TFT

Weight Loss Time Calculator – How Long Will It Take to Lose Weight?

Plan your weight loss journey with confidence. Enter your current weight, goal weight, and daily deficit to see a realistic timeline for reaching your target.

A deficit of 500 calories/day typically results in 1 lb weight loss per week.

How Weight Loss Works
The math behind losing weight

Weight loss comes down to one thing: calorie deficit. Burn more than you eat, and your body taps into stored fat for energy. The rule of thumb is that 1 pound of body fat equals about 3,500 calories.

Create a 500-calorie daily deficit and you'll lose roughly 1 pound per week. Double that to 1,000 calories and you're looking at 2 pounds weekly. Sounds simple. And it is – until hunger, cravings, and life get in the way.

Here's what most people don't realize: as you lose weight, your body burns fewer calories. A smaller body needs less energy. That's why weight loss slows down over time, even if you're eating the same amount. You'll need to recalculate your needs every 10-15 pounds lost.

Time to Lose Weight
How long it takes at different deficits
Weight to Lose250 cal/day500 cal/day750 cal/day1000 cal/day
5 lbs10 weeks5 weeks3.5 weeks2.5 weeks
10 lbs20 weeks10 weeks7 weeks5 weeks
20 lbs40 weeks20 weeks13 weeks10 weeks
30 lbs60 weeks30 weeks20 weeks15 weeks
50 lbs100 weeks50 weeks33 weeks25 weeks

Based on the 3,500 calories per pound rule. Individual results vary based on starting weight, metabolism, and adherence.

Recommended Weight Loss Rates
What's safe and sustainable

Slow (0.5 lb/week)

250 calorie daily deficit

Best for: People with less weight to lose, those who've struggled with yo-yo dieting, or anyone who wants a sustainable approach. Slow loss means less muscle loss and better long-term maintenance.

Moderate (1 lb/week)

500 calorie daily deficit

Best for: Most people. This is the sweet spot between results and sustainability. You'll see the scale move without feeling deprived. Easy to maintain for months.

Fast (2 lbs/week)

1000 calorie daily deficit

Best for: People with significant weight to lose (30+ lbs) under medical supervision. Not sustainable long-term. Higher risk of muscle loss, nutrient deficiencies, and rebound weight gain.

Why Weight Loss Slows Down
Understanding plateaus
1

Metabolic adaptation

Your body burns fewer calories as you get lighter. A 200-lb person needs about 2,400 calories daily. At 180 lbs, that drops to 2,200. Same diet, slower loss.

2

NEAT reduction

Non-exercise activity thermogenesis – the calories you burn fidgeting, walking around, standing – drops unconsciously when you're in a deficit. You move less without realizing it.

3

Water retention

Diet changes, stress, and exercise can cause temporary water retention that masks fat loss on the scale. This isn't real weight gain – it's just water weight fluctuations.

4

Calorie creep

Portions slowly increase. Snacks add up. "Just a bite" becomes a habit. Most people underestimate intake by 20-50%. Track honestly for a week – you might find your culprit.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does it take to lose 10 pounds?

With a 500-calorie daily deficit, expect 10-12 weeks. Faster deficits (750-1000 calories) can get you there in 5-7 weeks, but that's harder to sustain. The first 2-3 pounds often come off faster due to water loss.

Is losing 2 pounds per week safe?

For most people, yes – especially if you have significant weight to lose. The CDC recommends 1-2 pounds per week as safe. Faster than that increases risks of gallstones, muscle loss, and nutrient deficiencies.

Why am I not losing weight on a 500 calorie deficit?

Either your actual deficit is smaller than you think (common – people underestimate food by 30-50%), or your metabolism has adapted. Try tracking intake precisely for two weeks. If still no loss, recalculate your TDEE – it may have dropped.

Should I adjust my deficit as I lose weight?

Yes. Recalculate every 10-15 pounds lost. Your TDEE drops as you get lighter. Someone who needed 2,000 calories at 200 lbs might need only 1,700 at 170 lbs. Keep the same deficit, just adjust your maintenance level.

How accurate is the 3,500 calories per pound rule?

It's a useful approximation but not perfect. Research shows actual weight loss is often 20-30% slower than the 3,500 rule predicts, especially over longer periods. Use it as a starting point, then adjust based on real-world results.