Weight Lifting Workouts – Good for Losing Weight?

Written by Thaya Kareeson | Posted under Exercising | November 26, 2009

Lifting a lot of weightsContrary to the common opinion and the impression that is given by many infomercials and ads about weight training workouts, many common exercises are not primarily designed to lose weight. Find out about the most common misconceptions in this article.

In general, weight lifting does not necessarily burn a lot of fat. Heart rate and overall fat burning capacity is relatively low, because many weight lifting exercises address only a group of muscles at a time. Therefore, the same time spent in an exercise that engages more muscles at the same time will burn a lot more fat and energy.

However, there are exceptions to this generalization. You actually can get both done at the same time if you follow the guidelines in this related article about how to burn fat by building muscle.

Weight lifting workouts really strengthen specific muscle groups and build muscle. This can actually lead to an increase in weight, particularly if it is not accompanied by fat burning exercises and targeted nutrition adjustments.

A balanced “weight lifting workout” should consist of a cycle through different actual weight lifting exercises that are changed up with fat burning exercises like jogging or bicycle. It is also important to give the different muscle groups time to build and “digest” the strengthening exercises for certain time intervals before addressing them again with intensity.

It is also important to consider your overall workout goals and the time that you have available to put into the routines. Someone who wants to develop an overall fitness from scratch with a 3-day per week time availability will end up with a significantly different workout plan than a person who is in good shape and wants to build more strength in 5 workouts per week.

Most people who are looking to lose weight and gain better overall conditioning and fitness will get best results with a fitness workout routine that matches about 2 parts of fat burning exercises with one part of muscle and strength building.

This means if you are looking at a 3 day regiment, you can do two days of fat burning and conditioning, and one day of weight lifting. If you have the time to work out on five days per week, you can do three days of fat burning and conditioning, and two days of weight lifting and strength building. For best results switch between fat burning and weight lifting days.

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About the author - Thaya Kareeson

Thaya Kareeson is the Founder and Creator of TweakFit.com. After his sustainable success in losing 45 lbs. and 18% body fat, Thaya launched TweakFit.com hoping to help others improve their physical fitness level. Read more about Thaya on the about page.

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2 Comments

  1. Sep said,

    What the hell, not true at all! What a vague article. First of all, you can lose weight with any weight lifting workout. As long as you eat the same calories as you burn, or less, then you’ll lose fat (muscle growth may not be as much if you eat less). Adding muscle also increases your metabolism, meaning you can actually eat more without gaining fat.

    Finally, it all depends on the workout. I do full-body exercises 3 times a week. These are heavy, compound exercises that target a number of muscle groups (as opposed to isolation exercises). There’s no point in doing such exercises once a week. If I did it 3 times a week, which is what I’m supposed to do, I can’t do cardio more than once or max twice per week, as it will lead to early fatigue.

    My fried lost 25lb by weight lifting 4 days a week (isolation) + cardio once a week (high-intensity interval training, which seems to be the best kind of cardio for retaining muscles), and sprinting for 5-8 minutes once per week.

    on December 8, 2009 at 11:48 am
  2. Thaya Kareeson said,

    @Sep: Thanks for stopping by and commenting. I really appreciate it!

    I totally agree that ‘you can lose weight with any weight lifting workout,’ but that really depends on how each person’s body works and which exercises they are performing (Like you said, isolation exercises are not really that useful). I shall write an article about the compound exercises I do in my routines. I personally have lost a lot of “fat” weight, by building the right kind of muscles (see my other article on how to burn fat by building muscle) and doing a good amount of fat burning exercises.

    Some people such as wrestlers who need to weigh-in and meet a certain weight class. These people will not only have to worry about fat weight, but also muscle weight. If their goal is really to just lose weight itself they have to maintain a good balance of cardio and weight lifting to make sure they do not gain any weight, tip the scale, and get disqualified from wrestling.

    on December 8, 2009 at 12:18 pm

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