How can you build muscle and lose fat at the same time? A lot of people on the internet think the answer is simple. You can't.
If you want to build muscle, you need to do a proper bulk, and if you want to lose fat, you need to do a proper cut. I think this idea has made its way into the mainstream from old bodybuilding lore, where it was thought that you had to be in a massive caloric surplus to build size and then trim down for competition. But recent scientific evidence has challenged this idea. For example, this 2013 study from Garth and colleagues found that even when they overfed subjects by 600 extra calories per day, they actually didn't gain significantly more muscle, but did gain over three times the fat mass. So nearly all the extra bulk came as fat.
Now I should say I don't actually have anything against cutting and bulking. In the right circumstances, I think it makes perfect sense. And many of you guys know, last year I ran a pretty hefty bulk myself that I called bear mode.
And I still think that if you want to gain as much muscle and strength as possible, as fast as possible, then being in a bigger... caloric surplus is the way to go. However, this quicker muscle gain will come at the expense of more fat gain as well, and many people simply don't want that, but just accept it as an inevitability.
But it doesn't have to be that way. In fact, it's perfectly possible to build muscle without a large surplus, or even without any surplus at all, because fat tissue and muscle tissue are separate systems. And I've broken down the math explaining why this is possible in another video that I'll link below.
Now, many people will get on board with this and say, okay, building muscle while losing fat is possible, but not really practical because it only applies in a handful of more limited and obscure scenarios. But I think these scenarios aren't as limited as they seem. And I would say body recomposition is a realistic goal, not only for some people, but nearly all people.
So let's quickly cover the situations where I think recomposition makes the most sense. First of all, new lifters. Newbies can build muscle and lose fat at the same time quite easily because as a new lifter, you're the most primed for muscle growth you'll ever be. This means that calories can be pulled from stored body fat to fuel the muscle building process with just basic progressive resistance training and a reasonable diet.
Second, because overweight individuals have very large energy reserves stored in body fat, they can eat in a caloric deficit and still have plenty of stored energy to fuel the muscle building process. Thirdly, detrained individuals who got jacked before but then stopped training due to injury or other commitments are in a similar camp to the new trainee where owing to the very powerful muscle memory effect they're able to rebuild a lot of muscle very quickly making recomposition common and finally using anabolic steroids allows most people to build a lot of muscle very quickly allowing the body to tap into fat stores to fuel muscle building but at this point i would say even if recomposition were limited to these four groups walk into any commercial gym and most people will fall into one of these four categories. For example, even if you've been in the gym for several years, you might still fall under the newbie category if you haven't been training nearly hard enough or smart enough over the years.
I'd also add a fifth category to this list, the sub-optimized trainee. This would include anyone who's been going to the gym for a while, may even count themselves as an intermediate or advanced level lifter by training age, but deep down hasn't really been putting in their best effort with their training or nutrition. And according to my good friend and co-author Chris Barakat, he sees recomposition in his lab all the time, even in more advanced trainees.
So I literally see this every single semester. Every training study we've ever ran, I've seen body recomposition occur. Once we really start paying attention to some of the details to a higher extent, like nutrient timing and really optimizing their macronutrient intakes, we can see recomposition with some of the best athletes ever. This one subject in particular, he gained 20 pounds of lean mass in 10 weeks. And he actually lost like a pound of fat mass at the same time.
So he was a basketball player, pretty well trained when it comes to resistance training. He was able to squat 1.75 times his body weight. So he fit the criteria for the study and he just blew up.
He basically came in the lab looking like a normal basketball player. And then he looked like Phil Heath playing basketball. So I think there's really only a tiny subset of the population that recomposition wouldn't be practical for.
Truly advanced trainees already with. perfectly optimized training and nutrition who are near their genetic ceiling for muscle growth. But in my opinion, this is the obscure scenario, and it only occupies a tiny sliver of the total population looking to improve their physique.
Okay, so body recomposition is not only common, but practical. Now, how do we do it? Let's break it down into five simple steps.
First, you need to recognize that training is the driving force of body recomposition in any scenario. You can have the most optimal diet in the world, eat over 9,000 grams of protein per day, and you still won't build much new muscle without a progressive training stimulus. In the book, we use the analogy of a car where we can think of our training as the engine and our nutrition as the gasoline to fuel performance.
The better the fuel, the better the performance. However, without the engine, the car simply won't move regardless of the fuel's quality. We can also think of sleep and stress management as the oil changes and tire rotations required to keep things moving. So when it comes to training, you want to You want to focus on progressive overload, applying effort, and using proper technique.
And once you have the fundamentals in place, fine-tune your volume to fit your advancement level. Generally speaking, 10 to 20 sets per body part per week is a good ballpark for most people and most muscles. Next, you need to decide on a primary goal.
Even though you may want to do both at the same time, it's important to establish which is more important to you. For example, if you're currently on the leaner side, let's say 8 to 12% body fat as a male, or 18 to 22% as a female, then your primary goal should probably be to build muscle. And if you're not so lean, so somewhere between 15 to 20 plus percent as a guy, or 25 to 30 plus percent as a girl, then maybe your primary goal should be to lose fat.
Once you've decided on your primary goal, next you want to center your caloric intake around maintenance calories, the number of calories you need to eat to maintain your weight. If your primary goal is to build muscle, you should enter a slight caloric surplus, adding 5 to 25% to your maintenance intake. If you're leaner, less advanced, and more genetically gifted for building muscle, you can get away with a bigger surplus.
If your primary goal is to lose fat, you should enter a slight caloric deficit, slashing 10-20% off your maintenance intake. The more fat you have to lose, the bigger the deficit should be. And in the book, we outline other considerations such as if you're detrained, highly advanced, skinny fat, or significantly overweight. Next, you need to set up your macronutrient targets, starting with protein, the most important macro for recomposition. In the book, we recommend a sliding model for protein intake based on lean body mass, where the leaner you are, the closer you should be to 1.6 grams per pound of lean body mass, and the more body fat you have, the closer you should be to 1.2 grams per pound lean body mass.
Using myself as an example, I currently weigh 165 pounds at about 10% body fat. Using our sliding model, since I'm quite lean, I should be more toward the high end of intake. I'll pick 1.5. Multiplying it out, that would give me a daily protein intake of 222.8 grams per day, so I can round that up to 225, which is what I'm eating at the moment.
And in my last full day of eating video, I explained the benefits of going higher on protein than might be required just to build muscle. So even though you could probably get away with less, I think eating a higher intake is both safe and advised for those looking for recomp. From here, you want to determine your fat and carb intake. Personally, I set my fat intake at a minimum of 20% of caloric intake and then fill in the rest with carbs. Okay, the fifth and final step to achieving body recomposition is to pay attention to the details.
Like I mentioned earlier, this step might not be required for beginners. They can get recomp by just following the first four steps. But as you get more advanced, recomp gets more difficult, so it's more important to optimize your approach. We spend a lot of time in the book laying out these optimization strategies. I'm going to focus on a few of them here.
The first is to sleep more. I think sleep might be the single most underrated factor when it comes to transforming your physique. Just consider this 2018 study from Wang and Collin. colleagues.
They split 36 subjects up into two groups that both entered a caloric deficit, except one group slept one hour less five nights per week. They were also allowed to sleep one hour extra on the weekends to catch up. As it turns out, after eight weeks of dieting, weight loss was the same in both groups, but the group that slept well lost 83% of their weight from fat, whereas the sleep-restricted group lost 85% of their weight as lean mass. That is crazy. Now, it's worth mentioning that these subjects weren't weight training.
so lifting probably would have flattened out the results a bit, but I don't think it would have been enough to offset that enormous difference that sleep made. The next area we can look to optimize our approach is through peri-workout nutrition, or the timing of nutrients around the workout. Now, I already discussed some of the misconceptions around this topic in my latest full day of eating video, so I'll just link that video down below.
We can also turn to supplements to optimize, but it's worth noting that there aren't any recomp supplements that just cause recomposition on their own. However, there are a few worth mentioning that can help. In the book, we organize our supplements list into tiers. At the top of the list in tier one, we have protein powder, creatine, and caffeine. Protein powder is especially important for vegan lifters, and I recommend so-called vegan whey, a blend of rice and pea protein that offers a full spectrum of amino acids and has a high leucine content.
Whey protein can be used at any time of day to help make meeting total daily protein goals easier. and consuming a casein source before bed might have merit as well. Creatine is by far the most well-studied supplement on the market, and given how cheap it is and how low its risk of side effects are, it's a pretty obvious choice to supplement 3-5 grams of creatine monohydrate per day.
And I'll link my Creatine Science Explained video down below if you'd like more info on that. Caffeine rounds out tier 1 of our supplements shortlist, and it's a great supplement to use for your daily diet. for increasing strength, prolonging time to fatigue, increasing acute fat oxidation, and more.
However, unlike creatine, caffeine is susceptible to tolerance, so it might be smart to reserve it for your heaviest or most demanding training sessions, or periodically cycle off it to resensitize yourself to the effects. And of course, we dive into many other optimization strategies across the 15 chapters in the new nutrition guide, including sample meal plans, pre and post-workout meal examples, more supplements, cardio strategies, and a lot more. So if you guys are looking to take your nutrition up a notch, you can save 25% off the Ultimate Guide to Body Recomposition at the first link in the description box below for the launch. Or you can head over to jeffnipper.com, go to the Nutrition Plans tab, and you can find it over there.
And after launch week, so next weekend, it'll be going up to full price. So the manual has over 140 scientific references, an exact step-by-step guide for setting up your calories and macros, a list of foods to focus on. and even a full chapter on training for recon.
I'd also include customer service. So if you guys have any issues, there's a support email that you guys can contact. So hit up the link over here next to my head if you guys are interested in checking it out.
Don't forget to leave me a thumbs up if you enjoyed the video or if you found it helpful. Subscribe if you haven't already and I'll see you guys all here in the next one.