How Many Calories to Lose 100Pounds: Timeline & Plan
Losing 100 pounds requires a total calorie deficit of 350,000 calories, based on the 3,500-calorie-per-pound rule established in metabolic research. The table below shows how long it takes at different daily deficit rates.
Timeline to Lose 100 lbs
−250 cal/day
200 weeks
46.2 months
0.50 lbs/week
−500 cal/day
100 weeks
23.1 months
1.00 lbs/week
−750 cal/day
67 weeks
15.4 months
1.50 lbs/week
FDA-recommended safe rate: 1–2 lbs/week. At 500 cal/day deficit you lose ~1 lb/week.
To preserve muscle during a 100-lb weight loss, aim for at least 90g of protein daily (roughly 0.7–0.8g per lb of goal bodyweight). Research shows high protein intake during a calorie deficit preserves lean mass and increases satiety.
The 3,500 cal/lb rule slightly overestimates results over time — the body adapts by reducing resting metabolic rate by 10–15% after sustained deficits. Expect the final 20 pounds to take roughly 20% longer than linear math suggests.
Losing 100 pounds is a multi-month project. Breaking it into smaller milestones (25-lb increments) with quarterly check-ins improves adherence by 60% versus tracking only the final goal (source: behavioral science literature).