Calories allowed per day?
caitlinltuttle
Posts: 10 Member
Hey there! I have been using MFP for about 2 months now after my 2 roommates told me about it. I have had a lot of success but I have a question. I am considerably heavier than my 2 roommates. One is 150 lbs and the other is 200 lbs and obviously based on how vigorous we each want to lose weight and specifications of our body, our daily allotted calorie count is different but it’s like drastically different. I can eat almost 1800 calories a day but my other roommate can only eat like 1400 a day. I know it changes on how much you weigh and all that, but will MFP automatically update your calories you can eat based on how much you now weigh? I am just scared I might be eating too much
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Replies
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Yes, it is supposed to update your calorie goals automatically if you are tracking your weight in the app. You can go into “Goals” and see if it’s listing your current weight correctly, if not then update it and it will adjust your calories if needed.
I wouldn’t be worried about eating too much solely based off your roommates have a lower calorie allotment. You are heavier, you can eat more and still be losing weight. You should only worry about it if you stop losing weight for a few weeks (not one week, a few weeks of no weight loss).5 -
There is a 250 cal difference each time you change the rate of loss goal. You may be different.
You could have picked a reasonable level, they could have picked a foolish level.
Or you each picked a different activity level being honest about your day, or they chose sedentary even though not.
As commented, MFP will suggest when you drop 10 lbs to drop the eating goal.
It sadly won't suggest it's time to change to a more reasonable rate of loss as you have less to lose - it'll let what may have started as a reasonable choice go right to foolish.1 -
You can have those calories because you have more to lose, the allotted calories will change as you get closer to goal.0
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Based on the info provided, 1800 calories for a young person who weighs over 200 lbs is almost definitely a deficit amount, so you should still be able to lose weight on that. Also, it will depend on what each of you entered as your base activity level in addition to the rate of loss desired.
As far as the updating question, you will not get answers that agree.
I use the Android app. I enter my new weights using "Progress". MFP has updated my calories several times over the past 4+ months (from 1260 down to 1210). Others, however, have a different experience.2 -
As long as you are continuing to see progress, your calorie allotment should be fine. If you begin to see a plateau in your loss, reenter your goals using your current weight and adjust your eating.0
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The rate of loss you should select doesn’t have a lot to do with how fast you want to lose weight. It should be selected based on how fast you can safely lose weight. For example, one should only be selecting a 2 lb/week rate if they have about 75+ lb. to lose. With about 15ish lb. to lose, a 0.5 lb/week rate would the maximum to attempt. Some of the people in question may be choosing overly aggressive goals that are not safe for them.7
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Thank you guys so much for the feedback! It really answered my questions. I know 2lbs a week is pretty vigorous but I have about 100+ pounds to lose. I started at 280 lbs and I’m 19 years old. I need to lose at least 100 lbs to be healthy. I have lost 30 so far.17
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You can also go in and set you calories manually so maybe they have done that.
I have mine set lower than MFP suggests due to some medications I'm on making weight loss difficult.1 -
caitlinltuttle wrote: »Thank you guys so much for the feedback! It really answered my questions. I know 2lbs a week is pretty vigorous but I have about 100+ pounds to lose. I started at 280 lbs and I’m 19 years old. I need to lose at least 100 lbs to be healthy. I have lost 30 so far.
Congrats! 30 lbs in 2 months is great for your current weight. The rate of loss may slow down soon but you should keep losing. You are at sustainable calorie goal. I lost 140 lb eating about 1700.9 -
bold_rabbit wrote: »Based on the info provided, 1800 calories for a young person who weighs over 200 lbs is almost definitely a deficit amount, so you should still be able to lose weight on that. Also, it will depend on what each of you entered as your base activity level in addition to the rate of loss desired.
As far as the updating question, you will not get answers that agree.
I use the Android app. I enter my new weights using "Progress". MFP has updated my calories several times over the past 4+ months (from 1260 down to 1210). Others, however, have a different experience.
Actually, it's one of the roommates that weighs 200 lbs, and OP is "significantly" heavier, so we can be even more confident that 1800 kcals is a deficit.1 -
caitlinltuttle wrote: »Hey there! I have been using MFP for about 2 months now after my 2 roommates told me about it. I have had a lot of success but I have a question. I am considerably heavier than my 2 roommates. One is 150 lbs and the other is 200 lbs and obviously based on how vigorous we each want to lose weight and specifications of our body, our daily allotted calorie count is different but it’s like drastically different. I can eat almost 1800 calories a day but my other roommate can only eat like 1400 a day. I know it changes on how much you weigh and all that, but will MFP automatically update your calories you can eat based on how much you now weigh? I am just scared I might be eating too much
Find your comfort zone. Try 1,800 for awhile see how that works out. After time, tweak things a bit. You will learn as you go.
Everything is an estimation. Some people "need" lower calories because their logging isn't very good.0 -
caitlinltuttle wrote: »Hey there! I have been using MFP for about 2 months now after my 2 roommates told me about it. I have had a lot of success but I have a question. I am considerably heavier than my 2 roommates. One is 150 lbs and the other is 200 lbs and obviously based on how vigorous we each want to lose weight and specifications of our body, our daily allotted calorie count is different but it’s like drastically different. I can eat almost 1800 calories a day but my other roommate can only eat like 1400 a day. I know it changes on how much you weigh and all that, but will MFP automatically update your calories you can eat based on how much you now weigh? I am just scared I might be eating too much
Find your comfort zone. Try 1,800 for awhile see how that works out. After time, tweak things a bit. You will learn as you go.
Everything is an estimation. Some people "need" lower calories because their logging isn't very good.
That is something I have had to stay on top of. I have always known that I needed to lose weight but I didn’t really achieve anything until I started logging my food and wow!!! What has been the biggest thing for me was realizing how ignorant I was. I never knew how many calories was in the food I was eating until I started logging them. It’s crazy.8 -
With regards to the automatic update or not of calorie goals: I need to manually confirm my weight and activity level in the settings to adapt my calorie goal, it doesn't update automatically.
You've lost 30 lbs so it's quite simple: is your calorie goal in the app still the same as when you started your weightloss journey? If so, then it's not updating automatically. I've lost 16 lbs and my calorie goal has gone down from 1750 tot 1660 by updating my goal settings manually.2 -
MFP's goals tool has been an amazing tool for me. Over six months and 60+ pounds lost, it has not been off by more than a pound or two in its calorie guidance and its estimation of how much weight I'd lose per week. I really trust it at this point. Of course, results will vary from person to person, but I think even if it's a bit off for someone else, it isn't going to be crazy, totally off, just a little off. If it says to eat 1800 to lose X pounds per week, you can be reasonably confident for now that if you eat 1800, you'll lose X pounds per week.
But as someone else said, adjust as you go and tweak. MFP's numbers are starting points to get your organized and focused. Once you have 5 or 6 weeks of knowledge and data under your belt as to how fast you lose weight, how you feel being on 1800 cals, etc., you can fine-tune things. In fact, you can keep fine-tuning things after you fine-tune things; there is no obligation to ever arrive at The Number or The Perfect System. It can be a work in progress forever. The only thing you have to do is eat a calorie deficit on most days and not overdo it too much on the other days, and you will lose weight; everything else is up for grabs as you learn and tweak things.1 -
MFP's goals tool has been an amazing tool for me. Over six months and 60+ pounds lost, it has not been off by more than a pound or two in its calorie guidance and its estimation of how much weight I'd lose per week. I really trust it at this point. Of course, results will vary from person to person, but I think even if it's a bit off for someone else, it isn't going to be crazy, totally off, just a little off. If it says to eat 1800 to lose X pounds per week, you can be reasonably confident for now that if you eat 1800, you'll lose X pounds per week.
But as someone else said, adjust as you go and tweak. MFP's numbers are starting points to get your organized and focused. Once you have 5 or 6 weeks of knowledge and data under your belt as to how fast you lose weight, how you feel being on 1800 cals, etc., you can fine-tune things. In fact, you can keep fine-tuning things after you fine-tune things; there is no obligation to ever arrive at The Number or The Perfect System. It can be a work in progress forever. The only thing you have to do is eat a calorie deficit on most days and not overdo it too much on the other days, and you will lose weight; everything else is up for grabs as you learn and tweak things.
I can attest to this! As I’ve lost more weight, my calorie allotment has gotten smaller. It has gotten to the point where I had to become more active to keep it at a reasonable level. At one point I plateaued at around 158 for months, because I thought that the 1700 allotment I had started with coming down from 170 was supposed to continue to work, but it was too large for me at that point.
Another thing I will second is don’t be afraid to go a little over or under your calorie allotment AFTER you have learned more about your bodies needs and the way your activity level affects your energy levels. I say this not to encourage you to throw caution to wind with your calorie allotment, but when I first started I followed it strictly, and felt guilty whenever the numbers were red. Especially if you are aiming for something closer to losing 2lbs a week, sometimes in my experience there are days where my activity levels create an even larger deficit than what MFP recommends(aka sets me on track to lose closer to 2.5-3lbs a week if I am extra active that week). You can see this when you complete your diary and subtract the weight MFP estimates you will be in 5 weeks from your current weight. In those cases I do allow myself to eat 50-100 calories over my limit to avoid undereating. Again, like Igfrie said, MFP is a guide, and the more you use it, and notice trends, you can make your own adjustments to fit your needs. I’ve only JUST started doing this after about a year of intensively using MFP and a few months of being more physically active, but I still think this is something you should keep in mind especially once you begin moving forward. There will be times you have to make additive adjustments like that or even negative adjustments lowering your allotment.5 -
If you have lost 30 pounds you should have less calories than you did when you started. If not you should go back through the guided set-up. Since you are trying to lose 2 pounds a week you are attempting to create a 1000 calorie deficit each day. This means if MFP gives you 1800 calories to lose you would theoretically maintain your weight around 2800 calories and anything less would result in weight loss. This is worth keeping in mind when a mistake happens or you just want to eat a little more one day. Perfection is not required to lose weight. I have lost a lot of weight not being perfect.
Congrats on the 30 pounds. You must be feeling great at this point. Just don't quit for any reason.3 -
If you have lost 30 pounds you should have less calories than you did when you started. If not you should go back through the guided set-up. Since you are trying to lose 2 pounds a week you are attempting to create a 1000 calorie deficit each day. This means if MFP gives you 1800 calories to lose you would theoretically maintain your weight around 2800 calories and anything less would result in weight loss. This is worth keeping in mind when a mistake happens or you just want to eat a little more one day. Perfection is not required to lose weight. I have lost a lot of weight not being perfect.
Congrats on the 30 pounds. You must be feeling great at this point. Just don't quit for any reason.
Thank you for the motivation! I’m not quitting. I was sick and tired of who I saw in the mirror. I was sick and tired of not feeling sexy in my own skin. And I especially was sick and tired of having my weight limit what I do.
I went onto the setting portion of the app and looked at my goals and asked to “change them”. I kept them the same as they were but it just made MFP adjust. It dropped from 1780 calories a day to 1680 calories a day. Thank you guys for the tips! As someone who is new to MFP, it is really appreciated!!2 -
caitlinltuttle wrote: »I went onto the setting portion of the app and looked at my goals and asked to “change them”. I kept them the same as they were but it just made MFP adjust. It dropped from 1780 calories a day to 1680 calories a day. Thank you guys for the tips! As someone who is new to MFP, it is really appreciated!!
Forget room-mates.
Forget whether you have "reasons" you want to get there sooner!
Issue #1 is getting there.
Issue #2 is STAYING there.
Speed is wonderful. Adherence is much much much more important. Long term compliance even more.
Search @NovusDies posts about him speeding up his weight loss effort for surgery.
Don't get sucked into the speed trap. Keep your deficit to 25% of your TDEE or less. If your TDEE is not well over 3K, 1K deficits may already be too large.
The win is not just to get there but to stay there. <25% deficits tend to almost always allow for -500 and quite often for -750. -750 is still more than 75lbs a year...>
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caitlinltuttle wrote: »I went onto the setting portion of the app and looked at my goals and asked to “change them”. I kept them the same as they were but it just made MFP adjust. It dropped from 1780 calories a day to 1680 calories a day. Thank you guys for the tips! As someone who is new to MFP, it is really appreciated!!
Forget room-mates.
Forget whether you have "reasons" you want to get there sooner!
Issue #1 is getting there.
Issue #2 is STAYING there.
Speed is wonderful. Adherence is much much much more important. Long term compliance even more.
Search @NovusDies posts about him speeding up his weight loss effort for surgery.
Don't get sucked into the speed trap. Keep your deficit to 25% of your TDEE or less. If your TDEE is not well over 3K, 1K deficits may already be too large.
The win is not just to get there but to stay there. <25% deficits tend to almost always allow for -500 and quite often for -750. -750 is still more than 75lbs a year...>
Here:
https://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10762903/how-i-went-from-sustainable-to-unsustainable/p1
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“Don't get sucked into the speed trap. Keep your deficit to 25% of your TDEE or less. If your TDEE is not well over 3K, 1K deficits may already be too large.
The win is not just to get there but to stay there. <25% deficits tend to almost always allow for -500 and quite often for -750. -750 is still more than 75lbs a year...>”
Can you explain this some more? @PAV8888
It is just a little confusing. I’m not familiar with the acronyms used0 -
TDEE - total daily energy expenditure - the calories that your body burns during the course of the day, from basis body function 9breathing etc); to energy from non-purposeful movement (think just general walking during course of day); to purposeful exercise
what @PAV8888 is saying is don't fall into the trap of wanting to lose weight fast - set a reasonable goal (normally TDEE-25% TDEE) gives you a healthy weight loss rate without it being too drastic
i.e. if your daily calorie burn was 2000cal (for simplicity) - then 25% of that is 500 - so 2000-500 is 1500 - so you could eat 1500 cal a day, have a 500cal deficit and lose weight (approx a lb a week)3 -
This may help with what PAV and others are saying:
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