Decision Summary
Uses lean-mass-preserving pace to estimate deficit and protein needs.
Planning
Plan body-fat reduction pace, deficit targets, and protein baselines around realistic recomposition timelines.
Uses lean-mass-preserving pace to estimate deficit and protein needs.
Linear scale-weight projection from the current starting point to the goal.
Contract, discovery endpoints, and developer notes for agent use.
Always available for agents
Tool contract JSON
https://aifithub.io/contracts/body-recomposition-planner.jsonStable input and output contract for this exact tool.
Human review
People can use the browser page to sense-check outputs and charts, but agents should still execute against the contract and discovery endpoints.
{
"tool": "body_recomposition",
"weight_kg": 84,
"body_fat_percent": 24,
"target_body_fat_percent": 18,
"weeks": 20,
"resistance_training_days": 4
} No. Start with /agent-tools.json, then follow the tool's contract URL. The page UI is for human review, not parameter discovery.
Every tool opens in Quick Start first. Advanced Controls keeps the same scenario, reveals more assumptions or diagnostics, and every tool keeps AI integrations inline below the instructions.
Open it when a human wants to sense-check the output, review the chart, or keep exploring related tools after the calculation finishes.
Body recomposition is scientifically supported, not a myth. Research by Barakat et al. (2020) in the Strength and Conditioning Journal, Longland et al. (2016) at McMaster University, and multiple studies reviewed by Helms, Aragon, and Fitschen (2014) confirm that simultaneous fat loss and muscle gain is physiologically possible under specific conditions. The McMaster study showed subjects gained 1.2 kg of lean mass while losing 4.8 kg of fat over 4 weeks on a high-protein, moderate-deficit diet with resistance training. The key conditions are being in a mild caloric deficit (10-20% below maintenance), consuming adequate protein (1.6-2.2 g/kg/day), and training with progressive overload.
Recomposition is most effective for three populations: beginners with less than 1 year of consistent resistance training, detrained individuals returning after a 3+ month break (who benefit from the muscle memory phenomenon documented by Staron et al.), and individuals with higher body fat percentages (above 20% for men, above 28% for women). These groups have heightened sensitivity to the training stimulus that allows nutrient partitioning toward muscle growth even during a caloric deficit. Intermediate and advanced lifters with lower body fat typically achieve better results through dedicated cut and bulk phases because their body has less energy reserve and less untapped muscle-building potential.
During successful recomposition, muscle gain and fat loss offset each other on the scale. Muscle tissue is denser than fat, so gaining 1 kg of muscle while losing 1 kg of fat produces zero scale change but meaningful visual and performance improvements. Research shows this equilibrium can last 4-8 weeks or longer. Better progress metrics during recomposition include waist circumference (should decrease 0.5-1 cm per month), strength on key lifts (should increase steadily), progress photos under consistent conditions, and body fat percentage measurements taken monthly.
The Morton et al. (2018) meta-analysis in the British Journal of Sports Medicine established 1.6 g/kg/day as the threshold for maximizing muscle protein synthesis, with benefits plateauing around 2.2 g/kg/day. During recomposition, where you are in a caloric deficit, protein needs are at the higher end of this range because the deficit increases protein oxidation rates. Practically, this means a 80 kg person should consume 130-175 g of protein daily, distributed across 3-4 meals of 30-45 g each to optimize per-meal muscle protein synthesis signaling.
Recomposition is slower than a dedicated cut for fat loss but produces better body composition outcomes per unit of weight lost. A traditional cut at a 500-calorie deficit typically produces 0.5 kg of fat loss per week but also 0.1-0.2 kg of lean mass loss. Recomposition at a 150-300 calorie deficit produces approximately 0.2-0.3 kg of fat loss per week while potentially gaining 0.1-0.2 kg of lean mass. For someone targeting a 5% body fat reduction, a cut might take 10-14 weeks while recomposition might take 16-24 weeks, but the recomposition approach preserves or gains muscle in the process.
If you have 3+ years of consistent resistance training and are already below 15% body fat (men) or 22% body fat (women), recomposition rates slow dramatically because your body has less untapped muscle-building potential and less energy reserve from body fat. At this point, a structured cut of 10-16 weeks at a 20-25% caloric deficit followed by a 4-6 week maintenance phase and then a lean bulk at 200-300 calories surplus typically produces better body composition changes in 6 months than 12 months of continuous recomposition. The calculator accounts for your training age when projecting timelines.
A program emphasizing compound movements (squat, deadlift, bench press, overhead press, row) with progressive overload at 10-20 hard sets per muscle group per week is most effective. Research from Schoenfeld et al. (2017) shows that training frequency of 2-3 sessions per muscle group per week outperforms once-per-week training for hypertrophy. During recomposition, training intensity (proximity to failure) is more important than volume because the caloric deficit limits recovery capacity. Keep most working sets at RPE 7-8 (2-3 reps in reserve) to maintain training quality without exceeding recovery.
Yes, but the type and amount matter. Low-to-moderate intensity cardio (Zone 2 heart rate, walking, cycling) supports fat oxidation and cardiovascular health without significantly impairing muscle recovery. High-intensity or high-volume cardio (more than 3-4 hours per week of running or HIIT) can interfere with muscle protein synthesis through the AMPK-mTOR interference pathway described in the concurrent training literature. Limit intense cardio to 2-3 sessions per week of 20-30 minutes and prioritize resistance training on days when both are scheduled.
Yes. AI Fit Hub tools are free, no-signup browser tools. All calculations run in your browser with no data transmission.
No. This tool provides evidence-based planning estimates for general fitness purposes. Individual results vary based on genetics, medical conditions, medications, sleep quality, stress levels, and other factors not captured by any calculator. Consult a qualified professional for personalized guidance.
Related Resources
Every link here is tied directly to Body Recomposition Planner. Use the explanation, formula, examples, and benchmarks to pressure-test the calculator output from first principles.
How To Use
5 STEPSPlan your body recomposition with our calculator. Learn how to strategically lose fat while building muscle with personalized calorie and macro targets.
ReadHow To Use
5 STEPSPlan sustainable weight loss with AI Fit Hub's Calorie Deficit Calculator. Accurately determine your daily calorie needs for effective fat loss without sacrificing health.
ReadGuide
6 MIN READHow to body recomp: build muscle and lose fat at the same time. Macro targets, training structure, recovery rules, and the realistic timeline expectations.
ReadFormula
4 VARIABLESUse the Body Recomposition Formula to simultaneously build muscle and lose fat. Learn to calculate your ideal calorie target by adjusting TDEE.
ReadExamples
4 EXAMPLESExplore real-world body recomposition examples, from busy professionals to athletes and new parents, revealing how to build muscle and lose fat simultaneously for diverse lifestyles.
ReadChecklist
18 ITEMSPlan body recomposition with this actionable checklist. Simultaneously build muscle and burn fat through precise nutrition, effective training, and diligent progress tracking.
Read
Estimate required calorie deficit and timeline pacing for a bodyweight change target.
Estimate your total daily energy expenditure using the Mifflin-St Jeor equation and activity multipliers.
Convert your calorie target into daily protein, carbs, and fat grams based on your goal and split preference.
Estimate your 1RM using Epley, Brzycki, and Lombardi formulas with a practical percentage table.