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How to Calculate Weight Loss Plateau

What is Weight Loss Plateau?

The Weight Loss Plateau Calculator estimates when metabolic adaptation and reduced caloric expenditure will cause your weight loss to stall. It models the thermodynamic reality that as you lose weight, your body burns fewer calories, eventually equalizing intake and expenditure.

Formula

Plateau Weight = Weight where TDEE(new weight) = Current Caloric Intake
W₀
Starting Weight (lbs) — Weight at the beginning of the weight loss effort
I
Daily Caloric Intake (cal/day) — Average daily calorie consumption
TDEE(W)
TDEE at Weight W (cal/day) — Total daily energy expenditure as a function of current weight
W_p
Plateau Weight (lbs) — Weight at which intake equals adapted TDEE

Step-by-Step Guide

  1. 1Enter your starting weight, current weight, daily caloric intake, and activity level
  2. 2Input your GLP-1 medication and current dose if applicable
  3. 3The calculator models your declining TDEE curve and predicts the weight at which it intersects your intake
  4. 4View estimated time to plateau and strategies to break through it

Worked Examples

Input
Started 240 lbs, now 210 lbs, eating 1,600 cal/day, moderate activity
Result
Current TDEE at 210 lbs: ~2,300 cal. Deficit: 700 cal/day. Predicted plateau weight: ~185 lbs (when TDEE falls to ~1,700 cal with metabolic adaptation). Estimated time to plateau: 14 more weeks.
Input
Started 180 lbs, now 165 lbs, eating 1,400 cal/day, light activity
Result
Current TDEE at 165 lbs: ~1,850 cal. Predicted plateau: ~152 lbs in approximately 10 weeks.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Drastically cutting calories when hitting a plateau, which further increases metabolic adaptation
  • Confusing a weight loss stall (2-3 weeks) with a true metabolic plateau (6+ weeks at same weight)
  • Not accounting for water retention fluctuations that can mask ongoing fat loss

Frequently Asked Questions

Why did I stop losing weight on Ozempic after several months?

Weight loss plateaus are a normal physiological response, not a medication failure. As you lose weight, your body requires fewer calories and may reduce non-exercise activity thermogenesis (NEAT). Metabolic adaptation can reduce TDEE by 5-15% beyond what weight loss alone predicts. Discuss dose adjustment, dietary changes, or adding exercise with your provider.

How can I break through a weight loss plateau?

Evidence-based strategies include: increasing physical activity (especially resistance training to boost metabolic rate), adjusting caloric intake based on new TDEE calculations, ensuring adequate sleep and stress management, dose escalation if not at maximum, and temporary diet breaks or refeeds to mitigate metabolic adaptation.

Ready to calculate? Try the free Weight Loss Plateau Calculator

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