I'm going to share my experience and what I've observed in practice combining retatrutide with diet and carb cycling, especially during fat loss phases.
1. Why does retatrutide work better with carbs?
Many people try to use retatrutide with strict keto or very low-carb diets. I tried it too… and the result was:
This causes:
reduced appetite
improved insulin sensitivity
increased energy utilization
But it also:
increases the body's energy demand
If you don't consume enough carbohydrates:
You don't need the same thing every day.
The body doesn't burn calories the same way:
---
Cycling Goal:
🔵 High days (training)
🔴 Low days (rest)
3. Adaptation based on body fat percentage
Here's the important part: cycling at 30% body fat is not the same as cycling at 12%.
---
PHASE 1: 30% → 22%
Goal: Rapid weight loss + Adherence
Distribution:
Here, extensive cycling is NOT necessary yet.
PHASE 2: 22% → 16%
Goal: Optimize performance + continue losing weight
Introduce cycling:
Training days:
- 150–200 g carbohydrates
Rest days:
- 80–120 g carbohydrates
Here you will already notice a clear difference in energy.
PHASE 3: 16% → 13% (key phase)
This is where many people fail
Strategy:
Training days:
Rest days:
- 70–100 g carbs
Here, retotratutide + carbs works wonders:
✔ better energy
✔ less anxiety
✔ better physique
PHASE 4: 13% → 10% (real definition)
Here, pushing yourself recklessly is no longer an option
Optimal strategy:
Days Training:
- 180–250 g carbs
near maintenance calories
Rest days:
- 60–90 g carbs
Weekly refeed (key):
I'm currently at 14% body fat and I need to be increasingly careful not to lower my carb intake because I'm experiencing mild hypoglycemia and I'm only taking 2.5 mg of retatrutide.
What are your meal protocols?
1. Why does retatrutide work better with carbs?
Many people try to use retatrutide with strict keto or very low-carb diets. I tried it too… and the result was:
- energy drops
- poorer performance
- poorer sleep
- a feeling of physiological “stress”
This causes:
reduced appetite
improved insulin sensitivity
increased energy utilization
But it also:
increases the body's energy demand
If you don't consume enough carbohydrates:
- cortisol levels rise
- performance decreases
- recovery is slower
- adherence is poorer
- better muscle glycogen levels
- improved performance
- less stress
- better sleep
You don't need the same thing every day.
The body doesn't burn calories the same way:
- Weight training + cardio day
- Sedentary day
---
Cycling Goal:
- Maximize performance
- Maintain a deficit
- Avoid metabolic adaptation
- Improve adherence
🔵 High days (training)
- More carbs
- More calories
- Better performance
🔴 Low days (rest)
- Fewer carbs
- Greater deficit
- More fat oxidation
3. Adaptation based on body fat percentage
Here's the important part: cycling at 30% body fat is not the same as cycling at 12%.
---
PHASE 1: 30% → 22%
Goal: Rapid weight loss + Adherence
- Calories: Moderate-high deficit
- Carbohydrates: Medium
Distribution:
- Protein: High
- Fats: Moderate
- Carbohydrates: 100–150 g daily
Here, extensive cycling is NOT necessary yet.
PHASE 2: 22% → 16%
Goal: Optimize performance + continue losing weight
Introduce cycling:
Training days:
- 150–200 g carbohydrates
Rest days:
- 80–120 g carbohydrates
Here you will already notice a clear difference in energy.
PHASE 3: 16% → 13% (key phase)
This is where many people fail
- the body becomes more sensitive
- more cortisol
- worse tolerance to the deficit
Strategy:
Training days:
- 150–220 g carbs
- slightly higher calories
Rest days:
- 70–100 g carbs
Here, retotratutide + carbs works wonders:
✔ better energy
✔ less anxiety
✔ better physique
PHASE 4: 13% → 10% (real definition)
Here, pushing yourself recklessly is no longer an option
Optimal strategy:
Days Training:
- 180–250 g carbs
near maintenance calories
Rest days:
- 60–90 g carbs
Weekly refeed (key):
- 1 high-carb day
- maintenance or slight surplus
- increases leptin
- improves metabolism
- prevents plateaus
I'm currently at 14% body fat and I need to be increasingly careful not to lower my carb intake because I'm experiencing mild hypoglycemia and I'm only taking 2.5 mg of retatrutide.
What are your meal protocols?