Why a Pound of Muscle is Better Than a Pound of Fat

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ā€œMuscle weighs more than fatā€ is a common phrase youā€™ll often hear at the gym or from well-meaning friends. The conventional wisdom being that, if your clothes fit better but you havenā€™t lost any weight, itā€™s because youā€™ve been shedding fat and gaining muscle. That said, itā€™s a misleading statement since, no matter what somethingā€™s made of (muscle or fat, bricks or feathers), a pound is a pound.

So muscle does not actually weigh more than fat. But it is denser, and thatā€™s usually where the confusion stems.

WEIGHT VS DENSITY

According to Lance C. Dalleck from the American Council on Exercise (ACE): ā€œThe problem lies with equating the measurements ā€˜weightā€™ and ā€˜density.ā€™ While weight (mass) is a component of density (mass/volume), they should not be used interchangeably. As we lose fat and gain muscle, weight may change very little, while body volume decreases as we become leaner.ā€

In other words, muscle takes up less space in your body than fat, so itā€™s possible to pack on muscle ā€” and maintain or even gain a little weight ā€” while youā€™re actually getting smaller.

For a handy visual aid, imagine one pound of fat being roughly equal to the size of a small grapefruit, while one pound of muscle is about the size of a tangerine. Even though a pound is a pound, the more grapefruits youā€™re packing, the larger youā€™ll be.

METABOLIC RATE

Beyond your body composition, muscle and fat also play two very different roles metabolically. Your basal metabolic rate is the amount of calories your body burns just to survive ā€” yes, even while youā€™re watching TV or sleeping. This includes things like breathing, converting food to energy and circulating blood. Per ACE, it accounts for roughly 60ā€“75% of all the calories you burn in a given day. And because muscle tissue burns more calories than fat tissue, as you increase the amount of muscle you have, youā€™ll increase your basal metabolic rate.

Cedric X. Bryant, the chief science officer at ACE, says a pound of muscle burns an additional 4ā€“6 calories each day compared to a pound of fat. So if you start a strength-training regimen and replace 5 pounds of fat with 5 pounds of muscle, you can burn up to 30 extra calories each day. That might not sound like much, but itā€™s the equivalent of losing 3 pounds per year, just from being alive. If youā€™ve got a lot of fat to lose, and are able to combine your weight loss with significant muscle gains, your basal metabolic increases even more.

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