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Reverse Dieting: How to Add Calories Without Rebounding

Reverse dieting explained: what it is, when it helps, and a simple plan to increase calories after a cut without rapid fat regain.

Reverse dieting is a structured way to increase calories after a cut, with the goal of improving energy and performance without rapid fat regain. It is not magic. It is just controlled transitions.

Meal prep containers and a calorie tracking notebook representing reverse dieting and controlled calorie increases

The goal: stop the rebound by planning the exit.

When Reverse Dieting Makes Sense

  • You finished a long cut and feel drained.
  • Your steps, training, and mood dropped.
  • You want to transition to maintenance without "all or nothing" eating.

Reverse Dieting vs Going Straight to Maintenance

Many people can simply return to maintenance calories and be fine. Reverse dieting is most useful if you tend to rebound hard or if your hunger is intense post-cut.

Approach Pros Cons
Straight to maintenance Simple, fast recovery Can spike hunger for some people
Reverse dieting More controlled, easier mentally Requires tracking and patience

Simple Reverse Diet Plan (4-8 Weeks)

  1. Start from your current cut calories.
  2. Add 50-150 calories per day for 7 days.
  3. Hold and assess. If weight is stable, add another 50-150.
  4. Prioritize carbs first (often best for performance) while keeping protein steady.

What to Track

  • Weekly average body weight
  • Waist measurement
  • Training performance and energy
  • Hunger and sleep

Frequently Asked Questions

Will I gain weight during reverse dieting?

You may see a small bump from glycogen and water as carbs increase. That is normal and not fat gain by default.

How long should I reverse diet?

Usually 4-8 weeks, or until you reach maintenance calories and energy feels normal again.

Transition Smoothly With AMUNIX

AMUNIX makes the "after the cut" phase easier by tracking calories, weight trends, and training performance in one place.



This article is for education only. If tracking triggers anxiety or disordered eating behaviors, consider getting support from a qualified clinician.

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