By Sanyog Halarnkar, Fittr Coach
Struggling to lose weight despite eating fewer calories? It can be frustrating, but several factors might be at play. Here’s why this could be happening and what you can do about it:
Many people unknowingly underestimate their calorie intake. Small miscalculations like eyeballing portions, forgetting to log snacks, or overlooking hidden calories in sauces, dressings, and drinks can add up quickly. Even healthy foods like nuts, avocado, or olive oil can contribute significant calories when portions are not measured accurately.
What You Can Do:
When you consistently eat fewer calories, your body may adjust by slowing down its metabolism to conserve energy. This is a natural survival response where your Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR) decreases, making it harder to burn calories over time. Additionally, prolonged dieting can lead to hormonal changes, including a drop in leptin (hunger-suppressing hormone) and an increase in ghrelin (hunger-inducing hormone).
What You Can Do:
You may think you’re in a calorie deficit, but if you’re unknowingly eating at maintenance or surplus on some days, it can stall progress. Many people maintain a deficit during the week but overeat on weekends, unknowingly offsetting their progress.
What You Can Do:
Many people assume they burn more calories than they actually do during workouts. Fitness trackers and cardio machines often overestimate calorie burn, leading people to eat back more calories than they should.
What You Can Do:
High stress and lack of sleep can increase cortisol levels, which may lead to water retention, increased hunger, and fat storage. Poor sleep also disrupts ghrelin and leptin, making you crave high-calorie, sugary foods.
What You Can Do:
If the scale isn’t budging, water retention could be masking fat loss. Factors like high sodium intake, hormonal fluctuations, dehydration, and inflammation from intense workouts can cause temporary weight fluctuations.
What You Can Do:
If you’re strength training, you may be gaining muscle while losing fat. This can result in little to no change on the scale but visible improvements in body definition and shape.
What You Can Do:
NEAT includes everyday movements like walking, standing, fidgeting, and household chores. A low NEAT level significantly reduces total daily calorie expenditure (TDEE), slowing fat loss.
What You Can Do:
Certain conditions like hypothyroidism, PCOS, insulin resistance, and hormonal imbalances can make fat loss more difficult by affecting metabolism and appetite regulation.
What You Can Do:
Weight loss isn’t always a straight path. Fluctuations are normal due to water retention, hormones, and muscle gain. The key is to stay consistent over time.
What You Can Do:
If you’ve checked these factors and are still not seeing results, reassess your approach and make necessary adjustments. Sustainable weight loss takes time, and small consistent efforts will always win over quick fixes.
Stay patient, stay committed, and trust the process!
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