 4x a week). You would think with me only eating around 1200 calories a day (ok one day I went up to 1400 calories) the weight would just be falling off of me...but oh no, it still fluctuates up and down and I swear my trainer thinks I am lying about how much I am eating but I am not. So frustrated!

    I'd recommend opening your diary now.....

    With what you laid out, you should be losing because you're not eating much.......at all at 1200 gross.
  • bluebull123
    bluebull123 Posts: 27 Member
    You may not be eating enough calories with that amount of activity. Try upping it to 1400 calories a day (changing your setting from sedentary to light activity) and see what that does for you.
  • MPD6944
    MPD6944 Posts: 75 Member
    Thanks I will edit my setting to light activity and see what happens :)

    Ok I changed it to light but the calories per day still say 1200 -- anything else??
  • earlnabby
    earlnabby Posts: 8,171 Member
    I'm kind of in between. I coordinate MFP with my Fitbit and I sometimes get extra calories on days where I run more errands or whatever and the Fitbit says I burned more than normal. Those I do not eat back. The days I work out, I do eat back some. I have some flexibility because I am only eating at a deficit to lose 1 lb a week so a few extra calories burned will still fuel my body enough. I let my hunger be my guide as to how many I eat back on those days.
  • lenarashminraj
    lenarashminraj Posts: 53 Member
    MFP may overestimate your calories burned for some activities, best way is to manually enter the 'calorie burn' showed in cardio machine.

    The calories goal MFP gives you in food diary is what you should eat if you dont work out. Once you enter the calorie you burned, it automatically updates the calorie goal, and MFP expects that you will consume it, atleast half of it. Only thing is make sure you wont see the calorie remaining as 'o' or negative numbers. If you're full you dont HAVE to eat, but if you are hungry in the evening, dont starve your body after a good workout.

    i was following a 1200cal meal plan which MFP suggested with an average calorie burn of 400-450cal.. i reduced 10lbs in 5 weeks... but when i stopped my exercise for 1 month i gained back all the weight i burned. what i understood is i was starving my body, so it is easy to gain back the weight i lost.. then i posted a query about in forum and got very good replies from MFP friends. as they suggested i changed my settings and now i follow 1400calorie plan. because of ligament inflamation im not able to exercise as earlier, but still i loose weight and im happy with it. there are some cheat days too:wink:

    Your body needs fuel for metabolism, i will suggest you to change the settings and keep your calorie intake as 1400. :flowerforyou:
  • RGv2
    RGv2 Posts: 5,789 Member
    Thanks I will edit my setting to light activity and see what happens :)

    Ok I changed it to light but the calories per day still say 1200 -- anything else??

    You only have a few lbs left. I'm guessing you have it set at 2lbs per week? If so, that's really aggressive with what you have left. Try changing it to 1 - .5 lbs per week.

    What is your ht and wt?
  • 60sPanda
    60sPanda Posts: 303 Member
    I absolutely eat ALL of my additional exercise calories (swimming, kung fu, any walking over 10,000 steps). One week I experimented by not eating them and gained weight, went back to eating them all and lost. But everyone is slightly different, so you just need to experiment.

    I figured out that I was eating an average of 1800 calories a day (including exercise calories earnt) - I am female, 5ft 5, started at 184 pounds and finished at 140 pounds.
  • I dont eat them back, I am not hungry and wont eat if that is the case. I know. I could swallow a tbs of peanut butter or something but still wont do it. Eating when not hungry was a big part of me gaining weight in the first place and something I want to leave behind.

    My weight loss is constant, I sleep well, I have energy and meet my macro
  • MPD6944
    MPD6944 Posts: 75 Member
    Ok, I changed it to 1 lb. a week and it now has given me 1270 calories per day, I might try that as long as I'm working out as hard as I have been lately.


    Ht. 5'2", Wt. 146
  • JoeDenison
    JoeDenison Posts: 18 Member
    Do you eat your exercise calories? If so do you still lose weight? I've been sort of eating mine but not all and have not lost weight. Just wondering if I should just stick to my calories or if I should eat all of my exercise calories - which way to go??

    I set my MFP activity level to "sedentary", then manually record my HIIT workouts (both strength and cardio days), and let fitbit fill in the rest of the calories. This gives me more accurate BMR and TDEE values reported by MFP. I used to eat my exercise calories, but results didn't last long, plateaued.

    Currently I'm not eating my exercise calories: adhering to a strict 1,000 calorie deficit from my TDEE (ignoring exercise -- the extra calorie expenditure from exercise just helps me along further/faster). That's about 1,300 calories a day for me. Losing about 2+lbs weekly with this, plenty of energy.

    Check my diary for types of foods and macro nutrient values (I try to make sure the info is accurate).
  • Clarehc
    Clarehc Posts: 15 Member
    Agree you might want to up your cals. I've about 10lb (or maybe 5lb) to lose too and my progress has slowed right down to a crawl. Previously I was losing 1-2lb a week on the 1200 limit but once I'd lost around 40lb, I plateaued and assume it's those last few pounds being stubborn. I changed my settings to half a pound a week which gives me 1600 cals a day (seems loads) and I exercise every day too. I don't eat back all the cals I earn as I couldn't fit it all in but I am trying to eat closer to my limit. I'm also focusing on trying to tone up (the flipping Mummy tummy just won't shift!) rather than watching the scales at this point in the journey. I'm 5' 5" and 139lb now, if that helps.
  • jmv7117
    jmv7117 Posts: 891 Member
    Do you eat your exercise calories? If so do you still lose weight? I've been sort of eating mine but not all and have not lost weight. Just wondering if I should just stick to my calories or if I should eat all of my exercise calories - which way to go??

    I eat back some but not all even now when I have already met my weight goal. Some days this gives me a high deficit but it works for me. You may have to tinker a bit to see which works best for you. In general, if accurately logging calories in and not over estimating calories burned, you would eat back your exercise calories when using MFP. However, the calories burned is usually over valued in the database so most are eating back only a portion. If you are using the TDEE method, then no you don't eat your exercise calories back but rather if tracking eat according to your TDEE minus your value for weight loss (10%, 15% or 20%) and record your exercise as 1. That way you track your activity without tracking the calories burned.
  • stephe1987
    stephe1987 Posts: 406 Member
    I don't think eating them all back is a good idea. I'd say eat back about half. That way if you underestimate what you eat and overestimate your burn you're still going to be fine.
  • amaysngrace
    amaysngrace Posts: 742 Member
    I always eat half of them back. It has worked with me thus far. I started at 238 pounds and I am 5 ft 3.
  • melnorwich
    melnorwich Posts: 60 Member
    i think the biggest problem with eating calories back is knowing how many calories you've burnt as the readouts on machines, calculations or MFP etc may not be accurate. I also didnt realise the difference between net and gross calories until about a month ago.
  • jld0411
    jld0411 Posts: 29 Member
    The answer - like everything is - it depends. If you're doing heavy lifting or heavy cardio, you definitely need to replace the macros or your body is going to enter starvation mode and you're NOT going to lose no matter what you do. Or, are you counting calories burned every time you park in the far parking lot and walk into the store, and counting calories for doing house work? I'm not saying people shouldn't count that as exercise - what you count is up to you - but I would not recommend eating 500 more calories per day if your burn is coming from normal, daily activities. You do NOT need to replace those types of calorie burn because that's already included in your BMR.

    What are you refueling it WITH? If you're filling up your exercise calories with Doritos and Hershey bars, no you won't lose. Your body doesn't know what to do with fake food (I highly recommend reading Master Your Metabolism for more information on this topic). But if you're eating lean proteins, fruits and veggies (a banana post workout is excellent!), healthy fats (walnuts, avocados, etc) then YES you will lose.

    When I was REALLY dropping the weight, I ate a very strict diet of real foods, six times per day, and my caloric intake was between 1600-1700 (my goal to lose is 1200). My workouts were five times per week at one hour each, 85% of max AT LEAST, burning roughly 700 calories per session. I went from size 12 to size 4 and 150lbs to 127lbs in just under 5 months. But that was no cheating, no tastes, no treats, hard (albeit not impossible) to maintain in the long term. You can argue that it was simply the calorie deficit that caused the weight loss, but I don't completely agree. I didn't keep up that regimen, gained back about ten pounds, and now I'm trying to lose it again. I don't eat a completely clean diet. My workouts are the same, but I'm eating treats. Chips, candy, etc. if I have "room" at the end of the day. Even though I'm usually under my limit, the weight isn't coming off like it was before. I'm convinced it's the quality of food (or lack of quality) that's causing it. Everyone is different, though. See if you can find that book, I think it will answer a lot of your questions.

    As far as how many calories you're actually burning, get a heart rate monitor with a chest strap. That's the only way to know for sure. Everything else is just an estimate.
  • jld0411
    jld0411 Posts: 29 Member
    Are you measuring and weighing your food? Food intake can EASILY be more than what you think it is. I always use my coffee creamer as an example. I was eyeballing it for a while thinking, "that's about a tablespoon." 35 calories. When I actually measured it, I was using double. That will add up pretty quickly. It's a pain in the you know what, but if you're working out that much and not losing, make sure you measure everything.

    For what it's worth, I always wear a HRM when I work out. When I was with my trainer back in the day, I'd often burn less with him than I could burn working out on my own. That's not going to be true for every person with every trainer, but it was true for me. Get a HRM, measure your food, eat real food, and I'm willing to bet those pounds will start coming off again.

    Also, vary your workout routine. If you're doing the same thing over and over, your body will adapt and that will become 'normal'. Switch it up every couple of weeks, vary and increase the intensity. That should help, too!
  • njitaliana
    njitaliana Posts: 814 Member
    The amount of calories that MFP says you burn is double what you really burn. The counts are not accurate. If you use an exercise bike or a heart monitor or whatever, you will see this. My diet doctor said that if a person is a marathon runner or weight-lifting 200 lbs on a regular basis, they should eat back the exercise calories. He said a regular person who just does an hour of exercise a day shouldn't eat back the calories. My dietician said the same thing. So, I don't eat mine back.
  • MPD6944
    MPD6944 Posts: 75 Member

    What are you refueling it WITH? If you're filling up your exercise calories with Doritos and Hershey bars, no you won't lose. Your body doesn't know what to do with fake food (I highly recommend reading Master Your Metabolism for more information on this topic). But if you're eating lean proteins, fruits and veggies (a banana post workout is excellent!), healthy fats (walnuts, avocados, etc) then YES you will lose.
  • MPD6944
    MPD6944 Posts: 75 Member
    Thanks I will definitely try to find that book! I do not count my daily steps/activities. I only count my workouts which I do want to amp up. I usually do 30 min of cardio 4 days/week and personal trainer for 30 min. 2 days a week. I want to up the cardio to an hour and maybe that will help too. I'm pretty new at this website and plan, I did WW for so many years and just recently stopped as I didn't feel it helped me anymore, I want to concentrate more on the types of food I am eating and like you said not eat so much junk food, still working on that but I have gotten better. Thanks again for everyone's input!