Cut_Dude
Member
GLP-1 WEIGHT LOSS PROGRESS: WHAT TO EXPECT, WHAT'S NORMAL, AND WHEN TO RELAX
I've been on GLP-1 based meds for a while now and have followed a lot of long-term progress threads. One theme keeps coming up: people either underestimate what is possible... or panic because they think they're "behind."
This post is meant to ground expectations using:
- Clinical trial data
- Real-world results from long-term users
- Common progress patterns (including stalls)
- Maintenance and "moving goalpost" psychology
If you're early in your journey or wondering whether you're "doing it right," read on.
--------------------------------------------------
1. WHAT THE CLINICAL TRIALS ACTUALLY SHOW
--------------------------------------------------
Let's start with tirzepatide (SURMOUNT-1), since it's one of the most studied.
In adults with obesity (without diabetes):
Important context:
- 72 weeks = about 1.5 years.
- Many participants were still trending downward at the end.
- This was with lifestyle counseling, not starvation.
Now compare that with real-world reports:
We're seeing 30%, 35%, 40%+ weight loss over 12-18 months in some individuals.
Is that typical? No.
Is it possible? Clearly, yes.
But averages matter. If you lose 15-25% of body weight, you are matching or exceeding what most clinical participants achieved.
--------------------------------------------------
2. WHAT PEOPLE ARE ACTUALLY LOSING (REAL WORLD)
--------------------------------------------------
Across long-term users, here are common patterns:
Examples of real outcomes I've seen repeatedly:
- 30 lbs in 3 months (about 2+ lbs per week)
- 90 lbs in 9 months
- 120 lbs in 11 months
- 40% total body weight loss over 15 months
But here's the key: pace almost always slows over time.
The first 4-8 weeks can be dramatic.
After that, average weekly loss commonly settles into:
That is not failure. That is sustainable physiology.
--------------------------------------------------
3. "ONLY" 30 LBS IN 3 MONTHS? LET'S REFRAME THAT
--------------------------------------------------
I see this a lot:
"I've lost 30 lbs in 3 months but I thought it would be more."
30 lbs in 12 weeks is:
- 10 lbs per month
- About 2.5 lbs per week
- 120 lbs projected over a year
Most physicians recommend no more than about 1-2 lbs per week on average.
If you're losing 2+ per week consistently, you are not behind.
You're ahead of traditional guidelines.
Especially important:
People with type 2 diabetes often lose more slowly.
As you approach goal weight, loss slows further.
This is expected.
--------------------------------------------------
4. WHY SOME PEOPLE LOSE 40%+ (AND WHY MANY DON'T)
--------------------------------------------------
There are a few big variables:
Starting Weight
Higher starting weight often equals higher percentage loss potential.
Duration of Use
12 months vs 18+ months makes a big difference.
Medication Type / Stacking
Some long-term users combine agents (example: tirzepatide + another incretin pathway agent). This can increase total loss but also complexity and risk.
Lifestyle Consistency
Many of the biggest losses include:
Hormonal Factors
TRT, growth hormone, and other therapies are sometimes involved. These may affect body composition (muscle retention vs scale weight).
--------------------------------------------------
5. APPETITE SUPPRESSION IS NOT THE SAME AS PERFORMANCE
--------------------------------------------------
Early strong appetite suppression is common.
Some report:
But here's what people discover fast:
If you under-eat severely, your energy tanks.
I've seen multiple cases where someone tries to exercise intensely after consuming only broth and a shake all day and then crashes.
Appetite suppression is a tool.
It's not a signal to eat 300 calories and expect peak athletic performance.
--------------------------------------------------
6. STALLS ARE PART OF THE PROCESS
--------------------------------------------------
Almost everyone reports:
This is normal fat loss physiology.
Water shifts. Glycogen changes. Hormones adjust.
A stall is not the medication "stopping."
It's your body recalibrating.
--------------------------------------------------
7. THE MOVING GOALPOST PROBLEM
--------------------------------------------------
This deserves its own section.
Before starting, people say:
"If I could just get under 200, I'd be happy."
Then they hit 199.
And say:
"Maybe 185."
Then 170.
Then 160.
At some point, the scale becomes psychological instead of medical.
A few reminders:
40% weight loss is extraordinary.
But happiness doesn't automatically appear at a certain BMI.
--------------------------------------------------
8. LOOSE SKIN: THE REALITY
--------------------------------------------------
With 80-120+ lb losses, loose skin is common.
Variables:
- Age
- Duration of obesity
- Rate of loss
- Genetics
- Muscle mass retention
Slower loss and resistance training may help body composition, but large losses often come with excess skin.
That doesn't mean you shouldn't lose weight.
It means set expectations realistically.
--------------------------------------------------
9. MAINTENANCE: WHERE THINGS GET INTERESTING
--------------------------------------------------
Many people say maintenance is harder mentally than losing.
Common strategies:
Some users report staying on medication long term.
Others taper.
There's no universal answer yet.
But here's what is consistent:
Those who maintain habits (protein, movement, portion awareness) maintain weight better.
--------------------------------------------------
10. IF YOU'RE EARLY IN YOUR JOURNEY
--------------------------------------------------
If you've lost:
- 15 lbs in a month
- 30 lbs in 3 months
- 18% in 9 months
You are doing well.
Comparison is dangerous in GLP-1 spaces because the outliers are loud.
The person who lost 48% in 18 months is real.
But so is the person who lost 20% and completely reversed metabolic disease.
Both are wins.
--------------------------------------------------
11. QUICK PROGRESS BENCHMARKS
--------------------------------------------------
Rough, healthy expectations:
Anything in the 15-25% range at 1 year is clinically excellent.
30%+ is exceptional.
40%+ is rare but increasingly seen.
--------------------------------------------------
FINAL THOUGHTS
--------------------------------------------------
GLP-1 medications are powerful tools.
They are not magic.
The biggest predictors of long-term success seem to be:
If you're frustrated at 3 months, zoom out.
If you're chasing 50% loss, ask why.
If you've lost 30 pounds, that is life-changing.
Sustainable progress beats dramatic burnout.
Happy to answer specific progress questions below.
I've been on GLP-1 based meds for a while now and have followed a lot of long-term progress threads. One theme keeps coming up: people either underestimate what is possible... or panic because they think they're "behind."
This post is meant to ground expectations using:
- Clinical trial data
- Real-world results from long-term users
- Common progress patterns (including stalls)
- Maintenance and "moving goalpost" psychology
If you're early in your journey or wondering whether you're "doing it right," read on.
--------------------------------------------------
1. WHAT THE CLINICAL TRIALS ACTUALLY SHOW
--------------------------------------------------
Let's start with tirzepatide (SURMOUNT-1), since it's one of the most studied.
In adults with obesity (without diabetes):
- Average weight loss at 72 weeks was roughly 15% to 21% depending on dose (5mg, 10mg, 15mg).
- Placebo group lost about 3%.
- Many participants hit 20%+ weight loss.
- A meaningful number crossed the 25% threshold.
Important context:
- 72 weeks = about 1.5 years.
- Many participants were still trending downward at the end.
- This was with lifestyle counseling, not starvation.
Now compare that with real-world reports:
We're seeing 30%, 35%, 40%+ weight loss over 12-18 months in some individuals.
Is that typical? No.
Is it possible? Clearly, yes.
But averages matter. If you lose 15-25% of body weight, you are matching or exceeding what most clinical participants achieved.
--------------------------------------------------
2. WHAT PEOPLE ARE ACTUALLY LOSING (REAL WORLD)
--------------------------------------------------
Across long-term users, here are common patterns:
- 18-25% within 6-9 months
- 25-35% within 9-15 months
- 35-45% in extended users (especially stacking or long duration use)
- Rare but real: 45-50%+ over 15-24 months
Examples of real outcomes I've seen repeatedly:
- 30 lbs in 3 months (about 2+ lbs per week)
- 90 lbs in 9 months
- 120 lbs in 11 months
- 40% total body weight loss over 15 months
But here's the key: pace almost always slows over time.
The first 4-8 weeks can be dramatic.
After that, average weekly loss commonly settles into:
- 1-2 lbs per week
- Or roughly 0.5-1% bodyweight per week
That is not failure. That is sustainable physiology.
--------------------------------------------------
3. "ONLY" 30 LBS IN 3 MONTHS? LET'S REFRAME THAT
--------------------------------------------------
I see this a lot:
"I've lost 30 lbs in 3 months but I thought it would be more."
30 lbs in 12 weeks is:
- 10 lbs per month
- About 2.5 lbs per week
- 120 lbs projected over a year
Most physicians recommend no more than about 1-2 lbs per week on average.
If you're losing 2+ per week consistently, you are not behind.
You're ahead of traditional guidelines.
Especially important:
People with type 2 diabetes often lose more slowly.
As you approach goal weight, loss slows further.
This is expected.
--------------------------------------------------
4. WHY SOME PEOPLE LOSE 40%+ (AND WHY MANY DON'T)
--------------------------------------------------
There are a few big variables:
Starting Weight
Higher starting weight often equals higher percentage loss potential.
Duration of Use
12 months vs 18+ months makes a big difference.
Medication Type / Stacking
Some long-term users combine agents (example: tirzepatide + another incretin pathway agent). This can increase total loss but also complexity and risk.
Lifestyle Consistency
Many of the biggest losses include:
- High protein intake (100g+ daily common)
- Resistance training 3-5x per week
- Daily walking
- Reduced ultra-processed food
Hormonal Factors
TRT, growth hormone, and other therapies are sometimes involved. These may affect body composition (muscle retention vs scale weight).
--------------------------------------------------
5. APPETITE SUPPRESSION IS NOT THE SAME AS PERFORMANCE
--------------------------------------------------
Early strong appetite suppression is common.
Some report:
- Barely hungry for 24-48 hours
- Living on protein shakes and small portions
- Sudden "food noise" disappearance
But here's what people discover fast:
If you under-eat severely, your energy tanks.
I've seen multiple cases where someone tries to exercise intensely after consuming only broth and a shake all day and then crashes.
Appetite suppression is a tool.
It's not a signal to eat 300 calories and expect peak athletic performance.
--------------------------------------------------
6. STALLS ARE PART OF THE PROCESS
--------------------------------------------------
Almost everyone reports:
- 2-4 week plateaus
- Scale bouncing 3-5 lbs
- Sudden drop after weeks of nothing
This is normal fat loss physiology.
Water shifts. Glycogen changes. Hormones adjust.
A stall is not the medication "stopping."
It's your body recalibrating.
--------------------------------------------------
7. THE MOVING GOALPOST PROBLEM
--------------------------------------------------
This deserves its own section.
Before starting, people say:
"If I could just get under 200, I'd be happy."
Then they hit 199.
And say:
"Maybe 185."
Then 170.
Then 160.
At some point, the scale becomes psychological instead of medical.
A few reminders:
- Chasing arbitrary numbers can lead to under-fueling.
- Loose skin becomes more noticeable at extreme losses.
- Maintenance is a skill, not a failure.
- Health markers matter more than a round number.
40% weight loss is extraordinary.
But happiness doesn't automatically appear at a certain BMI.
--------------------------------------------------
8. LOOSE SKIN: THE REALITY
--------------------------------------------------
With 80-120+ lb losses, loose skin is common.
Variables:
- Age
- Duration of obesity
- Rate of loss
- Genetics
- Muscle mass retention
Slower loss and resistance training may help body composition, but large losses often come with excess skin.
That doesn't mean you shouldn't lose weight.
It means set expectations realistically.
--------------------------------------------------
9. MAINTENANCE: WHERE THINGS GET INTERESTING
--------------------------------------------------
Many people say maintenance is harder mentally than losing.
Common strategies:
- Stay on medication at lower dose
- Space injections further apart
- Increase calories slowly
- Continue lifting
- Keep protein high
Some users report staying on medication long term.
Others taper.
There's no universal answer yet.
But here's what is consistent:
Those who maintain habits (protein, movement, portion awareness) maintain weight better.
--------------------------------------------------
10. IF YOU'RE EARLY IN YOUR JOURNEY
--------------------------------------------------
If you've lost:
- 15 lbs in a month
- 30 lbs in 3 months
- 18% in 9 months
You are doing well.
Comparison is dangerous in GLP-1 spaces because the outliers are loud.
The person who lost 48% in 18 months is real.
But so is the person who lost 20% and completely reversed metabolic disease.
Both are wins.
--------------------------------------------------
11. QUICK PROGRESS BENCHMARKS
--------------------------------------------------
Rough, healthy expectations:
- Month 1-2: noticeable drop, sometimes dramatic
- Months 3-6: 1-2 lbs per week average
- Months 6-12: slowing but steady
- After 12 months: gradual trend toward plateau
Anything in the 15-25% range at 1 year is clinically excellent.
30%+ is exceptional.
40%+ is rare but increasingly seen.
--------------------------------------------------
FINAL THOUGHTS
--------------------------------------------------
GLP-1 medications are powerful tools.
They are not magic.
The biggest predictors of long-term success seem to be:
- Patience
- Protein intake
- Resistance training
- Not chasing starvation
- Realistic expectations
- Planning for maintenance early
If you're frustrated at 3 months, zoom out.
If you're chasing 50% loss, ask why.
If you've lost 30 pounds, that is life-changing.
Sustainable progress beats dramatic burnout.
Happy to answer specific progress questions below.