Why You’re Not Losing Weight In A Calorie Deficit
- Jun 3
- 2 min read
You’ve lowered your calories, you’re training hard, you’re hitting your steps… but the scales still aren’t moving.
Frustrating, right?
This is one of the most common things I hear from women when they first come to me for coaching.
The truth is, if you’re genuinely in a calorie deficit for long enough, you will lose weight. But there are a few reasons why it may feel like you’re doing everything right while progress has slowed down.
1. Your weekends are wiping out your weekly deficit
This is probably the biggest one.
You eat “well” Monday-Friday, then weekends become:
takeaways
drinks
meals out
snacks you’re not tracking
“cheat meals” turning into cheat days
You can easily undo an entire week’s deficit in just 1-2 days without even realising.
Fat loss is about consistency across the whole week, not just being “good” Monday-Friday.
2. You’re not tracking as accurately as you think
Most people underestimate their calorie intake.
Things like:
oils
sauces
coffees
bites while cooking
protein bars
handfuls of snacks
all add up quickly.
Even healthy foods can stop fat loss if portions aren’t controlled.
You don’t need to obsess over tracking forever, but being honest and accurate is important while trying to
lose body fat.
3. The scales don’t tell the full story
Scale weight naturally fluctuates every day.
Things like:
menstrual cycle
stress
sodium intake
poor sleep
digestion
eating later at night
can all temporarily increase your weight even when you’re still losing body fat.
This is why daily fluctuations mean very little.
Instead of panicking over one weigh-in, look at trends over several weeks.
4. You’re expecting progress too quickly
A lot of women expect dramatic weekly changes.
Real fat loss is usually slower than social media makes it look.
Losing:
0.5-2lb per week
is completely normal.
The women who get the best long-term results are usually the ones who stop looking for quick fixes and start
focusing on consistency.
5. Your “healthy lifestyle” isn’t actually structured
Training hard alone doesn’t guarantee fat loss.
You still need:
enough movement outside the gym
structure with nutrition
recovery
consistency
patience
A few intense workouts each week won’t outweigh a lifestyle lacking routine the other 23 hours of the day.
So… what should you do?
Focus on:
hitting calories consistently
increasing daily movement
prioritising protein
improving sleep
being patient
tracking trends instead of daily scale fluctuations
Most importantly, stop trying to be perfect.
The women who get the best results are rarely the ones doing extreme diets. They’re the ones who stay consistent for months instead of days.
Final thoughts
Fat loss isn’t about starving yourself or living on chicken and broccoli.
It’s about building habits you can actually stick to long term.
If you feel like you’re stuck despite doing “everything right”, chances are you don’t need to work harder — you need more structure, consistency and support.
If you want help building a physique you’re genuinely proud of without extreme dieting, you can apply for coaching below.
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