Can you lose weight on a "moderate" low carb diet?
nixism
Posts: 258 Member
I'd appreciate any thoughts on this please. I was following LCHF, keeping close or under 20g of carbs, but it isn't really suiting my lifestyle. I struggle to eat "fatty" foods. I was thinking of tweaking my plan to be more a moderate low carb diet, ie: 50g carb (low or keto is 20g of carb). My question is; can you lose weight on a moderate low carb diet?
For instance, I have my goals at 50g carb, 75 fat, 150g protein. Or should I amend these?
Many thanks,
For instance, I have my goals at 50g carb, 75 fat, 150g protein. Or should I amend these?
Many thanks,
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Replies
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You can lose weight on any diet as long as you're in a caloric deficit (eating less calories than you burn). I've lost 65 pounds and am not anywhere near "low carb". My carbs are well over 150g/day almost every single day.
There's nothing evil about carbs and there's nothing magic about keto.22 -
I have lost 80lbs on a moderate carb diet - carbs aren't what makes you lose or gain weight, calories are. The way of eating through which you achieve a calorie deficit should reflect what's best for your preferences, lifestyle and health requirements, but it's the calories which will make you lose.0
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Hey Anvil, yes I get that, I've been on here a while, but I am trying new approaches, as eating 1200cals and exercise wasn't working for me. Neither did upping my cals, nor anything else. For some people it ain't just "the maths" that works for them.0
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You can lose weight as long as you're in a deficit. I eat high carb (Complex carbs, veggies, and fruit primarily - very rarely simple carbs to avoid the blood sugar spikes and crashes) and have successfully maintained my weight. It also helps my athletic performance. Do whatever gives you the most energy and satiety within an appropriate calorie deficit.1
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Look at vegans and vegetarians who manage to lose weight, they are usually very high carb.
For some, keto/low carb makes losing weight easier because of the appetite suppression and loss of most cravings, but they still need to watch their calories as it is totally possible to gain weight with this lifestyle.
If weight loss is your goal, then calories come first.Watch your macros/micros to ensure adequate nutrition.2 -
Yes. You can lose weight on a twinky and beer diet if your deficit is there.
Problem with low carb it will zap your energy level and slow down workouts. But there are as many theory and opinions as there are people on the planet. Find what level is successful for you. I have seen people who had lots to lose be very successful on cycling a keto diet. Keto will not work for me or my lifestyle but u shoot for 150 carbs a day and have plenty of energy.0 -
I am diabetic and I have lost 50 lb. so far AND my blood glucose is under control with no medication on a moderate carb diet. Per my Dr.'s recommendation I stay under 160g per day (35% of my total).
The deficit will cause weight loss. The macro mix will determine how you feel and that varies from person to person.5 -
Hey Anvil, yes I get that, I've been on here a while, but I am trying new approaches, as eating 1200cals and exercise wasn't working for me. Neither did upping my cals, nor anything else. For some people it ain't just "the maths" that works for them.
It is just the maths.
Your calculations are inaccurate if you think you are not losing on 1200 calories unless you are five feet tall or shorter and you do nothing but sit all day.
Your food diary isn't open for us to view, so no way to know where your logging is causing problems.Tighten up your food logging.
Are you exercising at all? If so, are you eating any more on those days to fuel that exercise?9 -
Hey Anvil, yes I get that, I've been on here a while, but I am trying new approaches, as eating 1200cals and exercise wasn't working for me. Neither did upping my cals, nor anything else. For some people it ain't just "the maths" that works for them.
The maths works for everyone, some people just don't do the maths right.15 -
I'd appreciate any thoughts on this please. I was following LCHF, keeping close or under 20g of carbs, but it isn't really suiting my lifestyle. I struggle to eat "fatty" foods. I was thinking of tweaking my plan to be more a moderate low carb diet, ie: 50g carb (low or keto is 20g of carb). My question is; can you lose weight on a moderate low carb diet?
For instance, I have my goals at 50g carb, 75 fat, 150g protein. Or should I amend these?
Many thanks,
I think of 50 g as pretty low carb. I'm experimenting with low carb now and research seems to suggest that 50 total should result in ketosis, but that's a different issue.
Anyway, to answer your question, yes, you absolutely can lose on moderately low carb (or even average or high carb). I lost most of my weight eating between 100 and 150 g of carbs, varying mostly based on how much I was exercising, but sometimes just based on the day.
Re proposed macros, that works out to 1675, which may or may not be a good goal, depending on size and how much you work out (and whether it includes exercise calories). 150 g on its face seems unnecessarily high for protein (since I see you are female, and based on having been given the 1200 goal at one point), but won't hurt you. Might be tough to deal with.
When you say 1200 wasn't working, what specifically do you mean? 1200+exercise and no added calories is going to sap energy for many even without super low carbs and it's not something I normally would recommend. But you don't have a lot to lose and are exercising, so other things can mess up the scale apart from possible logging issues.2 -
Problem with low carb it will zap your energy level and slow down workouts
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My carb goal is 130-150 depending on activity and I lose just fine1
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LisaEatSleepRun wrote: »Problem with low carb it will zap your energy level and slow down workouts
I should ha e qualified my statement. It will zap your energy until your body adjusts to using fat storage as energy source.1 -
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cmriverside wrote: »Hey Anvil, yes I get that, I've been on here a while, but I am trying new approaches, as eating 1200cals and exercise wasn't working for me. Neither did upping my cals, nor anything else. For some people it ain't just "the maths" that works for them.
It is just the maths.
Your calculations are inaccurate if you think you are not losing on 1200 calories unless you are five feet tall or shorter and you do nothing but sit all day.
Your food diary isn't open for us to view, so no way to know where your logging is causing problems.Tighten up your food logging.
Are you exercising at all? If so, are you eating any more on those days to fuel that exercise?
Hi Riverside, I am only just back to logging on here as I have been using a low carb app lately to help me with my try out of low carb (but the App sucks, lol, so that is why I am back here on MFP! Love MFP.). So yes, my tracking on here isnt' really anything to go by, there are no entries. I would love help with setting my macros etc right for the amount of activity I do / who I am / my stats/ sedentary day job etc, but not too sure where to start?0 -
I would just use the default macros, focus on protein and see where the others fall and if needs be play around with them a bit to find your own personal sweet spot. I personally largely just pay attention to protein and end up naturally hitting or getting close to my fat goal and probably moderate carb. But there are days I pretty much just eat carbs because bread and cake.
I'd just make sure your logging is tight as if you're not seeing results that's always the first place to look. It really is just a maths game for everyone.2 -
lemurcat12 wrote: »I'd appreciate any thoughts on this please. I was following LCHF, keeping close or under 20g of carbs, but it isn't really suiting my lifestyle. I struggle to eat "fatty" foods. I was thinking of tweaking my plan to be more a moderate low carb diet, ie: 50g carb (low or keto is 20g of carb). My question is; can you lose weight on a moderate low carb diet?
For instance, I have my goals at 50g carb, 75 fat, 150g protein. Or should I amend these?
Many thanks,
I think of 50 g as pretty low carb. I'm experimenting with low carb now and research seems to suggest that 50 total should result in ketosis, but that's a different issue.
Anyway, to answer your question, yes, you absolutely can lose on moderately low carb (or even average or high carb). I lost most of my weight eating between 100 and 150 g of carbs, varying mostly based on how much I was exercising, but sometimes just based on the day.
Re proposed macros, that works out to 1675, which may or may not be a good goal, depending on size and how much you work out (and whether it includes exercise calories). 150 g on its face seems unnecessarily high for protein (since I see you are female, and based on having been given the 1200 goal at one point), but won't hurt you. Might be tough to deal with.
When you say 1200 wasn't working, what specifically do you mean? 1200+exercise and no added calories is going to sap energy for many even without super low carbs and it's not something I normally would recommend. But you don't have a lot to lose and are exercising, so other things can mess up the scale apart from possible logging issues.
Hi Lemur, I think you hit the nail on the head. I wasn't eating extra on 1200 when I was exercising.
And, 1675 seems like loads of cals to me! So I don't really know where to start with setting my goals Sadly.
I am only 5ft 2 at a push, 35yrs, female, with a sedentary job. I do lead an active lifestyle outside of work, on our farm, but I think most of the farm work, etc, I am already "conditioned" too... so it's not "true" exercise if that makes sense..? It's a tough one.
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lemurcat12 wrote: »I'd appreciate any thoughts on this please. I was following LCHF, keeping close or under 20g of carbs, but it isn't really suiting my lifestyle. I struggle to eat "fatty" foods. I was thinking of tweaking my plan to be more a moderate low carb diet, ie: 50g carb (low or keto is 20g of carb). My question is; can you lose weight on a moderate low carb diet?
For instance, I have my goals at 50g carb, 75 fat, 150g protein. Or should I amend these?
Many thanks,
I think of 50 g as pretty low carb. I'm experimenting with low carb now and research seems to suggest that 50 total should result in ketosis, but that's a different issue.
Anyway, to answer your question, yes, you absolutely can lose on moderately low carb (or even average or high carb). I lost most of my weight eating between 100 and 150 g of carbs, varying mostly based on how much I was exercising, but sometimes just based on the day.
Re proposed macros, that works out to 1675, which may or may not be a good goal, depending on size and how much you work out (and whether it includes exercise calories). 150 g on its face seems unnecessarily high for protein (since I see you are female, and based on having been given the 1200 goal at one point), but won't hurt you. Might be tough to deal with.
When you say 1200 wasn't working, what specifically do you mean? 1200+exercise and no added calories is going to sap energy for many even without super low carbs and it's not something I normally would recommend. But you don't have a lot to lose and are exercising, so other things can mess up the scale apart from possible logging issues.
Hi Lemur, I think you hit the nail on the head. I wasn't eating extra on 1200 when I was exercising.
And, 1675 seems like loads of cals to me! So I don't really know where to start with setting my goals Sadly.
I am only 5ft 2 at a push, 35yrs, female, with a sedentary job. I do lead an active lifestyle outside of work, on our farm, but I think most of the farm work, etc, I am already "conditioned" too... so it's not "true" exercise if that makes sense..? It's a tough one.
Just wondering, what do you have your activity level set to in MFP? Reason I am asking is that if the bolded is part of your daily lifestyle, then you may want to have your activity level set to lightly active at the very least, since it isn't purposeful exercise.0 -
I'm LCHF and have been for years. You can lose weight eating moderate carb, as long as you're in calorie deficit. 150 grams carbs is still considered low carb. I personally eat between 50-100 grams net carbs, but I still have to adjust my calories from fat and protein to lose weight.1
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lemurcat12 wrote: »I'd appreciate any thoughts on this please. I was following LCHF, keeping close or under 20g of carbs, but it isn't really suiting my lifestyle. I struggle to eat "fatty" foods. I was thinking of tweaking my plan to be more a moderate low carb diet, ie: 50g carb (low or keto is 20g of carb). My question is; can you lose weight on a moderate low carb diet?
For instance, I have my goals at 50g carb, 75 fat, 150g protein. Or should I amend these?
Many thanks,
I think of 50 g as pretty low carb. I'm experimenting with low carb now and research seems to suggest that 50 total should result in ketosis, but that's a different issue.
Anyway, to answer your question, yes, you absolutely can lose on moderately low carb (or even average or high carb). I lost most of my weight eating between 100 and 150 g of carbs, varying mostly based on how much I was exercising, but sometimes just based on the day.
Re proposed macros, that works out to 1675, which may or may not be a good goal, depending on size and how much you work out (and whether it includes exercise calories). 150 g on its face seems unnecessarily high for protein (since I see you are female, and based on having been given the 1200 goal at one point), but won't hurt you. Might be tough to deal with.
When you say 1200 wasn't working, what specifically do you mean? 1200+exercise and no added calories is going to sap energy for many even without super low carbs and it's not something I normally would recommend. But you don't have a lot to lose and are exercising, so other things can mess up the scale apart from possible logging issues.
Hi Lemur, I think you hit the nail on the head. I wasn't eating extra on 1200 when I was exercising.
And, 1675 seems like loads of cals to me! So I don't really know where to start with setting my goals Sadly.
I am only 5ft 2 at a push, 35yrs, female, with a sedentary job. I do lead an active lifestyle outside of work, on our farm, but I think most of the farm work, etc, I am already "conditioned" too... so it's not "true" exercise if that makes sense..? It's a tough one.
I think I'd use MFP to set calories and say active, but then not eat back calories unless you do extra exercise. Try it and see what number it gives you. (I am 5'3 and was 44 when I lost my weight in 2014, and mostly lost on around 1600-1650 (which I set to include the exercise so was not eating back) -- I'm not as active as you daily, but I was running a lot, so it probably evens out. That you are accustomed to the farm work doesn't mean it doesn't count!)1 -
I am only 5ft 2 at a push, 35yrs, female, with a sedentary job. I do lead an active lifestyle outside of work, on our farm, but I think most of the farm work, etc, I am already "conditioned" too... so it's not "true" exercise if that makes sense..? It's a tough one.
I am of similar height and age to you and don't believe 1200 cals is near enough! I eat up to 2200 cals and burn 500 to 800 on my running days and try (usually unsuccessfully) to eat about 1600 on my rest day/s and have lost 30 kg's over the past 10 months. Also, I am not a farmer, however, I cannot imagine it is ever easy work! If you can afford it, invest in an activity tracker to see how many steps you are getting each day, this helped me immensely on my (continuing) journey.
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Absolutely! (And yes, of course it's deficit and not macros that really matters for weight loss. But if you're looking for the benefits that LCHF has for some people--assuming this isn't strict keto for medical reasons--you should be fine.)
Plenty of sites will say anything under 50 carbs/day is ketogenic (for a lot of people). I lost 20 lbs in about 3 months (and I only had 20 to lose) on keto and I was eating 20-30gm net carbs/day (total carbs were often 30-50). I had a lot of benefits of keto/LCHF at that level (weight loss, satiety/adherence, etc.). I think you could bump your protein down a little and increase fats back up just a bit, too, but whatever works for you.1 -
You can lose weight on a no carb diet, a low carb diet, a moderate carb diet, even an all carb diet. Just make sure you eat fewer calories than you burn.4
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dragon_girl26 wrote: »
Just wondering, what do you have your activity level set to in MFP? Reason I am asking is that if the bolded is part of your daily lifestyle, then you may want to have your activity level set to lightly active at the very least, since it isn't purposeful exercise.
Dragon - I have it set to sedentary.0 -
I have looked online and reset my macros, IIFYM says: 124 protein / 66 fat / 91 carbs, 1459 cals.1
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LisaEatSleepRun wrote: »
I am of similar height and age to you and don't believe 1200 cals is near enough! I eat up to 2200 cals and burn 500 to 800 on my running days and try (usually unsuccessfully) to eat about 1600 on my rest day/s and have lost 30 kg's over the past 10 months. Also, I am not a farmer, however, I cannot imagine it is ever easy work! If you can afford it, invest in an activity tracker to see how many steps you are getting each day, this helped me immensely on my (continuing) journey.
Thanks Lisa, I think I might invest in one, I've always wanted a tracker - it may be a real eye opener for me! Thank you for your comment.
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So, I've logged my food for today, coming in at only 1211cals. I'm supposed to be eating 1459. Does it matter that I'm coming in lower?0
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So, I've logged my food for today, coming in at only 1211cals. I'm supposed to be eating 1459. Does it matter that I'm coming in lower?
It really depends how accurate your logging is. As I said further up, if you're not losing upping your calories is never the answer. You probably have loose logging, if you're eyeballing more often than not people underestimate. It's just human nature to be terrible at judging amounts. Some people are great, others not so much.3 -
I'm no pro or anything by any means. I did the 1200 calorie diet after I had my third child. Lost weight quick, plateaued then put it back on when I got pregnant with my fourth. For me it was just not an attainable, long-term thing and was too hard to realistically stick to. This time around I am doing a 1600 calorie diet, with 35% carbs (around 140), 35% protein, and 30% fat. It was slow going and then our entire household got sick which lasted a month total (including the hubs who ended up in the hospital for about 4 days), so I put my diet on the back burner and plateaued. I started back up a week ago tomorrow and upped my water intake to make sure I was hitting my 64oz, stopped eating after 7:30-8pm, and precooked all of my meals for the entire week on Monday. I had all my recipes set so I could log quick and I have been very strict with it. I use a kitchen scale and measure EVERYTHING that goes in my body. I didn't eat out (until today...ugh...). As of yesterday, I've lost 3.8lbs since starting back up Monday. I'll reweigh in the morning to get my exact weekly total. Not sure if any of this will help you, but that's my experience so far this go around.0
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