How Often Should Runners Weigh-In?

February 24
29 mins

Episode Description

How often should you weigh yourself?

If you’ve ever been told that daily weigh-ins are the key to staying “on track,” this episode might challenge that advice.

Today we’re talking about the scale- when it’s useful, when it’s misleading, and how often you should actually be stepping on it (especially if you’re trying to lose weight or avoid weight gain).
The reality is your body weight fluctuates. A lot. And most of those changes have absolutely nothing to do with fat gain or fat loss.

In this episode, I break down:

• Why daily weigh-ins often don’t work the way they’re marketed
• How focusing on short-term fluctuations can fuel the binge/restrict cycle
• Why real fat loss is slow (and gets slower over time)
• The many reasons your weight can swing day-to-day (hydration, inflammation, glycogen, muscle repair)
• Why the scale doesn’t reflect body composition changes, especially if you’re actively working on building muscle
• When body composition analysis (BIA, DEXA) or measurements may be more useful
• When weighing yourself is actually helpful, like assessing hydration before and after long runs
• The most important question to ask yourself: “What am I doing with this information?”

We also talk about the common trap of weighing yourself after a weekend away, a vacation, or a few dinners out, and why using the scale to judge “how bad it was” often leads to extreme, unhelpful decisions.

The bottom line?

It’s time to rethink your relationship with the scale and start measuring progress in ways that actually support your goals.

Looking for the resources mentioned in today's episode?

⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Get your free fueling audit here!⁠

And if you’re ready for more support, I’ve got options—whether it’s my brand-new ebook⁠ ⁠Fuel Smarter, Run Stronger⁠⁠, my group program⁠ ⁠The Fuel Train Recover Club,⁠⁠ or apply for limited spots in my personalized⁠ ⁠1:1 coaching ⁠⁠programs.

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