Does Running on a Treadmill Burn More Calories Than Running Outside?

I still remember stepping off a gym treadmill after a hard five-mile run, feeling pretty smug about myself, and seeing the screen flash something like “600 calories burned.” I felt wrecked in a good way. A couple days later I ran outside. Same distance. Same kind of effort. Heart thumping, shirt soaked. But my watch said I burned way fewer calories.

And I remember just staring at it like… wait, what?

Same effort. Totally different numbers. So which one was lying? The treadmill? My watch? Me?

As a coach and just a normal runner who spends way too much time thinking about this stuff, I hear this story all the time. People ask, “Is the treadmill inflating calories?” or “Do outdoor runs actually burn more?” And honestly, I went back and forth on this myself.

Early on, I crushed treadmill workouts in cool, air-conditioned gyms and thought I was flying. Then I took that same pace outside and got humbled real fast. Same speed on paper, way harder in real life. That was my first clue something wasn’t lining up.

So yeah, I got curious. And annoyed. And I started digging into the science and comparing my own runs. I coach people who train indoors and outdoors, and I wanted a straight answer—for them and for me. Is a treadmill mile actually the same as an outdoor mile when it comes to calories?

Why Treadmill vs Outdoor Calories Confuse Everyone

Part of the mess is that treadmill calorie numbers are usually just guesses. Unless you’ve entered your weight and settings perfectly—and even then—it’s still an estimate. A lot of machines assume some “average” person and don’t fully account for incline or how fit you actually are.

Outside, it’s chaos by comparison. Wind. Tiny hills you don’t even notice. Heat. Cold. Humidity. All of that changes how much energy you’re burning. And your GPS watch? That’s guessing too, using formulas based on pace and heart rate.

So you do two runs that feel the same, look down, and the numbers don’t match. Cue confusion.

I’ve heard every take in the book. Some runners swear treadmills are “cheating” because there’s no wind and the belt helps move your feet. Others say, very confidently, “Just set it to 1% and it’s exactly the same as outside.”

Annoying answer, but it’s true: both sides are kind of right. At 0%, treadmills are a bit easier. Around 1%, the effort lines up pretty closely with outdoor running. If you don’t know that, it’s really easy to start doubting your training or thinking you’re getting weaker or stronger when you’re not.

How Calories Are Really Determined (Science & Physiology Deep Dive)

This isn’t just gym folklore. Researchers have actually tested this stuff. The big, boring, repeatable finding is that when you set a treadmill to about a 1% incline, calorie burn is essentially the same as running outside on flat ground at the same speed.

That small incline fills in for what’s missing indoors—wind resistance and little terrain changes that add up outside.

At 0% incline, treadmill running is a bit easier. The belt helps a little. No air drag. You use slightly less energy at the same pace. That’s why coaches keep hammering the 1% rule. It’s not magic. It’s just compensating for what’s gone.

And anecdotally? It checks out for me. When I run at a certain pace on the treadmill at 1% grade, my heart rate and effort feel almost identical to running that pace outside. Same breathing. Same “yeah, this is work” feeling in my legs. That’s usually my gut check.

How to Use Treadmills Without Killing Your Confidence

Here’s how I handle treadmill running so it doesn’t mess with my head.

  1. Use a slight incline. This is the big one. Around 1% is my default. Easy runs, steady runs, tempos—most of the time, it’s sitting there. If someone’s brand new or coming back from injury, I’ll tell them to start at 0.5% and work up. But long-term, 1% is home base. You barely notice it after a while, but when you go back outside, nothing feels shockingly harder.
  2. Trust effort more than the calorie number. Your body has no idea what the treadmill screen says. It only knows effort. Breathing. Heart rate. How cooked you feel. I watch those things indoors the same way I do outside. If my breathing and heart rate match my usual easy run or tempo effort, I know I’m doing the right work. The calorie display is just noise. Sometimes I’ll wear a heart rate strap to double-check, but I don’t obsess over it.
  3. Match pace, but don’t get rigid. I’ll usually set the treadmill close to my normal outdoor pace. If I run 10-minute miles outside, around 6.0 mph at 1% should feel familiar. But if it doesn’t? I adjust. I don’t panic if the treadmill and GPS disagree by a little. Time and effort matter more than exact numbers.
  4. Don’t baby treadmill workouts. You can do real training indoors. I’ve done it plenty. Missed track session because of weather? Treadmill. Intervals, tempos, even hill work—you can make it all work. I’ve done tempos at 1% incline and compared them to outdoor tempos, and the heart rate and fatigue lined up almost perfectly. That convinced me a treadmill session, done right, absolutely counts.

And honestly, I’ve watched runners change their whole mindset after giving the treadmill a fair shot. I had one athlete who hated it. Hated. Swore treadmill miles didn’t count. One rainy week forced her inside. I told her to set it to 1%, run her normal pace, and stop overthinking it. A few runs later she admitted, through gritted teeth, that it felt legit. Same effort. Same tired legs.

Now she uses the treadmill when she needs to. No guilt. No mental gymnastics. Just another tool.

And that’s really the point. The treadmill isn’t lying to you. It just needs to be used right.

What Runners Get Wrong About Treadmill Calories

I see runners mess this up in two opposite ways. One camp treats treadmill miles like they’re fake money. Monopoly miles. Don’t count. The other camp lives on the treadmill all winter and then acts surprised when spring hits and outdoor running feels way harder than expected.

The biggest, most common screw-up is doing every treadmill run at 0% incline and then wondering why the road suddenly feels brutal. I had an athlete do exactly that. All winter, flat treadmill, nice and controlled. First outdoor run in March and he texts me like something’s wrong with him. Legs dead. Breathing off. Pace feels impossible. Nothing was wrong—he just hadn’t been matching effort. We added a 1% incline to his treadmill runs and, no joke, within a week his outdoor runs felt normal again. Same runner. Same fitness. Just fixed the mismatch.

The other big misunderstanding is treating the treadmill calorie number like it’s gospel. It’s not. It’s a guess. Sometimes a bad one. If the number is high, it doesn’t mean you crushed some superhuman workout. If it’s low, it doesn’t mean you wasted your time. I keep telling runners the same thing: pay attention to your body. Breathing. Heart rate. How cooked you feel after. I’ve had people run the same effort on a treadmill and outside and their bodies reacted the same way. Same fatigue. Same recovery. That pretty much kills the whole “treadmill is cheating” argument. Your body doesn’t get tricked by a belt.

Where the 1% Rule Has Limits

Now, the 1% rule isn’t some sacred law of running. It works really well for most of us, but it’s not perfect in every situation. At very fast speeds—like legit elite speeds—even a 1% incline might not fully replace wind resistance. That’s why you’ll see some experts suggest 2% for those cases. But let’s be honest, that’s not most runners reading this. For everyday runners, 1% is more than close enough.

Another thing worth saying out loud: treadmill calorie displays are sketchy by nature. If you don’t input your weight, the machine just assumes some average person. It has no idea how efficient you are as a runner. No clue. I treat those calorie numbers like weather forecasts. Ballpark, maybe useful, but not something I build my identity around. The only thing that really matters is whether the run did what it was supposed to do.

Outside running has stuff a treadmill can’t recreate perfectly. Headwinds. Real hills. Heat that feels like you’re running inside a microwave. Cold that makes your lungs sting. Those things absolutely raise energy cost. If an outdoor run burns more calories than a treadmill run, it’s usually because the conditions were tougher—not because treadmills are fake.

Then there’s the mental side, which doesn’t get talked about enough. For me, treadmill running can feel harder upstairs, in the head. The boredom. Staring at the wall. Watching seconds crawl by. I’ve had runs where my heart rate was fine but I felt more tired just because I wanted it to be over. I’ve also seen runners subtly change their stride without realizing it because running in place feels weird. If you hate the treadmill, that hate can make it feel harder than it physically is. That’s not physiology—that’s psychology.

These days, I use both without guilt. I still prefer being outside. Always will. But when the weather is trash or time is tight, the treadmill saves the day. I set the incline. I keep the effort honest. I don’t overthink it. I know I’m getting the same fitness out of it. A mile is still a mile, whether I’m moving through a park or staring at the same wall for 40 minutes.

FAQ

  1. Why does my treadmill say I burned more calories than my watch (or the other way around)?
    Different math. Treadmills usually use a generic formula and don’t know much about you. Your watch might use your profile and heart rate. Neither one is perfect. They’re both estimating. One isn’t lying—they’re just guessing in different ways.
  2. Should I always run with a 1% incline on the treadmill?
    Not always. It’s a guideline, not a commandment. For most normal runs, a slight incline helps match outdoor effort. For an easy recovery jog, you might leave it flat. For hill work, you might crank it up. But if you want treadmill miles to feel like outdoor miles most of the time, around 1% works well.
  3. Does running outside always burn more calories than running on a treadmill?
    No. On flat ground in normal weather, a mile is a mile—as long as the treadmill has a slight incline. Outdoor runs only burn more when conditions are tougher. Big hills. Strong wind. Heat. Cold. That’s not magic—that’s extra work.
  4. Are treadmill miles real miles?
    Yes. Full stop. Your body doesn’t know where you’re running. Muscles are working. Energy is being burned. Fitness is being built. Treadmill miles count. Always have.

FINAL COACHING TAKEAWAY

Treadmill versus outside isn’t good versus bad. It’s just different ways of doing the same work. Set the treadmill to around 1% incline, keep your pace honest, and match the effort you’d use outside. That’s it. Don’t let a generous calorie number or some tough-guy running buddy telling you it’s “cheating” mess with your head. The work counts. Every time. Whether you’re chasing a sunset down the road or watching the timer tick on a screen, a run is a run.

Can You Lose 25 Pounds in 2 Weeks? The Honest Truth (And What Actually Works Instead)

I’m gonna say the quiet part out loud — because someone needs to.

Losing 25 pounds in two weeks sounds exciting.

Motivating.

Like a clean slate.

But for almost everyone? It’s a trap.

Not because you’re weak.

Not because you “don’t want it bad enough.”

But because biology doesn’t care about deadlines, weddings, or beach vacations.

I’ve watched people chase that number with extreme cuts, endless cardio, zero carbs, and pure willpower.

And yeah… the scale drops fast at first. Then energy tanks. Hunger explodes. And the weight comes right back — sometimes with friends.

So instead of selling you a fantasy, let’s talk about what’s actually possible in two weeks, what’s smart, and how to use that time to kickstart real fat loss without wrecking your body or your head.

Sounds like a good idea?

Let’s get to it.


So What Can You Expect?

If you’re starting out with a high body weight and follow an aggressive-but-safe cut, you might drop 6–10 pounds in two weeks, with a good portion being fat and water.

That’s solid.

That’s progress.

Could someone drop 15–20 in extreme cases? Yeah—but we’re talking very high starting weight and borderline starvation-level intake.

And if they cut water right before weigh-in (like fighters do), they might hit 25 on the scale… but again, not real fat loss.


Instead of Starving, Try a Smarter Jumpstart

Here’s how you can dial in the same intensity, without burning yourself out:

  • Cut out processed carbs and sodium for 3–4 days: You’ll shed water fast and de-bloat. Great for a “clean slate.”
  • Run a solid deficit (~500–1000 cal/day): Not a starvation diet, but enough to see movement. Think ~1500–1600 cal/day for women, ~1800–2000 for men (depending on size/activity).
  • Hydrate like crazy: More water = less bloating. Aim for 8–10 cups minimum.
  • Train smart: Mix strength and cardio 5 days a week. Walk or stretch on off days. Build fitness, don’t just sweat for punishment.
  • Don’t panic after: Once the 2 weeks are over, ease back into more calories gradually. If you binge because you feel deprived, it’ll all come back. Plan your transition.

Why Crash Diets Backfire

People crash, burn, and bounce back heavier than before.

They slash calories to the bone, feel drained, and then binge when their willpower breaks. That’s not weakness—it’s biology.

You don’t need a cabbage soup diet. You need a plan that gets you leaner and keeps you sane.

 

2-Week Jumpstart: A Smarter Plan

Here’s a blueprint for a focused 14-day reset. It’s not “easy,” but it’s effective and realistic.

You’ll eat high-protein, move daily, and feel better—not starved.

Calorie Targets:

  • Women: ~1500/day
  • Men: ~1800/day
    (Tweak slightly based on size, hunger, and workout intensity.)

Macro Split:

  • Protein: 40%
  • Carbs: 30% (from fruits, veggies, whole grains)
  • Fats: 30% (mostly healthy fats)

Daily Structure:

  • 3 meals + 1 snack
  • Hydration: 8–10 cups water
  • No alcohol, no sugary drinks
  • No eating after 8:00 p.m.
  • Sleep: 7–8 hours minimum
  • Light morning routine + optional fasted cardio

Weekly Training Plan:

  • 2 Cardio Days: 1 steady state (long walk, easy jog) and 1 interval-based (run/walk, sprints, HIIT)
  • 2 Strength Days: Full-body circuits (squats, pushups, lunges, rows, planks)
  • 1 Combo Day: Short strength + light cardio or a sport/activity (hike, cycle)
  • 2 Active Rest Days: Walk, yoga, mobility work

Sample Day Breakdown:

7:00 a.m. – Wake up, hydrate
7:30 a.m. – Moderate cardio (fast walk, jog, 45 mins)
8:30 a.m. – Breakfast:

  • Veggie omelette (3 eggs or 1 egg + 2 whites)
  • ½ cup berries
  • Coffee (minimal sugar)
    (~350 cal, 25g protein)

10:30 a.m. – Snack:

  • Apple + 1 tbsp peanut butter
    (~150 cal)

1:00 p.m. – Lunch:

  • Grilled chicken salad
  • Greens, avocado, balsamic + olive oil
  • Add quinoa or slice of bread if needed
    (~400–500 cal)

3:30 p.m. – Snack (Pre-workout):

  • 5 oz Greek yogurt + berries + 6 almonds
    (~150 cal)

5:30 p.m. – Strength Workout (30–40 min circuit)
6:30 p.m. – Optional shake or banana (if needed)
7:00 p.m. – Dinner:

  • Grilled salmon
  • Roasted veggies + cauliflower rice
  • Optional sweet potato (for carb replenishment)
    (~450 cal)

8:00 p.m. – Herbal tea + stretch
10:30 p.m. – Lights out

Total: ~1500–1600 cal, 120g+ protein, low/mod carbs, smart fats


Repeat + Adjust

This plan is sustainable enough to repeat or tweak into a longer cycle.

Don’t obsess over perfect numbers.

Focus on:

  • Consistency
  • Protein intake
  • Recovery
  • Managing hunger
  • Building habits

Weekly Workout Structure 

Let’s keep it simple and structured. This weekly setup checks all the boxes—cardio, strength, recovery, and fun. Just enough balance to build strength, burn fat, and stay sane:

  • Mon: Moderate Cardio (45 min walk, run, bike) + Core (planks, leg lifts, mountain climbers)
  • Tue: Strength Training (full-body circuit – push, pull, squat, hinge – 40 mins)
  • Wed: Interval Cardio – 30 mins HIIT (e.g., 1 min fast, 1 min slow. Rinse and repeat)
  • Thu: Strength again – either full-body or split (upper/lower) if Tuesday hit you hard
  • Fri: Active Fun – sport, long walk, trail ride, boxing class… just make it fun
  • Sat: Rest (but hey, a little yoga or walk won’t hurt)
  • Sun: Chill day – mobility work, gentle hike, or foam rolling in front of the TV

This schedule works because it’s flexible. If life happens, shift days around. Just don’t skip two days in a row unless your body’s begging for it.


Meal Prep Game Plan 

Want to stick to your nutrition? Make it easy. That means prepping. Here’s how I do it—and how you can too:

  • Grill a batch of chicken, fish, or lean beef on Sunday. Lock it down for the week.
  • Pre-chop veggies so salads and stir-fries take minutes, not hours.
  • Stock protein go-tos: Greek yogurt, eggs, protein powder, tuna packets, hard-boiled eggs.
  • Rotate 2–3 meals per category so you don’t burn out:
    • Breakfasts: Omelets, oatmeal, or smoothies
    • Lunches: Chicken salad, turkey lettuce wraps, tuna + veggies
    • Dinners: Salmon, chicken stir-fry, lean chili, egg roll in a bowl

Use herbs and spices like garlic, chili, or Italian blends to keep things tasty without loading up on sauces and calories.

Want to win this game? Keep your fridge prepped like it’s game day. Don’t give yourself a reason to grab junk.


2-Week Results: What to Expect

Let’s be straight: this plan ain’t magic—but it works if you do.

Most people see 4–8 pounds lost in 2 weeks—more if they were eating high-carb, salty junk before (hello water weight).

You might drop an inch or two, notice your energy climbing, and maybe even see clearer skin or better sleep.

This plan creates a big calorie deficit (1000+ for some).

If you’re feeling weak, dizzy, or ravenous, bump your intake slightly—add 100–200 clean calories (maybe a handful of nuts, an extra egg, or a bit more meat). This is supposed to challenge you, not break you.

By week 3 or 4, feel free to add a bit more food, introduce a refeed day, or switch up meals for variety.

It works because it’s structured, not because it’s extreme.

Final Word 

If you’ve made it this far—first off, hats off. That tells me you’re serious about making real change. You’ve got the plan now. The roadmap. The tools. The science. It’s all here.

But let me give it to you straight:
The next part? That’s on you.

This journey—losing 25 pounds—it’s not some unreachable dream. It’s absolutely doable. I’ve coached people who’ve done it, and I’ve done it myself. But it’s not going to fall into your lap. You’ve got to work for it. Not with perfection. With consistency. With heart.

Be Relentless

That doesn’t mean go beast mode 24/7. It means when you trip, you get back up. Bad day? No biggie. Bad week? Okay, regroup. But don’t quit. This is about getting up one more time than you fall.

Relentless means keeping your eyes on the goal when motivation is dead and buried. It means showing up when it’s not sexy—when no one’s watching, when your muscles ache, when the scale hasn’t moved in a week.

That quote I live by? “Success is the sum of small efforts, repeated day in and day out.”

That’s it. That’s the secret.

Every walk you take, every smart meal you eat, every single time you pass on the late-night snack—that’s a brick. Stack those bricks and soon you’ve built something solid. A new body. A new mindset. A new you.

Be Patient

We live in a world where we can binge entire seasons in a night and get packages same-day. But your body? It doesn’t care about convenience. It changes on its own damn schedule.

Some weeks the fat comes off fast. Other weeks? Nada. That’s normal. The scale lies. Water weight, hormones, soreness—it all messes with the numbers. But the work still counts.

Zoom out. Where could you be in 3 months? In 6? If you don’t quit, you’ll get there.

Most people give up right before the magic happens. Don’t be one of them.

Take a deep breath, trust the process, and play the long game. You’re not just dropping weight—you’re building a life that keeps it off.

Be Kind to Yourself

Listen, this isn’t about punishing yourself for what you used to eat or how you look today. It’s about finally deciding to take care of yourself like someone who matters. Because you do.

So let’s kill the trash talk:
“I’m gross.”
“I have no discipline.”
“I’m so far gone.”

Stop. You wouldn’t say that to a friend—so don’t say it to yourself.

Instead, show some damn respect to the person in the mirror. You’re trying. You’re showing up. That’s huge. Be proud of that. Celebrate the effort—not just the result.

Skipped the extra fries today? Win.
Got in a walk when you didn’t feel like it? Victory.
Said no to dessert even though you were stressed? Huge.

This is the real stuff. The daily battles that add up to change.

Also, don’t wait to start living until you’re “at goal.” Do things that make you feel good now. Go out. Dress up. Take photos. Laugh. Love yourself enough to be happy where you are, even as you work on where you’re going.

Does Running Every Day Help You Lose Weight?

I see this one all the time.

Someone starts a run streak and quietly thinks, “Alright… this is it. Daily runs. Weight’s gonna melt off.”

And look — I get it. I thought the same thing years ago.

Run more, burn more, problem solved. Simple math, right?

Except it doesn’t always work that way.

I’ve seen runners who dropped serious weight while running every single day.

I’ve also seen runners who did the exact same thing… and gained weight.

Same streak. Same effort.

Totally different result.

And that’s usually where frustration kicks in.

Here’s the part nobody wants to talk about: running daily doesn’t override your habits the other 23 hours of the day. It exposes them.

Your eating. Your sleep. Your stress. How hard you’re running. How much you’re “rewarding” yourself because you earned it. The streak shines a big spotlight on all of that.

So yeah — daily running can help with weight loss. It can also stall it. Or even backfire if you’re not paying attention.

This isn’t about killing your motivation or talking you out of a streak. It’s about setting expectations so you don’t do everything “right” on paper… and still feel stuck.

Let’s talk about how this actually works — runner to runner — without the hype.

Calories In vs. Calories Out Still Matters

Let’s say your 1-mile run burns about 100 calories.

You do that every day, cool — 700 extra calories burned per week.

But if you grab an extra muffin or reward yourself with dessert because “you earned it”?

That deficit disappears.

Weight loss only happens when you burn more than you eat — even if you’re running daily.

Your Hunger Might Go Through the Roof

Especially when your mileage ticks up.

Your body’s repairing, rebuilding, and screaming “FEED ME.”

That’s fine — but if you overdo it, you’re eating back your runs and then some.

Ever finish a long run and clean out your pantry? Yeah, been there.

Cortisol and Stress Can Stall Fat Loss

Running every day, especially hard or high-volume stuff, can raise your stress hormones — mainly cortisol. Chronically high cortisol? Linked to fat storage, especially in the belly.

One Healthline piece put it bluntly:

“Chronically elevated cortisol levels may promote overeating and weight gain.”

So, if your run streak is running you into the ground, it might backfire on fat loss.

Early Weight Gain is Common — But It’s Not Fat

New runners sometimes gain a couple pounds at first. That’s water retention (muscles hold more water while they repair) or a bump in glycogen storage. Sometimes you gain a bit of muscle too — especially in the legs.

It might freak you out on the scale — but it’s not a bad thing.

You Can’t Outrun a Junk Diet

I hate clichés, but this one’s true.

Even if you’re crushing a daily run, if your food’s mostly processed garbage or loaded with sugar, you’re probably not losing fat.

A British Journal of Sports Medicine editorial even said:

“Focusing on exercise alone is misleading. Diet plays a bigger role in weight loss.”

So think of running as one tool, not the whole toolbox.

The Upside: Done Right, It Does Work

I’ve seen it over and over again — folks who start streaking, clean up their diet, and see major changes.

Daily running builds structure. It keeps your brain in the game. That alone helps with diet discipline.

So if you wanna lose weight?

  • Keep your runs easy enough to recover.
  • Watch your portions.
  • Sleep well.
  • Don’t reward every run with extra food.
  • Stay consistent — but also smart.

Tips for Losing Weight While Streaking 

Let’s cut to the chase: running every day can help with weight loss—but only if you don’t out-eat your efforts.

Just because you’re logging daily miles doesn’t mean you’re cleared for donut duty.

I’ve seen it too many times—runners start streaking, feel invincible, and then… boom. Weight goes nowhere or even climbs.

Rule #1: Keep That Diet Tight

You gotta watch what you’re eating, plain and simple.

  • Eat for your goals, not your cravings.
  • Focus on protein and fiber—they fill you up and keep the snack monster away.
  • Hydrate like crazy—a lot of what feels like hunger is just you being dry.

And for the love of running shoes, don’t treat the streak like a license to eat junk.

A 300-calorie donut can erase the calorie burn from a solid 3-mile run. That hurts. I’ve been there.


Track What Matters

Don’t just run and hope for the best—track something:

  • Weigh yourself a couple times a week (same time of day, same conditions)
  • Or track waist size, progress pics, clothes fit—anything to keep you honest

If nothing’s changing after a few weeks? Don’t panic—but adjust your intake. Streak or not, you still need a calorie deficit to drop weight.


Sleep & Stress: The Hidden Saboteurs

If you’re constantly tired, wired, or stressed to the gills, your body won’t let go of fat. That’s just how it works.

Running every day adds stress, even if it’s “good” stress. Stack that with poor sleep and high life-stress, and boom—your hormones work against you. Cortisol goes up. Appetite goes up. Progress stalls.

If after a month of streaking you’re not losing weight—or worse, gaining—it might be time to hit pause.

Take a rest day. Swap in a walk or cross-train. Cut the junk, tighten your diet, and reboot smarter.

Bottom Line:

Running daily can help—but it’s not a free pass.

  • Keep the calories in check
  • Track progress
  • Sleep like it’s your job
  • Don’t let the streak become an excuse

You’re not just running for the streak—you’re running for the bigger picture. Stay focused on that.

And if you want a deeper dive, I’ve got a full weight-loss running guide with food tips and common traps—hit me up and I’ll send it over.

Do You Really Need 10,000 Steps a Day? The Truth About Walking for Weight Loss

Let’s get one thing straight right away: 10,000 steps isn’t magic.

It’s not a fitness law or some scientifically perfect number carved into stone.*

It’s a motivational target someone came up with decades ago to get people moving—and honestly, it worked.

But it doesn’t mean you’re a failure if your watch says 7,843 instead of 10,000.

I used to obsess over that number.

If I hit 8K, I’d beat myself up, feeling like I somehow wasted the day.

Sounds ridiculous now, but back then, it felt real.

Until I finally realized something important: 8,000 steps is still miles of movement.

It’s effort.

It’s intention.

It’s health.

This guide breaks down the real math, the real expectations, and the real habits that make walking a quiet but powerful fat-loss strategy.

Can Walking 10,000 Steps a Day Help You Lose Weight?

Short answer? Yes.

But let’s not sugarcoat it—walking can help you drop weight, but it’s not some magic formula.

It’s more like your quiet weapon.

No gym bros. No fancy routines. Just you, your legs, and some grit.

Now, the math still matters: If you’re burning more calories than you eat, you’ll lose weight.

That old “calories in vs. calories out” truth isn’t going anywhere.

Walking 10,000 steps a day helps tip that balance—especially if you’re not undoing it later with double scoops of ice cream (been there, no judgment).

Let’s break it down real simple:

  • Most people burn about 30–40 calories per 1,000 steps.
  • That adds up to 300–400 calories for 10k steps.
  • Heavier or faster walkers will be on the higher end of that range.

(Example: A 150-pound person might burn ~400 calories from 10,000 steps. A 200-pound person? More like 500+—because moving more weight takes more effort.)

That doesn’t sound huge in a day, but over a week, that’s 2,100–3,500 calories.

And guess what? That’s roughly one pound of fat.

So, if you’re consistent, you could lose about a pound a week with walking—if you don’t eat back the calories. That’s the catch.

Why? Because it’s easy to accidentally eat a bit more when you feel like you “earned it.”

“I walked today. I deserve that cookie.”

Sound familiar? I’ve said it too.

Sometimes your body gets too comfy—burns fewer calories doing the same walk.

Or your eating subtly creeps up.

But here’s the upside: walking doesn’t wreck your hunger like hardcore training can.

Many people find that long walks don’t spike appetite—some even feel less hungry after.

That’s likely tied to better blood sugar and energy regulation from steady movement.

How to Actually Lose Weight with 10,000 Steps a Day

Let’s turn this from “nice idea” to “real results.”

  • Be Consistent. Once a week isn’t going to cut it. Aim for most days, not perfect days. It’s the steady habit that burns fat—not random sprints.
  • Don’t Eat It Back. You don’t need to starve. Just don’t go wild with the “reward” meals. Walking should support your healthy choices, not cancel them out. “I walked, so now I’ll fuel up right” → is the mindset shift that works.
  • Use NEAT to Your Advantage. NEAT = all the small stuff you do that burns calories (like pacing during calls, climbing stairs, walking to grab coffee). Your 10,000 steps = NEAT gold. It’s low-key, sustainable fat-burning.
  • Track What Matters. If weight loss stalls, look closer. Are you snacking more? Walking slower? You might need to add short hills, carry a backpack, or mix in some jogging bursts. Or maybe it’s time to cut the evening snack habit.

And let’s be real: if you’re dropping weight too fast or feeling wiped out, that’s not a win. It’s a sign to refuel smarter.

Can Running Give You Abs? Here’s the Real Way to Burn Belly Fat and Build a Strong Core

Let’s be real: most people don’t start running just for six-pack abs… but at some point, we’ve all wondered, “Can running actually carve out my core?”

Short answer: yes — but not in the way Instagram makes it look.

Running isn’t a magic ab machine.

It won’t melt belly fat overnight or give you a shredded midsection by itself.

What it will do is crank up your fat burn, build a rock-solid core, and give you the engine you need to reveal the muscle underneath… if you train the right way.

I learned this the same way most runners do: the hard way.

There was a time when I was running tons of miles but still pinching the same stubborn belly fat.

I thought the problem was effort — so I ran harder.

More miles.

More sweat.

More everything.

But nothing changed until I stopped trying to outrun my diet and started training smarter.

Once I mixed different types of runs, added real core work, dialed in my nutrition, and actually slept like a human being? My body changed.

Not just my abs — everything.

Stronger posture.

Better running form.

More confidence.

And yes, a tighter, sharper midsection.

So if you’re here because you want abs — cool. You’re in the right place.

But if you’re here because you want to feel stronger, run better, and build a body you’re proud of?

Even better.

This guide will show you the exact system to make running work with your core, not against it.

Let’s break it down — step by step.

1. Run Often, Change the Pace

If you want to burn fat and get those abs to pop, you’ve gotta run regularly — not just when motivation hits.

Aim for cardio most days.

Mix it up:

  • Easy jogs for fat burn and recovery
  • One or two sessions a week of sprints or tempo runs to crank up the burn

This combo keeps your engine revving. For me, fartlek runs (you know, those “run hard till that tree” kind of workouts) torch calories and fire up the core without needing a gym.

Don’t worry about being perfect.

Just stay consistent.

Three to five runs a week beats one all-out effort followed by four days on the couch.

2. Hills = Free Ab Work

Once a week (or every other), find a hill and run it like it owes you money.

Why? When you run uphill, your body naturally tightens the core for balance and power.

It’s like sneaking in a core workout without even thinking about it. I’ve done hill repeats that left my abs more sore than my legs.

Bonus: when you head back to flat ground, you’ll feel like you’ve got an engine upgrade.

3. Treat Core Work Like Training (Not a Bonus)

Two to three times a week, carve out 10–20 minutes for core training. No skipping. No excuses.

I’m talking:

  • Planks (hold till it burns)
  • Side planks
  • Crunches, sit-ups
  • Leg raises (lying or hanging)
  • Bicycle crunches
  • Russian twists

Once you get stronger, add weight — hold a dumbbell during sit-ups or grab a plate for twists.

These moves don’t just build muscle — they help your running form too

. A strong core keeps your posture solid and reduces the wobble during long runs. Trust me, I’ve seen athletes fix back pain and shave minutes off their race time just by tightening up the midsection.

4. Eat Like You Want to See Your Abs

This one’s not sexy, but it’s the truth: you can’t out-train a bad diet.

Start simple:

  • Load up on veggies, lean protein, and real carbs
  • Cut back on sugar, packaged junk, and heavy drinks
  • Watch the alcohol — sneaky calories, zero benefit for your abs

If you’re not in a calorie deficit, the fat won’t budge. I’ve had to log meals for a week or two to spot my blind spots — like those “healthy” smoothies that were 800 calories deep.

Keep protein high for recovery and satiety. Stay hydrated.

And if you’re eating a big meal at 10 p.m. every night, don’t be surprised when the belly stays bloated.

5. Be Patient (Even When It Sucks)

This part? It’s the grind. Abs don’t show up in two weeks.

Sometimes it takes months.

Track more than just the mirror:

  • Are your clothes fitting better?
  • Can you hold a plank longer?
  • Is your pace improving?

If the scale’s not moving but your runs are sharper and your mood’s better — you’re still winning.

But if nothing’s changing after 6–8 weeks, it’s time to tweak. Maybe that nightly dessert is sneaking in too many calories.

Or maybe you need one more hard run per week.

Little adjustments matter. So don’t panic — just course-correct.

6. Don’t Sleep on Sleep (Literally)

You can do everything right… and still mess it up if you’re sleeping like trash.

Lack of rest boosts cortisol (the stress hormone), and that’s linked to belly fat. Aim for 7–8 hours. No screens in bed. Let your body recharge.

And don’t forget mental stress. It’s a silent progress killer. Whether it’s yoga, journaling, or just a chill walk after dinner — find what helps you stay calm.

I use my evening runs as my “me time.” They clear my head better than any app ever could.

The Real Formula: Train Hard + Eat Smart + Stay Sane

Let’s get real: abs aren’t built by crunches alone. They show up when you…

  • Burn fat through cardio
  • Strengthen your core muscles
  • Eat like an adult
  • Sleep like it matters
  • And keep showing up

That’s the real combo.

The Bigger Picture: Abs Are Cool, But They’re Not the Whole Story

I’ll be honest — I’ve been there. Checking the mirror every day. Pinching belly fat. Wondering why, even though I was running my butt off, the abs weren’t showing up.

But over time, I realized that chasing abs too hard messes with your head.

Why did you start running in the first place? Probably to feel better, get stronger, and maybe stress less. Those things still matter.

Running gives you energy, confidence, and grit. It teaches you to show up — even when it’s hot, raining, or you’re tired. It’s a hell of a teacher.

So don’t lose the joy chasing a look.

The Takeaway?

Run for your health.

Lift for strength.

Eat for energy.

Sleep like it’s sacred.

And let the abs be a byproduct, not your only mission.

If you’re doing the work — the results will come. Might take time. Might not be a six-pack. But it’ll be progress.

And honestly? Feeling strong, clear-headed, and proud of the body you live in beats trying to copy some fitness influencer’s filtered photos.

So now I’ll ask you:

What’s your current mile time? What’s your next goal — abs, 10K, or just more energy?

Drop it in the comments or jot it in your training log — but keep showing up. That’s the real win.

The Diet Reality Check: Why Running Alone Won’t Reveal Your Abs (And What Actually Will)

Let’s get one thing straight before we go any further: you can’t outrun a bad diet.

I wish you could.

I tried.

I’ve logged 70-mile weeks, crushed workouts, sweated like a maniac — and still couldn’t outpace the donuts and late-night burgers I was inhaling.

My fitness was solid.

My mileage was high.

My abs? Nowhere to be seen.

If you’re running your heart out but still wondering why your midsection isn’t tightening up, you’re not broken — you’re just eating in a way that cancels out all your hard work.

Here’s the truth nobody wants to admit: your diet is the deciding factor when it comes to getting lean.

Running helps.

Strength training helps.

But if your nutrition is all over the place, your abs will stay in permanent hiding mode.

The good news? You don’t have to starve, cut out carbs, or live off sad salads.

You just need to eat with intention — fuel your training, keep a slight calorie deficit, hit your protein, and stop sabotaging yourself with random snacks and “reward meals.”

This is the diet reality check I wish someone had given me years ago. Let’s break it down.

1. Keep a Slight Calorie Deficit — But Don’t Starve

You don’t need to live in misery on lettuce and tears.

Just aim to eat a little less than you burn.

That gentle calorie gap — around 300 to 500 fewer calories a day — can help you lose around half a pound to a pound a week.

Not flashy, but it adds up. And it’s way more sustainable than crash dieting.

I know.

If you’re running a lot, your hunger can punch you in the face. I’ve had long-run days where I could eat a whole pizza and still feel snacky.

So plan ahead — carry good snacks, build meals that fill you up, and don’t let yourself hit that “screw it, I’m starving” wall.

2. Choose Foods That Work With You, Not Against You

Stick to the stuff that gives your body what it actually needs. I’m talking:

  • Lean proteins like chicken, fish, tofu, eggs
  • Loads of veggies and fruits
  • Whole grains like oats, brown rice, quinoa
  • Healthy fats — avocados, nuts, olive oil

These foods fuel your training, help you recover, and keep you full. It’s not about eating “perfect” — I still eat chocolate.

But every time you go heavy on soda, fries, or ultra-processed junk, you’re working against your running.

There’s a reason people say “abs are made in the kitchen.”

I once coached a guy running 60+ miles a week… but he lived on snacks, sugary drinks, and takeout.

No visible abs.

No body comp progress.

He cleaned up his meals, and boom — change happened fast.

3. Get Enough Protein. No, Seriously.

Protein is the real MVP if you’re trying to lean out and keep muscle. It helps you recover, keeps you full, and makes your body more efficient at burning fat.

General rule: shoot for 0.7 to 1 gram of protein per pound of body weight. So if you’re around 150 lbs, that’s roughly 105–150 grams per day.

That might sound like a lot, but once you get the hang of it — eggs, Greek yogurt, protein shakes, chicken, tuna, whatever — it’s totally doable.

I personally include protein in every meal. If I skip it, I feel like I’m running on fumes. Also, it’s been a game-changer for body comp. More strength, less fluff.

4. Water > Everything (Almost)

Hydration doesn’t get enough love. It’s not flashy, but it makes a real difference.

  • Less bloating? Check.
  • Better digestion? Check.
  • Appetite control? Absolutely.

Sometimes we think we’re hungry, but really, we’re just dehydrated. I always carry a water bottle — especially on run days.

And if I’m feeling off, I usually ask myself: When’s the last time I actually drank water, not just coffee or tea?

But What If You’re Doing Everything Right… and Still Not Seeing Abs?

Let’s talk about genetics.

It’s not an excuse — but it is a factor.

Some people are just wired to store fat around their stomach (just like me).

Others hold it in their thighs, hips, or arms.

If you’re someone who holds fat around the belly, you’ll need to work a little harder — and get leaner — before those abs show up.

And here’s another kicker: not all abs are shaped the same. Some folks naturally have a symmetrical six-pack.

Others? A four-pack or even a slightly uneven look. That’s tendon structure — it’s baked into your DNA.

I’ve seen runners sitting at 18% body fat with visible abs.

And I’ve seen others, like me, who don’t really get much definition until around 12–13%. It’s not “fair,” but it’s real.

The point?

Stop comparing. Work with your body, not against it. Don’t chase someone else’s finish line.

Running for Weight Loss: Treadmill vs. Outdoors — What Really Burns More Fat?

Let’s be real—running can help you lose weight, but it’s not some magic fat-melting button.

If you want real results (not two-week hype that fades fast), you need the right combo of effort, consistency, and smart habits.

Whether you’re pounding pavement or sweating on the treadmill, both can burn fat and build fitness.

The trick isn’t choosing the “better” one—it’s knowing how to use each.

This guide breaks everything down without the fluff:

✔️ how running actually helps you lose weight
✔️ whether treadmill or outdoor running burns more
✔️ how to mix intensities without dying
✔️ beginner-friendly pacing tips
✔️ mistakes that kill progress
✔️ and the real key to staying consistent long enough to see your body change

If you’re tired of overthinking it and just want the straight truth—you’re in the right place.

Let’s get into it.

1. You Can’t Outrun a Bad Diet

Yeah, I’ve said it a hundred times, and I’ll say it again: what you eat matters more than how far you run.

Running is a great calorie burner and builds solid cardio fitness, but if you’re eating like garbage, you’re just spinning your wheels.

Use running as your boost, your weapon, your daily grind—but pair it with better eating habits if you’re serious about fat loss.

Some people also explore tools like Weight Loss Peptides to support their goals, but these only work when paired with consistent training and healthy habits.

Quick check-in: Are you fueling like someone trying to get lean? Or justifying every dessert with, “Well, I ran today”?

2. Mix Up the Intensity

Whether you’re pounding pavement or stuck on the treadmill, mix it up.

Steady runs and interval training both work for weight loss. According to research shared on Healthline, intervals can burn more calories in less time—but that doesn’t mean they’re better for everyone.

Personally, I like to keep it practical:

  • On treadmills? Try 30-second sprints, 30-second walks. Rinse and repeat.
  • Outside? Sprint to the next lamp post. Walk to the one after.

It doesn’t have to be fancy. Just hard enough to make you breathe and sweat.

But if intervals feel too brutal, slower, longer runs still burn fat. Pick what you can stick with—not what sounds impressive.

Question for you: Have you tried intervals before? What’s your go-to method for pushing your pace?

3. Use Inclines to Burn More Without Dying

Treadmills have a cheat code: incline.

Crank it up and suddenly walking feels like hiking Everest.

This is especially good if you’ve got knee issues or you’re just starting out.

When I train beginners, I often have them alternate between:

  • Easy jogging
  • Brisk incline walking

It works. Builds stamina, burns calories, and feels more doable than trying to run nonstop when you’re not there yet.

Try 3% incline or more, walk at a pace that gets your heart rate up, and watch the sweat pour.

4. If the Numbers Motivate You, Use Them

One thing treadmills do well? Feedback. Distance. Calories. Time.

It’s all right there.

And yes, the calorie count isn’t gospel (they often overestimate), but it can still push you.

I’ve coached folks who love chasing those numbers:

“I’m not getting off until I burn 300 calories.”

If that fires you up, go for it. But don’t get obsessed. Use that screen as a guide—not a judgment.

Outside runs can be tracked too (apps like Strava, Nike Run Club, GPS watches), but it’s not as in-your-face.

Find what gets you moving. Whether that’s chasing numbers or chasing sunsets.

5. Enjoyment Matters

This one’s simple: You won’t lose weight from a workout you hate and never do.

If you dread the treadmill, get outside.

If you’re freaked out by running in public, start on the treadmill.

Love both? Mix them up and get the best of both worlds.

I’ve had clients burn more calories from consistent outdoor jogs than people doing “intense” but infrequent treadmill sessions.

From a coach’s seat: I usually suggest a blend.

Easy outdoor runs for stress relief and fresh air, treadmill sessions for focused effort and interval control.

Oh—and don’t forget strength training. Even two short sessions a week will help you burn more calories at rest.

Your body becomes a better fat-burning machine.

So, Which Is Better for Weight Loss—Treadmill or Outdoor Running?

Here’s the honest answer: Both work. Neither is magic.

They’ll both help you burn calories, shed fat, and get fitter—as long as you keep doing them. What matters most? Consistency.

According to Healthline, the environment doesn’t matter as much as your effort and frequency. That said, mixing the two adds variety, keeps your body guessing, and fights boredom (the #1 killer of fitness routines).

Your mission: Pick the option that keeps you moving—and keep at it.

If You’re New to Running, Be Patient (And Kind to Yourself)

I’ve coached tons of beginners. Let me be real: Starting is the hardest part.

But hey, if you’re the type who gets bored on a treadmill, don’t force it.

You can absolutely start your running journey outside.

Just go slow. Slower than you think you need to. I mean it.

Coach’s Tip for First-Timers

  • Don’t chase speed.
  • Measure by time, not distance early on.
  • Try 20 minutes with 1-minute jog, 1-minute walk.
  • Celebrate time on your feet—not miles.

And remember: that awkward run-walk stuff? That’s not weakness. That’s the process. That’s you getting stronger.

Final Words

Losing weight through running isn’t about finding the “perfect method.” It’s about finding your method—the one that keeps you showing up.

Whether it’s to the gym or to the beach, to the hills or the sidewalk…

Just lace up, move your body, and keep showing up. The weight will come off when your habits stack up.

Your turn:

What’s your favorite way to run? Outside, treadmill, or a combo?

What’s been your biggest struggle with staying consistent?

Drop your thoughts. Let’s build that momentum together.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Q: Is running outdoors harder than running on a treadmill?

Yeah, it usually is—at least at first. Outside, you’ve got wind, hills, uneven sidewalks, and no moving belt helping push you along. You’re doing all the work. That extra effort adds up, especially when you’re not used to it.

On the treadmill, things feel smoother. Climate’s controlled, belt’s moving—it’s like running on easy mode. But don’t sweat it if your outdoor pace drops. That’s normal. With time and repetition, your body catches up.

I’ve coached plenty of runners who felt wrecked by their first outdoor 5K after weeks on the treadmill—but a month later, they were stronger than ever. Real-world running builds toughness.

🟩 What about you? When was your first outdoor run? Did it feel harder than expected?

Q: Which is better for weight loss—treadmill or outdoor running?

Whichever one you’ll actually do. Both can help you lose weight as long as you’re in a calorie deficit. Sure, outdoor running might burn a few more calories thanks to wind or terrain, but that difference is minor.

What matters is consistency. If heading outside gets you fired up and keeps you out longer, that’s your win. If hopping on the treadmill helps you avoid skipping workouts, stick with it. Personally, I use both—speed work indoors, long chill runs outdoors.

🔥 Coach tip: Don’t chase the “perfect” weight loss workout. Just aim for 30 minutes, 4–5 times a week. And don’t ghost your nutrition either. It’s a full-team effort.

🟩 What kind of run keeps you coming back? Let me know where you feel strongest—outside or inside.

Q: Should I run outside or on a treadmill as a beginner?

Run wherever gets you started. Some folks feel anxious outdoors—too many eyes, unpredictable traffic, surprise hills. If that’s you, no shame in starting on the treadmill. It’s a safe, quiet way to build confidence. A lot of my Couch-to-5K athletes start there.

But if staring at a wall indoors makes you dread your workout, lace up and hit the road (or trail). Start with run/walk intervals and take it easy. You can even mix it up: treadmill during the week, short outside runs on weekends.

📣 Remember: There’s no rulebook here. Just move your body. Over time, you’ll figure out what feels best. And what used to feel intimidating will become routine.

🟩 Have you tried both yet? What’s stopping you from trying the other option?

Q: Do I burn more calories outside?

Maybe a little more—but not enough to stress about. Outside running makes your body work slightly harder thanks to wind, uneven terrain, and no belt assist. Some studies suggest you burn a few extra calories per mile. But again, it’s small.

If you crank the incline on your treadmill or up your pace, you can match (or even beat) outdoor burn. Calorie burn mostly depends on your weight, pace, time, and effort—not the location.

🤔 Pro tip: Don’t blindly trust those treadmill calorie counters. I wear a heart rate monitor for better data, but even then, I focus more on how I feel than the number.

🟩 Curious: Do you track your calorie burn or just go by effort?

Q: Is treadmill running easier on the knees?

Generally, yes. Treadmills usually have a cushioned belt that’s gentler than pounding concrete or asphalt. If you’re injury-prone or coming back from something nagging, it’s a smart tool. I often move recovery runs indoors after tough trail weeks.

But don’t ignore form. Crappy posture or bad shoes can mess you up anywhere. And outdoor runs, with all their variety, actually help you build stronger, more balanced legs over time.

I mix it up—treadmill, trail, grass, whatever’s available. That variety keeps my joints happier than pounding the same sidewalk daily.

🟩 How do your knees feel after a few weeks on one surface? Ever tried switching it up?

Q: How do I make treadmill runs feel more like outdoor runs?

Here’s the game plan:

  1. Set the incline to 1%. It helps mimic the effort of flat outdoor running. Want hills? Bump that incline higher for a few minutes at a time.
  2. Don’t grab the rails. You wouldn’t do that outside, right? It messes with your form.
  3. Run tall and strong. Focus on your stride. Push the belt behind you, don’t just let it pull you along.
  4. Switch it up. Every 5 minutes, change pace or incline. Outdoors isn’t constant—neither should your treadmill run be.
  5. Simulate fatigue. If you’re training for a race, try longer treadmill runs with incline shifts to work different muscles.
  6. Use your brain. Outdoors, your eyes and brain stay busy. On the treadmill, break your run into segments, throw on a podcast, or visualize your race course.

📲 Some treadmills even come with virtual route apps. I’ve used them during rainy-season prep for half marathons—worked great.

🟩 What tricks do you use to make treadmill miles fly by? Got a go-to playlist or mental game?

Q: Why do runners call it the “dreadmill”?

Because it messes with your head. Let’s be real: staring at a wall while running in place can feel like time just… stops. You miss the breeze, the movement, the scenery.

Even die-hard treadmill fans joke about it. I’ve had days where I stared at the clock every 30 seconds. But it’s not the machine’s fault. You’ve got to outsmart the boredom—music, intervals, goals, visualization.

💡 Once you finish a hard treadmill workout and realize you didn’t quit halfway, the dread starts fading. And sometimes, that “dreadmill” becomes your best weapon for staying on track.

🟩 Be honest—what’s your longest treadmill run before you tapped out?

Q: Can I split runs between treadmill and outside? Will it still “count”?

Heck yes, it counts. Your legs and lungs don’t care where the miles come from. If life gets messy and you need to split a run—3 miles outside, 2 on the treadmill later—go for it.

I’ve coached runners who started outside, came home to pee or refuel, then finished the rest indoors. Your body still gets the benefit as long as you don’t wait too long between.

Just don’t overdo it. Stick to your weekly mileage plan. And if you’re training for an outdoor race, make sure you still get enough outside to prep your body for terrain and weather.

🎯 I always say: “Miles are miles.” They all add up.

Running With a High BMI: Myths, Mindset & Smart Training for Bigger Runners

Lemme be straight with you.

If you run, you’re a runner.

Doesn’t matter if you walk-jog, shuffle, or sprint — you’ve earned the title the second you show up for yourself.

Forget the internet “experts” who tell you to lose weight first.

That’s gatekeeping dressed up as advice.

Here’s the truth: your weight does not determine your potential.

Your mindset and your consistency do.

You’re not a “before” picture. You’re a work in progress, a runner in motion, and your body is ready to carry you farther than you think.

I know I sound like Tyler Durden from Fight Club but please bear with me.

This isn’t another article telling you to shrink before you start. This is your blueprint — myth-busting science, battle-tested training strategies, and mindset shifts that will have you showing up stronger every week, no matter what the scale says.

Whether you’re chasing your first mile or your next marathon, this guide is your permission slip to stop waiting, start running, and never apologize for the body you run in.

Let’s get to it folks.


Table of Contents

  1. The Truth About BMI — And Why It’s Not the Full Story
  2. Fat ≠ Unfit, Thin ≠ Healthy
  3. Training Considerations for Bigger Runners
    1. Impact load and cushioning
    1. Recovery strategies
    1. Injury prevention tactics
  4. Common Myths About Running While Overweight (Busted)
    1. “It’ll ruin your knees”
    1. “You need to lose weight before you run”
    1. “People are staring at you”
    1. “You’ll never get fast”
  5. The Health Benefits of Running at a Higher Weight
    1. Stronger heart and lungs
    1. Better blood sugar and stable energy
    1. Mental health and confidence boosts
    1. Bone and joint resilience
  6. How to Build a Sustainable Running Plan (considered add-on section if not yet in draft)
  7. Gear Essentials for High-BMI Runners (shoes, apparel, chafing prevention)
  8. Fueling and Hydration Tips
  9. Staying Motivated: Building Community and Accountability
  10. Final Word: You’re Already a Runner

 

What Is a High BMI — and Does It Matter?

Let’s talk BMI for a second. Yes, it’s used everywhere. But that doesn’t mean it tells the whole story.

BMI = Body Mass Index, a simple ratio of weight to height. But it doesn’t:

  • Tell you how much muscle you have
  • Account for bone density or body composition
  • Consider ethnicity or sex
  • Say anything about your actual fitness

A bodybuilder and someone who’s sedentary can have the same BMI — and completely different health profiles.

Even the American Medical Association has said BMI is flawed and should be used with caution.

It’s a tool, not a sentence.

It’s a rough sketch, not a detailed portrait.

You get the picture.

That said, and for practical reasons, I’ll sometimes say “high-BMI runner” — not as a label, but just to give context (like when I talk about gear, injury risks, or recovery strategy). It’s not judgment. It’s just so the advice fits.

So please don’t leave any angry comments down below. I’m here to help not to undermine anyone. And my goal is to have read all of this so you can start applying it in daily life.

Sounds like a good idea? Let’s continue…


Fat ≠ Unfit. Thin ≠ Healthy.

Here’s the part most people don’t tell you:

  • You can have a high BMI and still have amazing endurance
  • You can have a high BMI and have normal blood pressure, strong lungs, and no disease markers
  • You can be in a smaller body and still be metabolically unwell or physically unfit

One massive study found that fitness is a better predictor of long-term health than weight.

In fact, a heavier person who is fit has similar health outcomes to a fit person at a “normal” weight. Meanwhile, unfit people— regardless of size — have higher risks.

So yeah: better to be fat and fit than skinny and sedentary.


Training Considerations for Bigger Runners

This isn’t about holding you back — it’s about training smarter, not harder. 

Here’s what I urge you to keep in mind:

  • Impact Load: More body mass = more impact per step. That just means you need to ease in, build mileage gradually, and pick shoes that cushion well.
  • Recovery: You might need more recovery time early on — that’s not a flaw. That’s being strategic.
  • Injury Prevention: Sudden jumps in mileage or intensity? Not great for anyone — but especially risky if you’re managing higher load on joints and tendons.

This is not saying “your body is a problem.” It’s saying your training plan should respect your body’s needs — just like anyone else’s.


Use BMI (If You Want To) — But Don’t Let It Define You

If knowing your BMI helps you track things like gear or sweat rate or how certain studies apply to you, cool — use it.

But if it makes you feel boxed in, toss it out. Because your body is more than a number.

Your body is strong. Your body is capable. Your body is worthy of movement and achievement and showing up at that start line — however it looks, whatever it weighs.

I know this sound cliche but I bet it is the exact thing you need to hear right now.


Common Myths About Running While Overweight

Let’s call it out: there’s a ton of BS out there about who “should” run.

If you’re carrying extra weight, you’ve probably heard it all—from clueless comments to outdated “health” advice that’s more about judgment than truth.

Let me bust these myths for you once and all:

 

Myth #1: “It’ll ruin your knees”

Let’s get this one out of the way. Yes, extra bodyweight = more load per step. But guess what? Running doesn’t destroy your knees. The science says so.

Recreational runners (even bigger ones) actually have lower rates of arthritis than non-runners. That’s because running:

  • Strengthens the muscles around your joints
  • Improves cartilage health through movement
  • Builds bone density over time

Studies show that unless you have a preexisting joint condition, running doesn’t “wear out” your joints—it strengthens them. Sedentary living? That’s what wrecks knees.

⚠️ The real key: train smart. Ramp up slowly. Wear good shoes. Strengthen supporting muscles.


Myth #2: “You need to lose weight before you run”

That’s straight-up gatekeeping.

There is no rulebook that says you have to hit a certain weight before you earn the right to run.

Can you move? Can you walk-jog, even if slowly? Congrats—you’re allowed to run.

And here’s the kicker: even if your weight doesn’t change, your fitness and health can improve. Your heart, your lungs, your blood sugar—all better with regular movement.

Stop waiting for permission. You don’t need to “fix” your body before using it. Running is for every body.


Myth #3: “People are staring at you”

This one hits deep. That fear of judgment? Totally valid. But here’s the truth:

Most runners are too busy gasping through their own workout to care what anyone else looks like. And those who do notice? Many are silently cheering you on.

The loudest claps at most races? They’re for the final finishers. The ones who dug deep and showed up even when it was hard.

And the jerks? The random car honker or sidewalk troll? They’d heckle anyone. That’s on them, not you.

Flip the script: you’re not “the fat runner.” You’re the runner who’s juggling life, doubt, and still putting in the miles. That’s powerful. That’s badass.

I’ve already written a guide on how to overcome this fear. Please check it out.


Myth #4: “You’ll never get fast”

Let’s talk about speed. Does body size affect energy output? Yeah. That’s physics. But pace is earned by training, not your weight.

I’ve seen 250-pound runners knock out sub-25 minute 5Ks. You don’t need to be light—you need to be consistent.

Can you shave 2 minutes off your time? Absolutely. Can you go from run-walk to full 5K?

Of course. Speed is relative—and most runners aren’t trying to win races. They’re chasing their own best.

Focus on progress. Build your engine. You’ll be amazed what your body can do when you stop treating it like a liability.


Health Benefits of Running at a Higher Weight:  

Let’s get something clear: running isn’t just a weight-loss tool — and reducing it to that is selling it short. Way short.

Of course, a lot of people get into this sport to lose weight. I did. But logging miles is more than just about burning calories.

Whether or not you ever lose a pound, running at a higher weight delivers serious benefits. Not “someday,” not “once you’re lighter,” but right now — as you build consistency and log the miles.

Here’s what’s actually happening behind the scenes every time you lace up:


1. Your Heart Gets Stronger — Fast

Running is elite-level cardio. You don’t need to be fast. Even a run-walk routine can deliver major heart and lung benefits.

  • Lower resting heart rate
  • Better blood pressure
  • Improved cholesterol
  • More efficient oxygen delivery

These are changes you’ll feel — not just in your running, but in everyday life. You’ll breathe easier on stairs. You’ll recover faster after walks or workouts. You’ll start feeling like your heart and lungs are actually backing you up — not holding you back.

And here’s the kicker: you don’t have to lose weight to get these results. Studies show overweight folks who start exercising regularly improve insulin sensitivity, heart function, and overall health markers even when their weight stays the same.

So don’t wait for the scale to validate your progress. Your heart already knows you’re winning.


2. Better Blood Sugar, More Stable Energy

Running trains your body to handle carbs more effectively. Your muscles become like high-performance gas tanks, pulling glucose from your blood and storing it as glycogen for fuel.

The payoff?

  • More stable blood sugar
  • Better insulin sensitivity
  • Less risk for type 2 diabetes
  • Fewer crashes and energy slumps

And again — this happens regardless of weight loss. You can be metabolically healthier at a higher weight with consistent running than someone lighter who’s sedentary.

You might notice fewer sugar cravings, fewer post-lunch crashes, and more energy overall. That’s your metabolism working for you, not against you.


Mental Health, Confidence, and Sleep Gains

The mental benefits? Game-changing.

  • Running triggers endorphins — your body’s built-in mood boosters
  • It helps regulate your sleep-wake cycle — meaning deeper, better sleep
  • It’s a proven stress reliever — and gives you a healthy outlet for mental pressure

But maybe the biggest benefit? Confidence.

Every run is a win. Every session you show up — even if it’s short, even if it’s slow — is you saying: “I care about myself.”

You start rewriting the story in your head. You’re not “the person who can’t run” — you’re a runner in progress. And that self-image shift spills into everything else: work, relationships, how you carry yourself.

It’s not about perfection. It’s about pride.


 4. You Build Stronger Bones, Joints, and Load Tolerance

Here’s something most people don’t expect: running at a higher weight — when done right — can make your body more durable.

That extra weight creates more mechanical stress, yes. But your body responds by:

  • Increasing bone density
  • Strengthening tendons and ligaments
  • Improving muscle strength and joint stability

Think of it this way: if you’re carrying more weight, you’re giving your muscles and connective tissues a built-in strength workout every run.

It’s like doing loaded bodyweight squats daily. You’re reinforcing your skeleton, your arches, your Achilles — as long as you build gradually and recover properly.

With smart progression, you actually become more resilient. Many heavier runners say that after a few months of consistent training, they feel rock-solid doing everyday tasks — stairs, lifting, hauling groceries. Their bodies adapt because they’ve trained at a higher load.

But yeah, recovery matters more too:

  • Get good shoes
  • Respect rest days
  • Fuel well
  • Stretch, roll, hydrate

More load = more adaptation and more recovery demand. Balance both, and you’ll thrive.


Walk-to-Run: 8 Weeks to Earning Your Runner Badge

Alright, listen up. If you’re just getting started—or getting back into the game after a break—this 8-week walk-to-run plan is for you.

You don’t need fancy gear, you don’t need to be “fit,” and you sure as hell don’t need to be fast. You just need to show up.

Let’s go.

Week 1: Start Where You Are

Three sessions this week. Pick days like Tue/Thu/Sat.

Warm up by walking 5 minutes. Then, go 1 minute jogging + 2 minutes walking. Repeat for 15–20 minutes total.

Cool down with a 5-min walk. And hey, if that 1-minute jog feels brutal, switch to 30 seconds jog + 2.5 minutes walk. No shame. The goal? Finish with gas left in the tank—not sprawled on the sidewalk.

Try this: How did it feel? What pace felt “manageable hard?” Take mental notes. Or heck, write it down.

Week 2: Keep It Moving

Same 3-day schedule.

Warm up, then alternate 1 min jog + 1 min walk for 15–20 minutes.

That’s it.

If it feels like too much, bump the walk to 90 seconds. By the end of the week, you’re aiming for around 8 minutes of jogging total. That’s progress. That’s you, getting stronger.

Ask yourself: Are you breathing hard but in control? That’s a win.

Week 3: Time to Push a Bit

This week, let’s stretch those jogging bouts.

Try 2 min jog + 2 min walk, 4 or 5 rounds (20 min total). Too spicy? Stick with last week’s plan and add one more round. It’s about running longer—not faster.

Coach’s tip: Your body adapts faster than you think—but don’t rush it. Stick with the process.

Week 4: Shave the Walks

Now we’re cooking. Try 3 min jog + 2 min walk, 4 to 5 cycles.

You’re hitting 12–15 total minutes of running.

That’s a big deal. If you’re bouncing back quicker, shorten the walk to 1 min. Start noticing that recovery. It’s happening.

Runner moment: You’ll catch yourself smiling mid-run. That’s not weird. That’s momentum.

Week 5: Your First Mile

Let’s go for a continuous mile midweek.

Warm up, then see if you can jog one full mile without stopping.

Doesn’t matter if it’s slow. Doesn’t matter if you walk once or twice. It’s a checkpoint. The other two workouts: 5 min jog + 2 min walk, twice through.

Remember: A 10–15 minute mile is still a mile. Don’t let pace shame you out of progress.

Week 6: Stretch the Distance

This week’s game is 2 miles per session.

Run/walk your way there. Maybe run 0.5, walk, repeat. Or go by time: 8 min run, 2 min walk, again and again until you hit about 25 minutes.

Don’t overthink the structure—just add more running than walking.

Check-in: Can you feel the engine getting stronger? That’s not a fluke—it’s the work paying off.

Week 7: Double Mile Days

Two workouts this week: run 1 mile straight.

You’ve done it before—now do it again. For your longer run, use run/walk to hit around 3 miles total.

By now, your legs are showing up strong, and your breathing’s way smoother than back in Week 1.

Truth bomb: This is the week people realize, “Whoa—I can actually run.” Yes, you can. And yes, you are.

Week 8: Graduation Time

Final test: Run 30 minutes nonstop. Or go out and run a 5K. Doesn’t matter how far you get in those 30 minutes—just don’t stop.

The earlier sessions can be lighter or rest days. You earned that. This is your celebration run.

Real talk: Even if you cover just 1.5 miles in those 30 minutes, who cares? You did it. You’re a runner. You always were.


Consistency Beats Everything

Let me say this loud and clear: You don’t need perfection. You need consistency.

That means 3 run/walk sessions a week, no matter what.

That’s the magic number.

It changes your body, your mindset, your rhythm.

Four days? Cool if your body’s on board. But skip the 5-6-7 day hustle. You’re not a machine—you need recovery.

Look, when I first started coaching, I watched countless new runners flame out because they tried to do too much too fast.

They’d crush one week, then vanish. Don’t be that guy. Don’t be that girl. Be the one who keeps showing up.

Missed a day? Shake it off.

Just lace up the next one.

It’s about habits, not heroics.

Set reminders. Put your runs in your calendar like they’re meetings with your future self. Logging workouts, using a cheap notebook or app, helps too—it’s visual proof that you’re doing the work.

 

Strength Training: It Works

If there’s one thing I wish every runner did from day one, it’s strength training.

Especially if you’re carrying extra weight (been there).

Running builds cardio, sure, but lifting—or even just bodyweight stuff—builds the armor that keeps you injury-free.

I’m talking squats, lunges, glute bridges, step-ups, planks.

Don’t overthink it.

Even a squat using just your bodyweight is legit—if you weigh 250, that’s 250 pounds of resistance. That counts, my friend.

Shoot for 2–3 short sessions a week on your non-run days.

Even 20 minutes gets it done.

Why? Because strength work doesn’t just protect you—it makes running feel easier.

More muscle = less effort per step. It’s science.

Studies back this up: Strength training helps reduce injuries, balances out weak spots, and boosts your running efficiency.

If weight loss is part of your goal, strength also cranks up your metabolism. More muscle = more calorie burn at rest.

Real talk: This isn’t optional. It’s your insurance policy. You want to stay on the road, not the injury bench? Then you lift.

If you’re unsure where to start, Google beginner routines, follow along on YouTube, or work with a trainer once or twice.

Even yoga or Pilates is solid stuff. The goal? Strong legs, strong hips, strong core. That’s your engine room.

You can also check out my guide to strength training.

Tips That’ll Keep You Running Safe (And Not Busted Up)

Here some of my best running tips that can help keep things safe out there. 

Watch Your Step

Early on, what you run on matters.

I’m not saying avoid concrete like the plague, but let’s not pretend pounding pavement for every run is easy on the body — especially if you’re carrying a few extra pounds.

I always tell my beginner runners to mix it up: grass, trails, tracks, treadmills… they’ve all got more give than the sidewalk jungle.

Now, there’s some debate out there — your body can adapt to harder surfaces over time.

True.

But from what I’ve seen with my runners, especially the bigger folks, trails or treadmills feel way friendlier on the joints.

Personally, when my knees are barking or feel any pain in my lower limbs, I head straight for the dirt path.

Don’t Just Bolt Out The Door Cold

Wanna get hurt fast? Skip the warm-up. Seriously, I’ve seen too many folks limp back home because they didn’t take five measly minutes to prep their body. A classic mistake.

Do this instead: Walk it out for 3–5 minutes before you run. Get the blood flowing. Add in a few leg swings, maybe some ankle rolls. Nothing fancy — just loosen up. Think of your muscles like taffy. Cold taffy snaps. Warm taffy stretches. Simple.

Here’s how to adapt your warm-up routine to the weather.

And after the run? Don’t collapse on the couch. Walk for a few minutes to bring that heart rate down. Then stretch — calves, quads, hammies, hips. Post-run is when your muscles are warm and ready for it.

Pre-run stretching? Skip it — might even reduce your muscle power, and nobody wants that.

Learn to Speak Body Language

Here’s the deal: Some soreness is part of the grind. Heavy legs, a little stiffness? That’s the cost of doing work.

But sharp, stabbing pain? That’s your body screaming, “Back off!”

For heavier runners, hotspots usually hit the knees, shins, Achilles, and feet. If something starts flaring up, don’t be stubborn.

I’ve seen people push through and end up sidelined for weeks. Instead, take a few days off, hit the bike, go swim, or just foam roll like your life depends on it. Early rest can save you from a full-blown injury disaster.

It’s not quitting. It’s training smart.

Here’s my guide on when to push through pain (and when to stop).

The 10% Rule (AKA How Not to Overdo It)

This one’s gold: Don’t jump more than 10% in weekly mileage.

If you did 6 miles this week, aim for around 6.5–7 miles next. Not 10. Not 12.

Patience, my friend.

I like to throw in a “cutback week” every 3rd or 4th week.

It’s not slacking — it’s part of the process.

Run less so you can eventually run more. So maybe Week 1: 6 miles, Week 2: 7, Week 3: 8, Week 4: drop back to 6–7. Then repeat. That’s how you build long-term strength, not short-term burnout.

Running Form 101 (Keep It Simple)

Posture tall. Slight lean from the ankles, not the waist.

Feet landing underneath you, not way out in front.

You’re not stomping, you’re gliding. Cadence somewhere in the 170–180 steps/min is solid for most. Don’t obsess over it, just avoid giant, slamming strides.

Arms relaxed, elbows about 90 degrees, hands loose (like you’re holding a potato chip you don’t want to crush). These little tweaks? They help with efficiency and cut down injury risk.

I’ve coached people who’ve shaved minutes off their mile just fixing their form. No joke.

Not enough guidelines? Read this.


Recovery Isn’t Laziness — It’s Where the Gains Happen

Let me be crystal clear: recovery is training.

You don’t get stronger while running.

You get stronger while recovering from running.

Bigger runners often need more downtime between sessions. That’s not weakness — that’s biology. Make sleep a non-negotiable. We’re talking 7–9 hours. According to research, skipping sleep jacks up your injury risk and slows muscle repair.

Eat real food (we’ll talk nutrition later). Drink water like it’s your job. Use that foam roller or massage gun on tight calves and quads. I’ve had days where 10 minutes on the roller saved me from a week on the bench.

Also, if you’re feeling beat, take an extra day off.

The pros do it.

Know the difference between “meh, I’m lazy” and legit fatigue.

Build habits that carry you through low-motivation days.

Set a run time.

Pick your playlist.

Lay out your gear the night before.

When motivation dips, the system kicks in.

The Right Gear for Heavier Runners (Real Talk)

Listen—your gear isn’t just some sidekick.

It matters.

If you’re a bigger runner, the stuff you wear on your feet, legs, and chest?

That’s the line between finishing strong and limping home with a blister the size of Texas.

1. Shoes: Cushion, Support, and Not Falling Apart in 200 Miles

First things first: your shoes are everything.

As a heavier runner, every foot strike hits the ground with more force—basic physics. So you need shoes that can take a hit and keep going.

What does that mean? Cushioned midsoles that don’t pancake after a couple of runs.

Solid support if your feet tend to roll inward (that’s called overpronation, but let’s not get too nerdy here). And above all—comfort. If your feet feel beat up halfway through your run, it’s time to upgrade.

Now, if you walk into a running store and mention you’re a heavier runner, don’t be surprised if they point you to max-cushion or stability shoes.

It’s not an insult—it’s common sense.

More weight = more impact = more cushion needed. Think of it as shock absorption for your knees and hips.

Some of my go-tos over the years? These:

  • Brooks Glycerin GTS (a nice blend of cushion + control)
  • ASICS Gel-Kayano (OG stability)
  • Hoka Bondi or Gaviota (like clouds for your feet)
  • Saucony Triumph
  • New Balance 1080 or Fresh Foam More.

Try a few. You’re not marrying them.

Oh—and shoes might wear out faster if you’re on the heavier side.

I usually swap mine out around 300 miles instead of 500. If they start feeling flat or you get weird aches, it’s time. No shame in retiring a pair early. Your joints will thank you.

Also, if you’ve got wide feet (totally normal), don’t cram into something narrow.

New Balance, Brooks, ASICS, and Altra all make wide sizes. Trust me, numb toes and blisters are not a badge of honor.

2. Socks: The Key For Fighting Off Blisters

Nobody talks about socks enough, but they can make or break a run.

Especially if you’re carrying more weight, your feet take a beating. More sweat. More friction. More risk for gnarly blisters.

First rule: ditch cotton. I mean it. Cotton holds sweat like a sponge and turns into a friction factory.

Go for moisture-wicking stuff—poly blends, nylon, merino wool. Socks from brands like Balega, Thorlo, Feetures? Worth every penny. A little padding in the heel and toe goes a long way.

I used to think $15 socks were a scam… until I stopped finishing runs with shredded heels.

Double-layer socks like WrightSock?

Freaking magic.

The two layers rub against each other—not your skin. No more hot spots, even on long runs.

Now, if your calves puff up like balloons or your ankles swell post-run, compression socks or sleeves can help. They apply gentle pressure, reduce swelling, and can even help with shin splints or tight calves.

I’ve had athletes swear by ‘em for long runs and recovery.

Just don’t size down. A too-tight compression sock is medieval torture. Measure that calf circumference and buy accordingly.

3. Clothing: No Chafe, No Shame

Running while tugging at your shorts or feeling your shirt shred your nipples? Been there. It’s brutal.

The right clothes won’t just save your skin—they’ll give you that “I’m a runner and I look damn good” energy. Moisture-wicking, quick-dry gear is your best friend.

And thankfully, more brands are stepping up with size-inclusive gear that fits real runners—not mannequins.

Look for gear with flat seams (less rubbing), soft fabric, and a cut that works with your body.

I’m a big fan of longer inseam shorts to keep my thighs from starting a fire. Body Glide or anti-chafe sticks? Don’t leave home without ‘em on hot days.

More brands are finally getting it—Nike, Brooks, Under Armour, and some boutique ones like Senita and Girlfriend Collective are offering high-quality gear in larger sizes that actually moves with you.

No more squeezing into stuff made for twigs.

Shirts: Wear What Works, Not What Flaps

Let me be straight with you—when it comes to running shirts, cotton is the devil.

You’ll finish your run looking like you jumped in a swamp.

Go for sweat-wicking stuff instead—polyester or merino wool blends are gold.

They keep you dry, reduce the stink, and don’t stick like glue mid-run. Look for flat seams too, unless you enjoy skin-on-sandpaper.

If chafing’s been kicking your butt, especially between the thighs, try a longer shirt—a tunic-style cut that covers more. It’s not a magic fix, but it can help (we’ll get into thigh chafe in a sec).

Some brands actually get what plus-size runners deal with.

Superfit Hero and Skirt Sports? They were built for bigger bodies.

Even big dogs like Nike, Adidas, Old Navy Active (up to 4X), and Athleta now carry extended sizing.

And the smart ones pay attention to stuff like length (no rolling up), real coverage, and designs that don’t assume every runner looks like they just ran off a magazine cover.

Personally? I’d recommend something that stays put and doesn’t flap like a flag in the wind. You might dig a fitted tank or prefer a loose tee—whatever makes you feel like a badass when you hit the pavement.

Legwear: No More Tug-of-War With Your Tights

Here’s a lesson I learned the hard way: bad tights will ruin a good run.

If you’re constantly yanking them up or fighting thigh burn by mile two, they’re not worth it.

High-waist leggings with a drawstring? That’s the sweet spot.

You want support that hugs, doesn’t squeeze, and lets you move.

Compression tights can also help tame the jiggle—if that’s something that bugs you mentally. (No shame in jiggle, by the way—it’s part of the deal.)

Capris or full-length tights are my go-to.

Why? They cut out the dreaded chub rub.

But if you’re a shorts runner, opt for longer inseams—8 or 9 inches at least. Better yet, wear compression shorts under looser ones. Some brands make built-in combos that do both.

And yes, good plus-size options exist.

Superfit Hero runs up to 7XL and designs gear specifically not to roll or chafe.

I’ve coached folks who swear by Day-Won or K-Deer. Even Lululemon (yep, Lululemon) now goes up to size 20 in some items—and they’ve got plus-size ambassadors like Mirna Valerio giving them real feedback.

Bottom line? You need 2 or 3 solid pairs of leggings or shorts you trust. Ones that stay put. Once you find that brand that gets you—you buy spares, no questions asked.


Sports Bra & Undies: Lock It Down

Let’s talk brass tacks—especially for the ladies. A high-impact sports bra isn’t optional, it’s survival gear. You’ve got to lock that bounce down if you’re going to enjoy running (or avoid pain and back strain).

Brands like Enell, Panache, SheFit, and Brooks Moving Comfort build for bigger busts and bands. These aren’t cutesy bras—they’re workhorses.

And if chafing’s a problem under the band or straps, throw on some BodyGlide or look for cushioned straps.

I’ve known runners who finally went pain-free after switching to the right bra. It’s a total game-changer.

As for undies? Go moisture-wicking or go commando—especially with tights.

The gusset in running leggings is built for that. But if you do wear underwear, pick synthetics or merino blends that dry fast and don’t bunch.

Chafing: The Silent Run-Killer

If you’ve ever limped home like you just got sandpapered by life, welcome to the chafe club.

And it’s not just a size thing—elite marathoners lube up with Vaseline at aid stations too.

For us bigger runners, the hotspots are just more frequent: thighs, groin, underarms, under the bra, belly folds—you name it.

Prevention is everything. I cannot say this enough. Hit those spots with anti-chafe balm—BodyGlide, Vaseline, whatever works.

I always say, better to look like you prepped for battle than end up walking like a cowboy post-run.

Compression shorts under regular shorts? Total game-changer. Some runners love Thigh Society bands—like thigh armor. Just do something. Don’t let preventable pain wreck your groove.

Gear That Actually Fits: Belts, Vests, and Stuff That Doesn’t Squeeze

One of the main reasons I love running is because it’s simple—just shoes and go.

But when you’re carrying a phone, keys, or water, gear matters. And if you’re plus-sized, finding gear that fits can be a battle.

  • Running Belts: SPIbelt is a favorite—especially with the extender strap. Amphipod and Nathan also make adjustable options. If the belt’s too tight, try wearing it crossbody. Whatever keeps it from bouncing or cutting off your breath.
  • Hydration Vests: Here’s the deal—many vests are made for stick figures. But brands are catching on. Nathan and Ultimate Direction now offer extended sizes and adjustable straps. Still no luck? Handheld bottles or stashing water along your route works too. Some runners even DIY their packs to fit.
  • Visibility Gear: If you run in the dark, light up! Amphipod’s Xinglet has an XL version. Check reviews for fit if you’ve got a broader chest or waist.
  • Support Braces: Bad knees? Ankles a bit wobbly? A neoprene sleeve can help keep things in line without cutting off circulation. Go snug, not strangled.
  • Tech Fit: Fitness watches are usually fine, but if the band’s too short, look for longer straps. Polar and Garmin sell XL chest straps too for heart rate monitors.
  • Miscellaneous: Hats that fit larger heads? Headsweats has you covered. Earbuds falling out? Try over-ear loops or true wireless options that actually stay put.

Let’s Talk Gear: It’s Not Optional, It’s Part of the Plan

Look, if you’ve ever walked into a running store and felt like you didn’t belong because nothing fit — yeah, I’ve been there. It’s not your imagination.

For years, bigger runners were pretty much ghosted by gear companies.

Nothing in your size.

No ads with bodies that looked like yours.

But things are finally shifting.

Brands like Superfit Hero? They didn’t just dip a toe into plus-size activewear — they were built for it. Their whole mission is to celebrate bodies as they are, not how society says they “should be.”

Hell yes to that. And the bigger names? They’re starting to catch on too.

More brands are realizing that runners come in all shapes, all sizes — even if their Instagram feed doesn’t show it yet.

So here’s my advice: Don’t settle. If something doesn’t fit right, send it back.

Let the company know why. You’re not being picky — you’re pushing the industry to do better. That feedback matters. The louder we are, the more the gear evolves. You deserve that same moisture-wicking tech, bold prints, and performance fabrics as anyone lining up at a start line.

Invest in Your Comfort (It’s Not Vanity — It’s Smart)

I get it — old sneakers and those cotton leggings from a drawer in 2009 might seem “good enough.” But real talk? That kind of gear can make your run a nightmare.

If you’ve ever hit mile two and felt the sting of chafing under your arms or thighs, or you’ve had a blister pop mid-run — you know. That’s not just uncomfortable — it’s the kind of thing that can throw you off your whole training plan.

So let’s flip the script: Gear isn’t a splurge.

It’s how you set yourself up for success. Proper running shoes, anti-chafe shorts, high-support sports bras — this is the stuff that lets you actually enjoy the run. It cushions impact. It handles heat. It helps with skin-on-skin contact when you’re logging those summer miles. You don’t need to drop a fortune. Just get a few key pieces that work for your body.

And here’s the kicker: every time you gear up, you’re making a statement. You’re saying, “I’m an athlete.” And guess what? You are. So suit up accordingly.

Enough talking about gear.

Let’s get into training.

10-Week Run-Your-First (or Stronger) 5K Plan

Who’s this for?

You can already run 20-30 minutes without dying on the side of the road? Sweet. This plan’s for you.

Whether you’ve wrapped up a walk-to-run program or just naturally built up to 2 miles nonstop, we’re about to stretch that engine to a full 5K — and beyond. No magic. Just grit, patience, and some smart tweaks.

Goal:

Get you from “I can run 2 miles” to “I just cruised through a 5K without stopping—and I didn’t feel wrecked afterward.” You’ll also get your first taste of some light speed work. Nothing crazy. Just enough to get those legs turning a bit faster.

Weekly Flow:

  • 3 run days (usually Tue/Thu/Sat)
  • 1 optional cross-train day (think biking, swimming, yoga, brisk walk—or couch recovery if needed)
  • 2 strength sessions (lift something heavier than your water bottle. Do it right after easy runs or on non-run days)

Weeks 1–2: Warming Up the Engine

Let’s not go zero to hero just yet. If you ended the last plan running for 30 minutes, we’ll dial it down slightly and ramp it back up:

  • Week 1: 25 mins easy run on Tue/Thu, 35 mins on Sat
  • Week 2: 30 mins Tue, 20 mins Thu (plus 4-5 relaxed 15-sec strides to introduce some quick turnover), 40 mins on Saturday

Coach’s Tip: I don’t care how slow you go—as long as you can talk in phrases, you’re golden. Speed will come later. For now, time on your feet wins.

What’s your Saturday long-run looking like? Still dragging, or starting to groove?


Weeks 3–4: Let’s Fartlek (Yes, It’s a Real Word)

Time to sprinkle in some speed. Fartlek = “speed play.” It’s like a no-pressure speed session. Just short bursts in the middle of your run.

  • Week 3: On Thursday’s 25-min run, toss in 4×1-minute pick-ups at a faster (but still controlled) pace. Recover for 2 mins easy jog in between.
  • Week 4: Maybe bump it to 5×1 or try 3×2 min pickups. Play with it.
  • Tuesdays: Stick to a steady 30-min easy run.
  • Saturdays: Long runs bump to 45 mins (week 3), then 50 mins (week 4). By now, you’re probably running close to 3 miles—or your first unofficial 5K.

Weeks 5–6: Hello, Hills (or Fake Hills)

You’re getting stronger now. Time to climb.

  • Week 5: One of your midweek runs (like Thursday), throw in 3–4 short hill repeats (run 30 seconds hard uphill, walk back down).
    If you live in the flattest place on Earth, use a treadmill incline or do fartleks again.
  • Saturday Long Run: Pull back a bit this week to 40 mins. Call it a recovery week.
  • Week 6: Back to business—Saturday long run hits 55 mins. Now you’re definitely running past 5K distance.

This is when I usually suggest runners consider signing up for an actual 5K. Week 8–10 window is golden for a race. Having a race on the calendar? Total game-changer.

Week 7: Building the Long-Run Muscle

You’ve come far, and it’s time to push it a bit.

  • Tuesday: 35 mins steady
  • Thursday Fartlek: 5×2 mins quick with 2 mins jog
  • Saturday Long Run: 60 minutes. That’s 4+ miles for a lot of folks. But again—it’s not the miles, it’s the time. You’re conditioning your legs, heart, and mind to stay in the game longer.

Week 8: Race Week or Easy Week

If you signed up for a race—awesome. If not, no big deal. Use it to test yourself.

  • Tuesday: 30 mins easy
  • Thursday: 20 mins + 4 strides
  • Saturday: Either race a 5K (with a bib and cheering), do a 5K time trial (solo hero mode), or run a 30-minute strong effort to see how far you’ve come.

Week 9: Recovery or Reload

  • If you raced: Take it chill early in the week—light jogs, walks, or some easy cross-training.
  • If not: Keep rolling. Tuesday 35 mins easy, Thursday maybe repeat those hill sprints (4×45 sec). Saturday hits 65 minutes. Longest yet.

Week 10: The Big One

Let’s wrap with a bang.

  • Saturday: Long run goal = 70 minutes.
    That’s a big one. Mentally and physically. It’s the kind of long run that builds serious endurance—and confidence.
    If you can do this, 10K isn’t far off.

12-Week “Race Performance” Plan: Crushing a Sub-40 5K at 200+ lbs

Who this is for:

This one’s for the big dogs who already have some miles under their belt—if you can run 30-40 minutes straight and knock out 10-15 miles a week, you’re in the right place.

We’re not jogging for fun here. We’re targeting performance—breaking that 40-minute barrier in the 5K even if you weigh 200+ lbs.

I picked sub-40 because that’s about a 12:50-per-mile pace—tough, sure, but absolutely doable if you train right.

Even if you’re starting at a 45-50 minute 5K, this plan can help shave off serious time.

Adjust the goal if you want—sub-30, sub-35, whatever—but the structure holds. We’re building real speed and endurance here.


The Goal: Get Faster, Stay Healthy

We’re not just running more—we’re running smarter. The aim is to build speed and stamina for race day while staying sharp with recovery.

As a heavier runner, your engine is strong—but managing stress on the joints is key.

You’ll run four days a week:

  • 1 Speed day (intervals, fartlek, etc.)
  • 1 Hill or tempo session
  • 1 Long run (builds your aerobic base)
  • 1 Easy run (shake out, flush the legs)

Then you’ve got:

  • 1-2 strength or cross-training days
  • 1 legit rest day (non-negotiable)

If four runs a week feels too much, it’s okay to scale back to three. Just keep the effort honest.


Phase 1 (Weeks 1–4): Build the Base, Add Some Heat

Starting weekly mileage: ~12. By week 4, we’ll be nudging 18. This phase is about laying the groundwork and getting your legs used to turning over at faster speeds. Short intervals, strides, hill sprints—simple but brutal.

Week 1:

  • Speed: 6×400m at 5K effort, 200m jogs between. No track? Do 6×90 seconds hard, 2 min jogs.
  • Hills: Find a good hill. 5×45 seconds strong uphill. Walk down.
  • Long Run: ~4 miles, chill pace.
  • Easy Run: 2–3 miles, super easy.

Week 2:

  • Speed: 8×1 min fast with 1 min recovery jogs.
  • Tempo: 15 minutes at “comfortably hard” pace. Can break into 2×8 min with a 2 min jog if needed.
  • Long Run: 4.5 miles
  • Easy Run: 2–3 miles

Week 3:

  • Intervals: 5×800m at goal 5K pace (about 4 minutes each). Equal jog recovery.
  • Hills: 6×60 sec grind-it-out hill reps
  • Long Run: 5 miles
  • Easy Run: Optional

Week 4 (Recovery Week):

  • Speed: 4×400m, slightly faster than 5K pace
  • Everything else is easy.
  • Long Run drops to 3–4 miles
  • End-of-week: Optional 5K time trial to see where you’re at (not all-out, just to practice race rhythm)

You’ll probably already notice your pace improving. Stick with strength training—especially core and glutes. You want to hold form late in the race, not fold like a lawn chair.

Phase 2 (Weeks 5–8): Race Prep Gets Real

Now we’re cranking the intensity. We’re pushing the VO2 max, stretching the lactate threshold, and seeing what your engine can do under pressure. This is where you get strong.

Week 5:

  • Intervals: 3×1000m a little faster than goal pace. Or do 3×5 min hard with 3 min recovery.
  • Tempo: 20 minutes at threshold pace. Split it if needed (2×10 min).
  • Long Run: 5.5 miles
  • Easy Run: 2–3 miles

Week 6:

  • Speed: 6×400m fast, like flying fast. Work that turnover.
  • Hills: 8×45 sec uphill (or swap for 8×1 min fartlek).
  • Long Run: 6 miles. Solid hour on feet.

Week 7 (Peak Week):

  • Intervals: 5×800m again, faster or with shorter rests. Let’s test growth.
  • Tempo: 2-mile tempo (~20–25 min at strong, near-race pace).
  • Long Run: 6.5–7 miles. Not necessary for 5K performance—but it helps. Endurance always helps. And yep, weight loss may sneak in here too, which only helps speed.

Week 8 (Taper Week):

  • Speed: 8×200m fast pickups—get the legs moving, but keep it short.
  • Long Run: ~4 miles
  • Easy Run: Keep it relaxed.

This stretch is tough. If you’ve dropped a few pounds by now—great. If not, no sweat. Your body’s still getting faster. I’ve coached plenty of heavier runners who broke 40 minutes at 210+ lbs.

Phase 3 (Weeks 9–12): Sharpen Up & Race

This final stretch is about confidence. Dialing in your pacing. Feeling fast. And letting your legs freshen up for race day.

Week 9:

  • Workout: 3×1 mile at goal 5K pace, 3 min jogs between. If you can hit those splits, you’re ready.
  • Long Run: Keep it moderate, ~5 miles.

Week 10:

  • Early week: 4×400m all-out—leg turnover + confidence boost.
  • Later week: Race simulation. Run an all-out 2 mile or even a mile time trial. Just feel race day on your skin.

Week 11 (Taper):

  • Cut volume by 30%
  • Light workout: 3×800 at goal pace, just to feel rhythm
  • Focus on rest, sleep, and carbs. Fuel up.

Week 12 (Race Week):

  • Mostly rest. One short run (2 miles + strides) early in the week
  • Friday: Rest or 1-mile shakeout
  • Race Day: Warm up well, especially with a bigger body—get the joints and muscles moving. Then get after it. Don’t go out too fast. Aim for even splits or a slight negative. When it gets tough—and it will—lean on all those workouts behind you. You earned this.

Mental Tip: When it hurts, tell yourself: “Pain is temporary. Hitting this time is forever.”


What If You Need to Adjust?

Don’t push through injuries. Don’t ignore fatigue.

If running 4 days is too much, drop to 3 and add a spin bike or swim. Many heavier runners I coach mix in cross-training to protect their knees and still crush performance goals. You can do intervals on the bike and still build speed.

Bottom line: stay consistent. Show up.

Nutrition for Energy, Not for Shrinking

Let’s flip the script. Food isn’t your enemy. It’s your fuel.

So if you’ve been trapped in that “eat less, shrink more” mentality—it’s time to ditch it. That thinking will sabotage your running before you even get started.

Here’s how to fuel like a runner—especially one with a little extra horsepower under the hood.

1. Eat to Move. Not to Shrink.

Too many heavier runners think, “I’ve gotta cut way back if I want results.” I get it. I’ve been there. But slashing calories too hard is a one-way ticket to burnout and injury.

Think of food as gas in your tank. You wouldn’t try to drive across the country on fumes, right? Same deal with your body.

Research backs this up. When you eat for performance—enough carbs for energy, protein for muscle repair, and healthy fats for hormones—you start seeing real progress.

Your runs feel better, your recovery gets faster, and yeah, sometimes the weight shifts too.

But even if it doesn’t? You’re still getting stronger.

I tell all my athletes: your body isn’t something you’re trying to punish into submission.

It’s your teammate. Feed your teammate.

What that looks like day-to-day? More food than you probably ate when sedentary—especially on run days.

Whole foods, lean protein, complex carbs, healthy fats, and yes, some treats too. No need to white-knuckle your way through every craving. That just leads to binge cycles. Been there. Not worth it.

2. Pre-Run Fuel: Protect Energy and Joints

If you’ve ever started a run and felt like your legs were made of lead or your stomach was doing backflips, your pre-run fuel might be the issue.

Let’s fix that.

If you’re running in the morning, you might not have time for a full sit-down breakfast.

That’s okay.

Go light but smart—something with quick carbs 30-60 minutes before you run.

A banana, slice of toast with jam, or a handful of pretzels works. Shoot for 15–30 grams of fast carbs. It gives your muscles and brain the sugar they need so you’re not running on fumes.

And get this—there’s research showing that training in a carb-depleted state can spike cortisol (a stress hormone that’s rough on joints and recovery). That means eating a little before you run isn’t just about energy—it actually helps protect your joints by keeping your form solid.

Running later in the day? Cool. Have a full meal 2–3 hours before—think lean protein, carbs, veggies—and then a small carb snack 30–60 minutes before the run if needed.

Easy stuff like a granola bar, fruit, or applesauce.

Oh—and hydrate! 8–16 oz of water in the hour before your run. No brainer. Dehydration messes with everything—blood flow, energy, cramping. Bigger bodies often sweat more, so get ahead of it. Here’s how much water runners need.

And yes, caffeine helps too. A little coffee or tea can boost your performance and sharpen focus. Just don’t go nuts—especially if you’re prone to GI distress.

Some go-to pre-run snacks that don’t mess with your stomach:

  • Banana + peanut butter
  • Half a bagel with jam
  • A pack of applesauce
  • Handful of dried fruit
  • Small bowl of cereal with milk (if dairy sits well with you)

Avoid heavy, greasy, or super fibrous stuff before your run. Save the salad and bacon for later. Your gut will thank you.


3. Fueling While You Run (Especially for the Longer Grinds)

Let’s keep it real — if you’re just heading out for a chill 20-30 minute run, you don’t need anything fancy mid-run.

Grab your water bottle, hit the pavement, and you’re golden.

But once you start stretching those miles past the hour mark? That’s when the fueling game changes.

Especially if you’re carrying more weight — and hey, no shame in that, it just means your engine’s working harder and burning more fuel per mile.

A 150-pound runner burns roughly 100 calories per mile. If you’re around 250 pounds? That can jump to 170 calories per mile.

Do the math on a five-miler — that’s a big difference.

So here’s the deal: start fueling mid-run. And yeah, I mean during the actual run.

Not “Oh I’ll wait until I’m crashing.” Too late by then.

Heavier runners especially should consider fueling earlier — your calorie burn is high, and you don’t want to hit that bonk zone. Trust me, it’s not fun.

Here’s my rule of thumb: If you’re running longer than an hour, aim for 30 to 60 grams of carbs per hour starting around the 45-minute mark.

Then refuel every 15-20 minutes.

Think sports drink, gels, energy chews — or if you’re like me and can’t stomach those weird textures — real food like gummies, pretzels, or a banana half.

Most runners I’ve coached end up with some trial and error here. GU, Clif Shot, honey stingers… pick your poison and chase it with water. Your gut will tell you what works. I’ve even seen folks crush a few jelly beans and be good to go.

One more thing — if you’re sweating buckets (and most of us are, especially in heat), you’re not just losing water.

You’re dropping electrolytes too — sodium, potassium, magnesium, the whole crew.

Replacing them matters. A sports drink or electrolyte tab in your water can be a game-changer for avoiding cramps and keeping your muscles firing clean.

4. After the Run: Refuel to Rebuild

You just finished your run. Legs burning, shirt soaked, brain foggy. This is prime time — your body’s like a sponge, just waiting to soak up the good stuff so it can start repairing and refueling.

Don’t overthink it. Within 30 to 60 minutes post-run, grab something with protein and carbs. Protein helps patch up the micro-tears in your muscles. Carbs reload your tank (aka glycogen). Skip this window and you’re basically giving soreness an open invitation to wreck tomorrow’s run.

Here’s the sweet spot: shoot for around 20–30g of protein and 40–60g of carbs.

Some go-to combos I’ve used and shared with clients:

  • Whey protein smoothie with a banana (bonus if you add tart cherry juice — it’s backed by science to cut down soreness)
  • Greek yogurt with fruit and granola
  • Turkey sandwich on whole grain
  • Scrambled eggs + toast + some fruit

Also, this is a good time to sneak in anti-inflammatory foods. Tart cherry juice is the rockstar here — 8 oz post-run has been shown to help with muscle recovery. Pineapple (thanks to bromelain), turmeric, berries, salmon, flaxseed — they won’t magically erase soreness, but they help reduce the sting.

And don’t forget hydration. If your pee’s darker than lemonade after a run? You’re dehydrated.

A good rule: for every pound of sweat lost (you can weigh yourself before/after if you’re nerdy like me), drink 16–20 oz of water.

Toss in some electrolytes if it was a sweaty grind.

5. The Balancing Act: Fueling Without Overeating

Let’s talk about the elephant in the room: trying to drop pounds while running. It’s a fine line, but not impossible.

You need to burn more than you eat — sure — but don’t go cutting calories like you’re in a starvation bootcamp.

For runners, a 300-500 calorie deficit per day is plenty. Any more, and you risk bonking or burning out.

When I first started coaching heavier runners, a lot of them saw fat loss just by starting to run — no crazy diets, just more movement. The body figures it out.

But if your weight’s stuck? First check your food quality.

Ditch the ultra-processed junk. Add more fiber, lean protein, and veggies. You might not even need to eat less — just eat better.

One thing to watch: the “I earned this” trap.

We’ve all done it — crushed a run, then slammed 1,000 calories of donuts because “I ran today!” I’m not here to demonize treats, but be honest with your hunger. Running spikes appetite — if you let it, it’ll trick you into eating back everything you burned and then some.

Want my fix? I tell my runners to build meals around protein and fiber, and keep snacks like fruit, nuts, or yogurt close. You’ll stay full and avoid the post-run junk raids.

Look, it’s okay to eat more on long-run days — you probably need it. But match your food to your effort. Rest day? Pull back a bit. Hard day? Fuel up. Just like your training has peaks and valleys, your eating should too.


6. Emotional Eating vs Performance Mindset

Look, I’ve been there.

Bad day, long run, stress piling up—you hit the snacks like it’s a coping mechanism.

You’re not alone. A lot of us, especially early on in our running journey, have turned to food for comfort. It’s human. But here’s the thing: running gives you a new way to deal with that stress.

Instead of crushing cookies at midnight, go crush a few miles.

Feel that release.

Now, I’m not saying never eat sweets. Just flip the script—enjoy that slice of cake like a celebration, not as a crutch to survive the day. Be intentional. You earned that treat after fueling up right, not as a reward for misery.

A trick I’ve seen work—something I even used with a few clients—is keeping a simple training log. Not just miles, but food and mood too.

For example: “Skipped breakfast, dragged like a zombie on my run.” Or “Had a solid dinner? Boom.

Crushed my pace this morning.” Real talk.

Patterns show up fast. And if you’re getting crazy sugar cravings at night, check if you actually ate enough protein or real meals earlier. Skimping during the day leads to nighttime raids of the pantry.

And here’s a big one—don’t turn running into a punishment. You’re not out there to “burn off” dinner. Running is about building something, not erasing something. You ate big? Cool. Next meal, clean it up. Don’t spiral. It’s training fuel, not a moral scoreboard.

 

7. Practical Tips (Real-World Stuff That Works)

Bigger-bodied runners (like me, back in the day) often do better eating 4–5 smaller meals instead of loading up twice a day. Keeps blood sugar steady. You avoid that “I could eat the fridge” feeling at dinner.

Try this layout: breakfast, mid-morning snack, lunch, pre-run snack, dinner, maybe a protein dessert. I used to demolish late-night cereal—shifting to this plan helped curb that.

And don’t forget your protein.

Your muscles need it. It fills you up. Helps you recover.

If you’re training, aim for 0.7 to 0.8 grams of protein per pound of body weight.

So if you weigh 250 lbs, shoot for 175–200 grams. Sound high? I get it. But studies back this up—it helps drop fat while keeping muscle on. Can’t hit that? Get at least 100–120g and build from there.

What that looks like:

  • Eggs or Greek yogurt in the AM
  • Chicken or tofu at lunch
  • Protein shake or bar post-run
  • Lean meat or lentils for dinner

Real food first. Powders are backup.

What’s more?

Stop fearing carbs. They’re your fuel, period. Whole grains, potatoes, fruit, beans—they give you steady energy. Save the simple carbs (sports drinks, candy) for before or during long runs. Don’t go keto unless you want your runs to feel like dragging a tire.

Your plate? Try this:

  • Half veggies
  • A quarter lean protein
  • A quarter quality carbs
    (And bump carbs up for long run days.)

Healthy Fats Are Your Friend:

Avocados, olive oil, nuts—eat them. Omega-3s help with joint pain and inflammation. Just don’t eat a whole jar of peanut butter in one go (I’ve done it. Regret it every time). Stick to a tablespoon or a small handful.

Micronutrients Matter:

Larger runners sometimes run low on vitamin D and iron—especially female runners. That leads to fatigue. If you’re always tired, get some bloodwork done. Eat more spinach, lentils, or red meat. Pair iron-rich foods with something high in vitamin C to help absorb it. Calcium’s key too—your bones need it to handle all that pounding on the pavement.

Supplements? Maybe.

Some folks swear by glucosamine, collagen, or fish oil for joints. The research on glucosamine is meh, but fish oil helps with inflammation. Collagen + vitamin C before training might help tendons. Not magic, but if you’ve got the cash, they’re worth testing.

Listen to Your Body:

Hungry all the time? You might be under-eating. Focus on high-fiber, high-water foods (veggies, beans, fruits). Never hungry? You might be overdoing it—or stress is messing with your appetite. Mood, energy, and sleep are big clues. A fueled-up runner feels good. An under-fueled one hits walls and gets grumpy.

8. Enjoyment & Sustainability

Let’s be clear: This isn’t about going on a diet. This is your new life as an athlete. Yep, athlete. That means food is fuel, not punishment.

You gotta find meals you love. Hate steamed veggies? Cool. Roast them. Crunch lover? Try roasted chickpeas or air-fried sweet potato fries. Got a sweet tooth? Fruit, dark chocolate, protein shakes that taste like dessert—these are your new secret weapons.

There’s this quote I live by: “Athletes eat and drink. They don’t diet and exercise.”

Get it? You’re fueling for a reason. Not starving yourself into misery.

When you shift into that mindset—eating to move, not to shrink—you send your body a message:
“I deserve energy. I deserve strength.”

You’re not depriving yourself. You’re preparing for battle. And funny thing? When you eat like a runner, performance goes up—and body comp usually follows. Win-win.

Your knees hurt less. Your sleep gets better. You wake up ready to move. This is what it feels like to be strong. To be in charge.

Your Move: What food makes you feel strong? Eat more of that. What food drags you down? Cut back a bit. Experiment. Learn. Adjust.

Motivation & Accountability

Staying motivated can be challenging for any runner – and if you’re heavier, you might face additional mental hurdles or outside pressures.

Here are some of my favorite ways to keep the fire burning for the long run (pun intended) and build systems that keep you going even on low-motivation days. 

1. Find Your Tribe – Inclusive Running Communities:

One of the best ways to stay motivated is to connect with others who share similar goals or experiences. Inclusive run communities – whether in person or online – provide encouragement, accountability, and that crucial feeling that you’re not alone in this. Consider seeking out or creating communities such as:

Plus-Size or Slower-Pace Run Groups:

More cities now have running clubs or run/walk meetups geared towards beginners or non-traditional runners.

Check Facebook for groups like “Slow AF Run Club” (founded by a larger runner, Martinus Evans) or local “beginner 5K training groups”. Just don’t post any “fast” run stats there – you’ll get banned instantly (I learned the hard way lol).

These communities explicitly welcome runners of all sizes and speeds.

For example, the Big Girls Who Run Strava club founded by Danielle Burnett fosters a supportive vibe for women of all sizes to share workouts and wins. They emphasize that “All paces are welcome, all paces are good paces. All movement is good movement.” – which is exactly the kind of positivity that fuels consistency.

Online Forums & Social Media:

Platforms like Reddit have communities (e.g. r/C25K for Couch-to-5k, r/running for general, r/XXRunning specifically for female runners, etc.) where people post progress, ask questions, and get support.

There are Facebook groups for overweight runners (search terms like “overweight runners support” etc.).

Strava – the fitness social network – can also be motivating; you can follow friends or even strangers, give each other “kudos” on workouts. (On Strava you can make your profile private if you only want certain people to see your posts, or you can join clubs).

Seeing others of similar background succeed can massively boost your belief in yourself. When you log a tough 2 miles and someone comments “great job, keep it up!”, it feels good. When you see someone your size post that they ran their first 10K, you start believing maybe you can too.

Local Races and Parkruns:

Participating in local 5Ks or free Parkrun events is a way to find community. You’ll likely meet other back-of-packers. Some of my best experiences were chatting with fellow “back” runners during races – a camaraderie forms.

Also consider volunteering at races – it’s super motivating to hand out water or medals and absorb the positive energy, and often seeing all body types cross the finish is inspiring. You also get plugged into the local running scene that way.

Accountability Buddies:

If group runs aren’t your thing, even just having one friend or family member as an accountability buddy helps. That could be someone who literally runs with you a couple times a week (perhaps at your pace, or run/walk with you).

Or it could be a virtual buddy – you agree to check in via text each time you complete a workout. Some plus-size runners pair up with a friend across the country: both text “Got my run in!” daily, creating mutual accountability. T

here are also apps that create challenges (e.g., step challenges, mileage challenges) you can do with coworkers or friends for fun competition.

The key is finding support and a sense of belonging. Underrepresentation of higher-BMI folks in mainstream running can make you feel isolated. But the truth is, there are many of us out there – we just have to link up.

When you immerse in a community where a non-lean body is normalized and celebrated, it recharges your motivation. So much of motivation is about environment – place yourself (physically or digitally) in spaces that cheer for you.

Focus on Non-Scale Victories:

Motivation often wanes if you only track weight loss, because weight can fluctuate or plateau due to factors beyond fat (water retention, muscle gain, hormones, etc.).

And chasing the scale number can distract from the real progress you’re making. Instead, track and celebrate non-scale wins – the tangible improvements tied to your running and health:

Performance Milestones:

Did your pace for the same route improve? Did you run your first mile nonstop? Did you increase your long run from 2 to 3 miles? Set mini goals and relish hitting them.

E.g., aim to knock 1 minute off your 5K time over 8 weeks, or to run an extra day per week consistently. These performance goals shift focus from appearance to ability.

It feels amazing to see, for example, your mile time go from 14:00 to 12:30 over months – that’s progress you achieved through hard work, regardless of weight. Or maybe you couldn’t squat without knee pain before, and now you can due to stronger legs – huge victory!

Fitness Indicators:

Notice how you can climb stairs without huffing now, or your resting heart rate dropped from 80 to 65 (a sign of improved cardiovascular fitness).

Maybe your blood pressure improved, or you can play with your kids longer without needing a break. These real-life benefits are motivating because they improve quality of life.

One great idea: keep a journal and periodically jot down “Things I can do now that I couldn’t do last month.” It could be as simple as “I can run 10 minutes straight” or “I recover faster, not sore for days.” Seeing that list grow is fuel.

Body Feel and Composition:

Even if the scale barely moves, you might notice clothes fitting differently (looser in some areas as fat converts to muscle shape). You might feel muscles where you didn’t before. You might stand taller, have better posture (often due to core strength).

Or check inches if you want – sometimes people lose inches from waist or hips while scale stays same because of muscle gain (and muscle is denser).

Another win: less joint pain – ironically, some bigger people report knee or back pain improves after they start exercising and strengthening those areas (contrary to myth that running always causes pain). These are signs of a healthier body irrespective of weight.

Here’s my guide on how to measure body composition.

Habit over Hype – Build Systems:

Motivation (hype) is fickle. Some days you’re pumped by a new challenge or an inspirational video… other days you want to quit. The secret is to rely on habits and systems more than raw motivation.

James Clear in “Atomic Habits” says you fall to the level of your systems, not rise to the level of your goals, and it’s true.

Here’s what I’d recommend you to do:

Schedule Runs Like Appointments:

Treat them as non-negotiable meetings with yourself.

Block the time on your calendar. Example: Monday-Wednesday-Friday at 7am are run times, no matter what.

Eventually it becomes automatic – Monday morning = run day, not debate day.

As we’ve said, consistency is key, and routine breeds consistency. Even if you don’t feel like it, if it’s “what you do” at that time, you’re more likely to get out the door.

Lay Out Clothes/Prep Gear Ahead:

Remove friction. If you run in the morning, set out your running clothes, shoes, watch, etc., the night before.

If you run after work, maybe change into running clothes at work so you’re mentally and physically prepped to hit the road on the way home.

The less you have to think or decide, the better. If your gear is ready and waiting, it’s easier to slip into autopilot and go.

Habit Stacking:

Attach running to an existing habit. E.g., get up, brush teeth, put on running clothes (tie it to your morning routine).

Or every day after work, immediately change into trainers. By chaining it with something you already do, it becomes expected.

Mini-Goals for Streaks:

Some people find tracking streaks motivating. For instance, commit to “I will do some form of exercise 5 days a week for the next 4 weeks.” Each day tick off on a chart or app.

The visual streak can motivate you not to break it (we love continuity). Just be mindful to allow rest days or active recovery to avoid burnout – streak doesn’t have to mean running every day, just doing your planned activity schedule.

Reward Yourself (External Accountability):

You likely get intrinsic rewards from running (endorphins, pride).

But external rewards can help in early habit formation.

For example, tell yourself “If I complete all my planned runs for the next 2 weeks, I’ll treat myself to [new running leggings / a movie night / fancy coffee].”

Or use a fitness app that awards badges (shiny digital badges shouldn’t be motivating but darn it, they are – see Strava “trophies” or Garmin badges).

Set New Challenges Periodically:

The human psyche likes novelty and challenge. Once you hit one goal, set another to avoid stagnation. It doesn’t always have to be faster or farther – could be different. For instance, sign up for a fun trail race, or a run distance you haven’t tried (maybe a 10K or half marathon if you’ve done 5Ks), or try a relay race with friends.

The anticipation of a challenge can motivate you to train consistently. Or mix in something like “I’ll do a mile time trial at end of month to see improvement.” Challenges provide a target to aim at so you’re not just running in circles (pun intended).

Just ensure you don’t escalate too unrealistically (like going from 5K to marathon in 2 months – too much risk). Choose doable but stretching goals.

And occasionally do runs just for fun with no watch or pace concern (a run with a friend while chatting, or on a pretty trail). Those remind you running itself is rewarding, not just meeting goals.

Handling Setbacks:

Despite best efforts, there will be times motivation plummets – e.g., an injury forces rest, or life gets busy and you break your routine. This is where many throw in the towel. Don’t.

Plan for comeback strategies. If injured, stay involved in community (volunteer at runs, cheer others, do what cross-training you can). If you regained some weight or lost fitness, be kind to yourself and treat it as a temporary state, not failure.

The road is not linear. A useful mindset: No matter how many times you falter, you’re always one run away from being back on track. Literally, one workout and you’ve turned momentum forward again. So just focus on that next run, not how far you fell behind.

Also, frankly, allow yourself ups and downs. Motivation is like the tide – it will ebb and flow. That’s normal. Experienced runners know not every day is excitement; discipline and love of the process carry you through lulls. When you emerge the other side of a slump, you often find a new level of resilience.

Final Words: This Ain’t the Finish Line — It’s Just Your Starting Gun

First off, huge congrats. Not just for reading this whole guide, but for showing up—for deciding to run, right now, in the body you’ve got. That decision? That’s power. Real power.

Listen, your weight doesn’t decide what kind of runner you are. It never has. The fact that you’re here, reading this, lacing up, showing up—that’s what defines you. This right here? This is your starting line. Not your finish line.

I know it’s easy to feel like you’re behind. Like you’ve gotta catch up to all the lean, fast folks out there. But that’s a lie. You are exactly where you need to be. Every runner starts somewhere. This is your “somewhere.” And I promise you—what’s ahead? It’s full of wins you haven’t even dreamed of yet.

Strength Isn’t Measured on a Scale

Let’s be real—yeah, lighter runners might have a different gear. But I’ve seen so-called “unathletic” folks grind through brutal runs with more heart than some skinny speedsters who bailed at mile two. Strength isn’t about numbers on a scale—it’s about guts, grit, and showing up even when it’s hard.

And here’s a little secret: your body has strength that most people overlook. You’ve been carrying extra weight your whole life. That means your legs are already doing resistance training every damn day. I’ve coached bigger runners who crushed hills because their engine was built tough from the start.

Give yourself some credit. You’ve already been training—just living in this world. Now you’re channeling it into something focused. That’s powerful stuff.

Progress, Not Perfection

You’re gonna have rough runs. You’ll skip a day. You’ll have weeks where motivation is MIA. That’s normal. And it doesn’t mean you’ve failed.

Forget perfection. That’s a trap. Go for progress.

One step forward—even after two steps back—is still one step ahead of where you were.

Trust me, there’s no such thing as a “perfect” runner. Everyone struggles. The winners are the ones who keep coming back.

So if you had a crappy run this week? Good. You showed up. That’s what matters. Keep stacking those wins.

You Don’t Have to Look Like a Runner to Be One

Still got that image in your head? The ripped marathoner or Olympic sprinter?

Forget it.

Real runners come in all shapes. I’ve coached 250 lb runners with more drive than someone half their size. I’ve seen folks with gray hair and round bellies finish races with fire in their eyes. You don’t have to “look” like anything.

If you run, you’re a runner. Period.

Say it to yourself. Say it out loud. Claim it. Own it.

Once you believe it, everything else falls into place. You’ll train like a runner. Think like a runner. Show up like a runner. And that identity? It’s what keeps the fire going on the hard days.

Don’t Compare Your Chapter 1 to Someone Else’s Chapter 10

Look, scrolling social media can mess with your head. You see people cranking out 10-mile tempo runs and think, “Why can’t I do that?”

Because you’re writing your own damn story, that’s why.

Some folks have been running for years. You’re just getting started—and that’s beautiful. Keep your eyes on your lane. Celebrate your wins, no matter how small they feel. Every mile you log, every workout you finish, every day you choose to keep going—that’s momentum.

Weight might change. Or it might not. But how you feel will. How you move. How you show up in the world. That’s the real prize.

And don’t be surprised when people around you start noticing. Your kids. Your coworkers. Your friends. You’ll inspire more people than you realize just by putting one foot in front of the other.

Low Motivation Days? Yeah, They Happen.

You’re gonna wake up some mornings and just not feel it. You’ll get hit with self-doubt. You’ll wonder if this is really for you.

That’s okay. Bookmark this guide. Come back to it. Read the parts that fired you up. This is not a “one and done” journey—it’s a practice. Like brushing your teeth or doing squats. You keep at it, and over time, it becomes part of who you are.

And honestly? It gets easier. You’ll start racking up those “hell yeah I did it” moments. And those are addictive in the best way.

Your Finish Lines Are Still Ahead

Maybe you started reading this looking for permission. Maybe you needed proof that you could actually do this.

Well, here’s your permission slip. And your proof? It’s in every run you’ve done—and the ones coming next.

The feeling when you cross your first finish line? When you PR? When someone calls you a “runner” and it just hits different?

Those are waiting for you. They’re real. They’re golden. And they’re coming.

This guide might be over, but your journey? It’s just heating up. We’re out here with you. Other runners like you. All rooting. All cheering. Some of us walking. Some of us jogging. Some of us sprinting. But we’re all moving forward together.

So lace up. Get out there. Doesn’t matter if it’s a jog, walk, shuffle, or slow mile.

This is your starting line.

And the road ahead? It’s yours to take.

Now go run it. 🏃‍♂️

Can Walking 10,000 Steps a Day Really Help You Lose Weight? Here’s the Truth (Backed by Results)

So… does walking 10,000 steps actually help you lose weight, or is it just another fitness myth that refuses to die?

Short answer? Yeah, it works.

Long answer?

Yeah — but only if you’re not washing those steps down with three slices of cake every night.

The truth is, walking is one of the simplest, most underrated, and most sustainable fat-burning tools out there.

No gym.

No burpees.

No bootcamps.

Just your legs, some intention, and a half-decent playlist.

Here’s the real deal on whether 10K steps can move the scale… and the small daily habits that make it easier than people think.

Let me tell you more…

The Math Behind the Walk

According to the stats, 1,000 steps burns about 30–40 calories, depending on your body size and pace.

So 10K steps? That’s about 300–400 calories a day, or roughly 2,100–2,800 per week.

That’s nearly two-thirds of a pound of fat burned off—just from walking. And that’s without even stepping inside a gym.

And if you’re heavier or walking faster, you’ll burn even more.

I’ve seen clients shed weight walking 10K steps a day while barely changing their food intake.

It’s not magic. It’s consistency.

But Let’s Be Real

If your diet’s a mess, no amount of walking will save you.

I say this to clients all the time: You can’t out-walk a bad diet.

But walking does help you control your appetite.

After a good walk, you’re more likely to crave real food—not junk.

Plus, when you’re out walking, you’re not in the kitchen snacking out of boredom.

Bonus benefit? Walking helps protect your muscle as you lose fat.

That’s huge.

People crash diet and lose muscle too fast — bad move.

Walking, especially with hills or stairs, keeps your muscles working.

More muscle = better metabolism.

That’s how you stay lean long-term.

And don’t forget the non-scale wins:

  • Your jeans fit better
  • Your energy’s up
  • You’re sleeping like a baby

I’ve had readers tell me their waist shrank before the scale even moved. That’s walking at work.

One Redditor on r/loseit lost 40 pounds in just three months walking 10K a day while eating clean.

That’s fast—and they were super disciplined. But it shows what’s possible when you pair movement with good choices.

Your next move: If you’re walking for weight loss, stay patient. Keep the steps up and the food smart. Watch how your body—and life—change.

And celebrate every win, even the small ones.

Making 10,000 Steps a Daily Habit (Real Tips That Actually Work)

So, you know the science. You’ve seen the charts. You get why walking 10K steps a day is a big deal. But let’s talk about the hard part—turning it into a habit.

When I first aimed for 10,000 steps daily, I had to be deliberate.

I’d glance at my tracker at 6 PM and see “4,000” and just groan.

But over time, I figured out a bunch of sneaky little ways to get my steps in without making it feel like another job.

These aren’t abstract tips—they’re what I use in my life, what I give my clients, and what I’ve borrowed from some clever folks on Reddit and around the internet.

Here’s how you build the habit from the ground up:

1. Break It Up Into Mini-Wins

Don’t picture 5 miles all at once. That’s overwhelming. I like to chip away early—maybe 2,000 steps before breakfast, another chunk by lunch, and so on.

One Redditor said they just go on short walks a few times a day and hitting 15K “feels easy.”

I’ve done that too—a quick 10-minute walk here, a block loop there. It adds up without killing your energy.

Try this: Set alarms. I used to have one labeled “Stretch & Stroll” at 10 AM and 3 PM. Sounds cheesy, but it worked.

2. Stack It With Stuff You Already Do

This one changed everything for me. After lunch? I walk. That’s the rule. Doesn’t matter if it’s 10 minutes or 20—I move.

It helps digestion, resets my head, and earns me 1,500+ steps easy. Another trick: walk during calls, during your kid’s soccer practice, or instead of scrolling your phone.

One of my clients ditched driving his daughter to school and walked instead. Same routine, but now he gets 2,000 extra steps every morning.

That’s how habits get locked in—attach them to stuff you already do.

3. Make Weekends Active (Skip the Couch Marathons)

I used to kill entire weekends binge-watching. Now? I mix in some movement:

  • Farmers’ markets
  • Beach walks
  • Hikes
  • Even just grabbing coffee and strolling

Those active plans add steps without “exercise” vibes. Some of my favorite memories are just long sunset walks with my girlfriend or exploring a new street market.

Make your downtime move you. It’s a win-win.

4. Park Farther, Walk Longer

You’ve heard it before, but seriously—it works.

Park farther. Take the longer sidewalk. Get off one bus stop earlier.

I’ll even go to the store and take the long route home just for the steps. Doesn’t cost me anything, and I avoid the stress of squeezing into a parking spot near the front.

Bonus: the more you do it, the more it becomes automatic.

5. Stairs Over Elevators – Always

I set a rule: if it’s under 5 floors, I’m taking the stairs.

At first, I was breathing hard after 3 floors (not gonna lie, I felt weak). But after a while, it got easier—and my legs got stronger too.

It’s not just about steps—it’s mini strength training. And yes, downstairs counts too. Just be careful on the knees.

6. If It’s Close, Walk It

Living in Bali, it’s easy to fall into the scooter trap. Even for a 2-minute trip, people fire up the bike. I used to do that too.

But now I walk to the local warung or a friend’s place down the street. Adds 2K steps easy, and I skip traffic.

One Redditor with a big dog said they hit 5K steps just doing basic errands plus a nightly walk. That’s solid passive mileage.

7. Use a Treadmill Desk (or March in Place)

Not everyone has this option, but if you work at a desk, try a cheap under-desk treadmill. I use one for emails and meetings.

I’m not jogging—just walking slow—but it adds up. If not, even a standing desk can help.

I’ve taken calls while marching in place, camera off. Feels silly? Maybe. But you get your steps without thinking.

One guy online said he watches Netflix while walking on a small treadmill. Turn TV time into step time. Boom.

8. Walk the Dog (Or Be the Dog)

Don’t have a dog? Borrow one. I walk my neighbor’s pup sometimes and get a solid workout without even trying.

If you do have a dog—lucky you. Built-in accountability. Can’t skip walks when those eyes are staring at you.

If you’re pet-less, treat yourself like the dog. Go outside. Same time each day. Non-negotiable.

Even better, rope in your partner or a friend. Evening walks with my girlfriend are our thing. We talk, laugh, walk. It doesn’t feel like exercise—it’s just life.

9. Add Fun – Dance, Music, Podcasts

Walking doesn’t need to be boring. I crank up podcasts and go.

Sometimes I keep walking just to finish an episode. Or I’ll dance around while folding laundry. Steps are steps.

One person online said they throw solo dance parties in their living room when they can’t go outside. I respect that.

Whether it’s music, audiobooks, or just new routes to explore—make it fun, or you won’t stick with it.

10. Track It – But Don’t Be a Slave to It

Fitness trackers help. Seeing your step count climb is like a mini reward.

I check mine midday to see if I need to move more. But I don’t obsess.

Don’t panic if you’re short. Some days I’m pacing in my kitchen at 9:45 PM to hit 10K. It’s not weird—it’s commitment.

11. Build a Routine That Sticks

Routine is king. I shoot for:

  • 2K by 10 AM
  • 5K by mid-afternoon
  • Wrap up in the evening

Some days go sideways—meetings, travel, sick kids, whatever. That’s life. Do what you can.

The goal is most days, not every day. Aim for 5–6 good days a week.

Eventually, missing a day will feel off. That’s when you know it’s a real habit. And if you need motivation—share your journey. I post walks, daily counts, cool views, whatever.

A few readers started monthly step challenges. It’s not about perfection—it’s about showing up.

Final Thought (And Your Challenge)

So what now?

Simple: make a plan. Right now. One tiny change.

Maybe it’s:

  • “I’ll walk 15 minutes after lunch.”
  • “I’ll do a 5-minute dance break every hour.”

Write it down. Tell someone. That’s your Week 1 challenge.

Stack more habits as you go. Step by step, it becomes who you are.

You’ll notice you breathe easier. Sleep better. Maybe your jeans loosen a bit.

You’ll crave movement—not because you have to, but because it feels right.

So, what’s your next step?

Let’s crush that 10K goal—together.

FAQs: Running for Weight Loss

If you’re taking up running to lose weight – just like I did a few years ago – then I’m pretty sure you got plenty of questions.

Worry no more.

In this post, I’m gonna do my best to address some of the most weight loss running questions in simple and easy-to-understand way.

Sounds like a good idea?

Let’s get to it.

How long should I run to lose weight?

You don’t need to crank out marathon sessions to see results. W

hen I first started shedding weight, I stuck to 20–30 minutes per run, about three times a week.

That’s it. Nothing fancy—just showing up and putting in work.

And guess what? It worked.

As your body adapts, you can stretch those runs to 40 minutes or even an hour if you’re feeling strong.

But there’s no need to rush it. According to health experts, around 150 minutes of moderate cardio a week is great for general health.

If weight loss is the goal, bump that to 250–300 minutes per week.

That might sound like a lot, but it breaks down pretty clean: five days a week, 30-minute runs—and boom, you’re in the sweet spot. Want faster results? Add a sixth day or toss in a longer session on the weekend.

Here’s what I always tell clients: you don’t need a magic number of minutes.

What you need is a calorie deficit—and running helps you build one consistently. A 30-minute run at a good clip burns around 300 calories. Stack that with decent eating, and you’re well on your way.

Short on time? No problem. Even a 15-minute interval run can do serious work if you push the effort. Don’t overthink it—just move.

Q: How much should I run per week to lose weight?

Let’s cut to it: a solid weekly target for weight loss is around 15–20 miles, spread across multiple runs.

That range has worked for a ton of runners I’ve coached—and it’s what helped me drop fat while building endurance.

Now if you’re just getting started, don’t panic. You might only hit 5–8 miles a week at first—and that’s totally okay.

Everyone starts somewhere.

What matters is adding to that number bit by bit. Mileage should grow with your confidence, not crush your joints.

And here’s a coaching truth: quality > quantity. Ten focused miles with clean nutrition will always beat twenty sloppy miles that leave you broken.

Walking, biking, strength training—they all count too. Get in that 150–250 minute weekly activity range, however you can. If you’re running a little and walking a lot, that still burns fat.

Q: Can I lose weight just by running—no diet changes?

You can… but it’s like running uphill with a weight vest. You’ll get somewhere, but it’s way harder than it needs to be.

When I first started clocking miles, I saw a few pounds come off without changing what I ate.

But it didn’t last. My hunger went up, my body got more efficient, and eventually, I hit a plateau.

Running can torch calories—sure—but if you’re refueling with double cheeseburgers and soda every time, you’re fighting yourself.

Let’s keep it real: running 30 minutes might burn 300 calories. One oversized muffin? Same calories, wiped out in three bites.

If you ignore diet, it’s way too easy to undo your hard work.

But pair running with smart food choices? That’s where the magic happens. You’re creating a deficit from both ends—burning more and eating less. That’s when the fat starts to drop consistently.

Q: I run really slow. Can I still lose weight?

Hell yes.

Your pace does not define your progress. A mile is a mile—whether it takes you 7 minutes or 17. You still burn about 100 calories per mile, give or take.

When I first got serious about running, I was slogging 11–12 minute miles, sometimes slower. And I still lost weight. The trick? I stayed consistent and didn’t let pace mess with my head.

Running slower can even be a secret weapon. You might be able to go longer and rack up more total calories burned. One step at a time adds up.

And I love this quote from Reddit: “5K in 25 minutes is a solid ‘I jog often’ pace. But if you’re running 5K in 40 minutes as a beginner, that’s fine too—you’re lapping everyone on the couch.”

Truth bomb, right there.

If you want to burn more while staying at a slow pace, just stretch the run a bit—maybe do 25–30 minutes instead of 15–20. Or add another run to your week.

Either way, you’re winning.

Q: Is running or walking better for weight loss?

Running burns more calories in less time—no question. But that doesn’t mean walking isn’t a powerful tool.

A 30-minute run usually burns more than a 30-minute walk. But walking’s easier on the joints, less intimidating, and still works if you do enough of it.

I’ve had clients drop pounds just by hitting 10,000 steps a day and cleaning up their diet. No running involved.

Here’s my honest take: running works faster if your body can handle it.

But walking works too—especially if you walk more often or for longer durations. Combine the two and you’ve got the perfect setup.

Personally, I use walking on my rest days. It keeps me active, burns extra calories, and helps my body recover.

Don’t feel like you have to choose one or the other. Mix and match based on how you feel.

Q: What should I eat before and after a run to support weight loss?

Let’s keep this simple: fuel just enough to power your run, but don’t overdo it.

If you haven’t eaten in a while, a small pre-run snack—maybe 100 to 200 calories—can make a huge difference. My go-to’s? A banana, a rice cake with peanut butter, or half a granola bar.

If you run early in the morning, you might not need anything. Some folks do fine fasted for short runs. Others don’t. Try it both ways and listen to your body.

After the run, you’ll want something with protein and a little carb to help recover—but don’t use it as an excuse to eat junk “because you earned it.”

I usually plan my runs right before a normal meal. That way, I’m not adding extra snacks—I’m just shifting meal timing so I eat when my body needs fuel.

Think: Greek yogurt with fruit, a veggie omelet, a chicken wrap. Nothing fancy. Just real food, smart timing.

And water—don’t skip that. If I’ve been sweating like crazy, I’ll add a pinch of salt or a squeeze of lemon to help replenish.

Try this: Next time you run, plan your meal afterward instead of before. It’s a simple shift that keeps calories in check.