01
Weeks 1-2
Calibration
- Calories
- 2,561 kcal
- Deficit
- -300
- Protein
- 160g (2g/kg)
Build the tracking habit before forcing the deficit lower.
Track intake, weigh daily, average the week, and keep lifting intensity stable.
Not "eat less." Build a precise calorie deficit, high-protein macro target, and 8-week execution plan around your body.
01
Weeks 1-2
Build the tracking habit before forcing the deficit lower.
Track intake, weigh daily, average the week, and keep lifting intensity stable.
02
Weeks 3-6
Stable fat loss with muscle-retention guardrails.
Hold the deficit, keep protein high, and bias carbs around training sessions.
03
Weeks 7-8
Avoid dragging fatigue into the next phase.
Reduce the deficit, add one higher-carb refeed day, then decide whether to continue or maintain.
Portions scale with your calculator output. The remaining calories are left as a buffer for sauces, brands, cooking oil, or normal tracking error.
| Meal | Food | Calories | Protein | Portion |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Breakfast | Egg scramble, oats, black coffee | 462 | 35g | 1x |
| Lunch | Chicken breast, brown rice, broccoli | 565 | 55g | 1x |
| Pre-workout | Banana and whey protein | 257 | 25g | 1x |
| Dinner | Salmon, sweet potato, salad | 565 | 40g | 1x |
| Snack | Greek yogurt and blueberries | 205 | 20g | 1x |
Use this for normal cutting days. Keep the buffer for real-world variance.
2054 kcal · 175g protein
Buffer: 307 kcal · Target carbs: 236g
Brands, cooked weights, sauces, and oil can move the final total. Verify your real batch before portioning.
Open Recipe CalculatorMistake
Very large deficits move weight faster, but they also raise fatigue and lean-mass-loss risk. The useful deficit is the one you can train through.
Mistake
Cutting without resistance training tells the body that muscle is less necessary. Keep intensity high even if total volume comes down.
Mistake
A calorie deficit increases the need to protect lean mass. That is why this page uses 2.0-2.4g/kg instead of a lower maintenance target.
Mistake
Dietary fat has a floor. This model keeps fat around 20% of calories and at least 0.5g/kg before assigning the rest of the plan.
Use body fat as a rough decision filter. It is not a medical diagnosis; it is a planning shortcut for the next nutrition phase.
Recommended phase
Cut
Prioritize fat loss before pushing a muscle-gain surplus.
Calorie direction: 300-500 kcal deficit
300-500 kcal deficit
8-16 weeks
200-300 kcal surplus
12-24 weeks
maintenance
6-12 months
Next step
Your plan starts with a calorie target. The next useful move is checking today's food against that target and making sure protein stays high.
Check the baseline
After the cut
A cutting diet is a structured fat-loss phase built around a calorie deficit, high protein intake, and continued resistance training. The goal is to lose body fat while preserving as much lean muscle as possible.
A 300-500 calorie daily deficit is the most practical starting range for muscle retention. Larger deficits can work for short phases, but the risk of lean mass loss rises when protein, sleep, and resistance training are not controlled.
A practical cutting target is about 2.0-2.4 g/kg/day. Lean, resistance-trained athletes may need an even more individualized target based on lean mass, diet severity, and training volume.
Most cutting phases work best as 8-16 week blocks. After that, fatigue, hunger, training performance, and metabolic adaptation often make a maintenance break more useful than simply pushing harder.
Beginners, returning lifters, and people with higher body fat can sometimes build muscle while cutting. Trained lean lifters should mostly expect fat loss and muscle retention, not fast muscle gain.
A cutting diet is not just a smaller version of your normal diet. It is a temporary fat-loss phase where the calorie deficit is deliberate, protein is higher than usual, and training is managed so the body has a reason to keep muscle. The mistake most people make is treating "cutting" as a race. The faster the scale drops, the more likely you are to lose training performance, water, glycogen, and eventually lean tissue.
The calorie deficit should start with maintenance calories. This page uses Harris-Benedict to estimate resting metabolism, multiplies by activity level, then subtracts the selected deficit. NHLBI's public guidance says a reduction around 500-750 calories per day often maps to a common weight-loss pace; see their healthy eating plan calorie guidance. Their clinical key recommendations also describe a 500-1,000 kcal/day deficit as part of programs aimed at 1-2 lb/week loss, but that larger range is not automatically ideal for lifters trying to preserve muscle.
For muscle retention, the practical default is smaller: 300-500 calories per day. A 300 kcal deficit is slow enough to keep training stable during the calibration phase. A 500 kcal deficit creates clearer weekly progress while still leaving room for hard sessions. A 750 kcal deficit can be useful for short phases, but it should be paired with higher protein, careful fatigue monitoring, and a plan to exit before performance falls apart.
Protein rises during a cut because the body is underfed. In a randomized trial by Longland and colleagues, young men in a large energy deficit who consumed 2.4 g/kg/day protein while training intensely had better lean-mass and fat-loss outcomes than a lower-protein group. The PubMed record is here: higher versus lower protein during an energy deficit. For very lean resistance-trained athletes, a natural bodybuilding review discusses even more specific targets based on fat-free mass; see the evidence-based contest preparation review.
Resistance training is the second half of the muscle-retention system. Diet alone can make the scale move, but it does not give the body a strong reason to keep contractile tissue. A systematic review and meta-analysis on resistance training in people with overweight and obesity found resistance-based programs useful in body-composition management when caloric restriction is used; see the PMC review on resistance training and body composition. In practice, keep the heavy lifts in. You may reduce volume if recovery drops, but do not turn a cut into only cardio and restriction.
Carbohydrates are not the enemy during a cut. They are the easiest macro to flex around training. This page keeps a meaningful carbohydrate target because hard sessions need fuel, especially when calories are already lower. Refeed days are not magic, but a planned higher-carbohydrate day can make the exit-ramp phase more sustainable and can restore training quality for some people.
Dietary fat also has a floor. Extremely low-fat dieting may make it easier to hit a low calorie target, but it can be a poor trade if it crowds out essential fats and makes the diet harder to sustain. A systematic review and meta-analysis reported that low-fat diets appeared to reduce testosterone levels in men, though more trials are needed; the paper is indexed at ScienceDirect. This planner therefore keeps fat near 20% of calories and at least 0.5 g/kg.
The clean workflow is simple: calculate TDEE, pick the smallest deficit that produces measurable progress, set protein high enough to protect lean mass, keep lifting, and run the phase for a defined window. After 8-16 weeks, reassess. If training performance is falling, hunger is high, or the weight trend has stalled for several weeks, a maintenance phase may be more productive than another round of restriction.
This page is an educational planning tool, not medical care. People with diabetes, eating-disorder history, pregnancy, kidney disease, adolescent growth needs, or physician-directed diets should use a clinician-guided plan.
If your maintenance estimate is wrong, every deficit target is wrong. Recheck TDEE, then track your real intake for a week.