When Weight Loss Just…Stops

Stevie_38

Active member
WHEN WEIGHT LOSS JUST… STOPS: A GLP-1 STALL GUIDE

Hey friends 💛

If you’re on a GLP-1 (semaglutide, tirzepatide, etc.) and your weight hasn’t moved in weeks, this post is for you.

I’ve been around these forums long enough to see the same panic cycle happen over and over:

• "It worked great for 3 months and now nothing."
• "I only have 15–20 lbs left and the scale is stuck."
• "I’m eating 900 calories and working out 5 days a week — what am I doing wrong?"
• "Should I increase my dose? Switch meds? Add something else?"

First: breathe.

Stalls are normal. Expected, even.

Let’s break this down in a way that actually helps.

1. WHAT IS A REAL STALL?

People define this differently, but here’s what I’ve seen most commonly:

  • No weight change for 4+ weeks
  • Scale bouncing within the same 1 lb range for a month
  • Losing and regaining the same 0.5–1 lb repeatedly

A 7–14 day pause? That’s not a stall. That’s just biology.

Weight loss on GLP-1s is rarely linear. Many people trend monthly, not weekly. Some lose 10–12 lbs/month early on, then have random 1–2 week pauses. That doesn’t mean the medication "stopped working."

If you don’t weigh often, you might not even notice these pauses. Some people only weigh at doctor visits and avoid the mental spiral altogether.

2. THE SCALE IS NOT PURE FAT LOSS

This is huge.

The scale reflects:

  • Water
  • Glycogen
  • Sodium retention
  • Digestive contents
  • Hormones
  • Lean mass
  • Fat mass

One gallon of water weighs over 7 pounds. If you’re retaining fluid from:

• higher sodium
• hormonal shifts
• inflammation from workouts
• constipation

…you can easily mask fat loss.

Constipation alone can create multi-week “stalls.” Many people report this especially at higher doses.

Also: if you started resistance training, especially for the first time, you may be gaining lean mass while losing fat. "Newbie gains" are real. The scale might stay flat while your body recomposes.

If your clothes fit better, waist is shrinking, or progress photos show change — you are not stalled.

3. THE LAST 10–20 LBS ARE DIFFERENT

This is where almost everyone struggles.

When you are 15 lbs from goal:

• Your total daily energy expenditure is lower
• Your body defends remaining fat more aggressively
• The calorie deficit required is smaller and harder to maintain

What worked when you had 70 lbs to lose may not work the same way near goal.

Some people stall 2 months within 5 lbs of goal — then suddenly lose slowly again over several months. It’s frustrating but normal.

4. "I’M EATING 900 CALORIES AND NOT LOSING"

This one deserves careful attention.

Very low calorie intake (800–1000 kcal/day) can:

• Lower NEAT (you subconsciously move less)
• Increase fatigue
• Increase stress hormones
• Slow thyroid conversion
• Increase hair shedding
• Stall weight

Some people break stalls by increasing intake to a more appropriate level (for example 1200–1300 depending on body size, age, and activity).

Yes, eating more can sometimes restart loss.

Why?

Because severe restriction is itself a stressor.

GLP-1s reduce appetite, but they are not magic starvation bypass drugs. If you are chronically under-fueling, especially while doing cardio + resistance 4–5x per week, your body may push back.

If you’re in this camp, consider:

  • Accurate tracking for 2 weeks
  • Ensuring protein targets are met
  • Gradually increasing calories by 100–200/day
  • Monitoring energy, sleep, recovery

5. DOSE QUESTIONS: WHEN TO INCREASE?

This depends on WHY you’re stalled.

Ask yourself:

  • Is hunger back?
  • Is food noise louder?
  • Am I thinking about food constantly again?

If yes — and you’ve been on the same dose 6+ weeks — it may be reasonable to discuss increasing.

If no — appetite suppressed, food noise quiet — the medication is still biologically active. Increasing dose may not solve a stall driven by:

• metabolic adaptation
• low calories
• stress
• water retention
• nearing goal weight

Switching between sema and tirz sometimes helps, but not always. If one medication maintained weight without gain, it was still doing something beneficial — even if additional loss slowed.

Also: stacking additional peptides or adding anabolic agents just to "force" fat loss introduces new variables and risks. Change one lever at a time.

6. CALORIES STILL MATTER (BUT IT’S NOT JUST CALORIES)

GLP-1s work partly by lowering intake, but also through:

• improved insulin sensitivity
• delayed gastric emptying
• altered reward signaling
• possibly central metabolic effects

That said — if weight is stable for 4–6 weeks, energy balance is likely close to neutral.

Options to test (one at a time, 2-week experiments):

  • Tighten tracking accuracy
  • Reduce 100 kcal/day
  • Add a short walk daily
  • Increase protein slightly
  • Add one higher calorie "refeed" day weekly

Think of it as adjusting dials, not smashing buttons.

7. EXERCISE: ARE YOU RECOVERING?

High-intensity training 5–6 days a week while under-eating can backfire.

Signs you may need more recovery:

• Persistent soreness
• Poor sleep
• Elevated resting heart rate
• Irritability
• Water retention

Sometimes adding a rest day improves the scale.

Other times, increasing frequency (if recovery is good) helps push through the last bit of stubborn fat.

There isn’t one formula — recovery capacity, age, hormones, and overall stress load matter.

8. WATER, SODIUM, AND THE FAKE STALL

A salty meal can hold several pounds of water.
Hormonal cycles can mask fat loss for 1–2 weeks.
Strength training causes temporary inflammation.

Before declaring a stall:

  • Look at 4-week trends, not daily numbers
  • Compare same-cycle weigh-ins if applicable
  • Evaluate waist measurements

Trend > snapshot.

9. PSYCHOLOGY: COMPARISON IS POISON

This one is big.

Reading dramatic "down 100 lbs in 9 months!" posts can mess with your head.

Your rate is your rate.

Some people drop 20 lbs in 2 months.
Some take 2 years to lose 100.
Some stall for months and then resume.

Stalls do not erase progress.

And maintaining during a plateau — especially after switching medications — is not failure. It means the medication is preventing regain.

That matters.

10. SPECIAL SITUATIONS

Some people are on GLP-1s primarily for glucose control, not weight loss. In those cases, aggressive weight reduction may not be the goal — and providers may advise stabilization once at a healthy weight.

Always align your plan with your medical context.

11. A PRACTICAL STALL CHECKLIST

If your weight hasn’t changed in 4+ weeks, run through this:

  • Am I truly stalled or just fluctuating?
  • Has constipation been an issue?
  • Has sodium increased?
  • Have I started lifting recently?
  • Am I under-eating?
  • Is my dose still controlling appetite?
  • Am I within 10–20 lbs of goal?
  • Have I changed multiple variables at once?

Then pick ONE lever and test it for 2 weeks.

Not five.
Not all at once.

12. REAL TALK

Some people stall 4 lbs from goal for 2 months — and then lose another 10 over the next 5 months.

Some plateau for half a year and then suddenly drop.

Some need a small calorie bump.
Some need a dose increase.
Some just need patience.

GLP-1s are powerful tools, but they do not override human physiology completely.

Your body is adapting. That’s not sabotage — it’s survival biology.

If you are down 50, 70, 96 lbs… the fact that you’ve paused does not cancel that achievement.

Sometimes the breakthrough is metabolic.
Sometimes behavioral.
Sometimes just time.

If you’re stalled right now, drop your details below:

• Medication + dose
• How long stalled
• Calories (estimated or tracked)
• Exercise pattern
• How close to goal

Let’s troubleshoot it logically instead of spiraling 💛
 
This is so helpful, thank you 😭

Stevie_38 said:
Very low calorie intake (800–1000 kcal/day) can slow things down

I’m 5'2", 58, and have been sitting around 950–1000 calories because I literally can’t eat more. I lift 3x a week and walk daily. I’ve been stuck at the same weight for 6 weeks.

It feels scary to increase calories when I already feel like I’m "barely losing." How would you suggest increasing without panicking?
 
Excellent overview, Stevie.

I would add a clinical note: persistent intake under estimated basal needs can reduce spontaneous movement (NEAT) significantly. Patients often do not realize they are sitting more, fidgeting less, and generally conserving energy.

Stevie_38 said:
Trend > snapshot.

This cannot be overstated. I routinely have patients who "stall" for 3 weeks and then drop 3–4 pounds once fluid shifts resolve.

GenePath, at your height and age, a structured increase to 1150–1250 kcal with adequate protein may actually improve hormonal stability and recovery from lifting. I would increase gradually (100 kcal at a time) and monitor for 2–3 weeks before drawing conclusions.
 
Love this post.

I’ll add from experience: when I was within 15 lbs of goal on tirz, I thought it "stopped working." Food noise was still controlled. I just wasn’t dropping.

Turned out I was eating the same low calories I used when I was 70 lbs heavier. I bumped calories up one day a week and added two short walks. Loss resumed slowly.

Also agree 100% that you shouldn’t increase dose just because the scale is flat if hunger isn’t back.
 
This is such a grounded take.

I’m one of those people who started serious resistance training when I began GLP-1. My weight didn’t move for almost a month, but my waist dropped 1.5 inches.

Stevie_38 said:
If your clothes fit better, waist is shrinking, or progress photos show change — you are not stalled.

That line should be pinned everywhere. Body recomposition is real, especially for beginners.
 
Thank you for talking about comparison.

When I was 4 lbs from 100 down, I stalled for almost 2 months. I was convinced I had "broken" something. Then I started losing again — slowly — and 5 months later I was another 10 lbs down.

The mental side near goal is way harder than the first 50 lbs, in my opinion.
 
Great thread.

One thing I would gently emphasize: maintenance during a medication switch is not failure.

Stevie_38 said:
If one medication maintained weight without gain, it was still doing something beneficial

I see people assume that if they are not actively losing, the drug "isn’t working." Preventing regain after prior loss is clinically meaningful.

Stalls need context.
 
Okay I needed this today 😅

I’m 96 lbs down and stuck bouncing the same 1 lb for 5 weeks. Reading this makes me realize I’m probably just in the "last stretch" phase and not doomed.

Also… guilty of weighing every morning and letting it ruin my mood. Might switch to weekly for my sanity.
 
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