How to Lose 5 Pounds in a Week (What’s Actually Possible and What Isn’t)
The honest breakdown of what can happen in 7 days — and how to make the most of it
“Lose 5 pounds in a week” is one of the most searched weight loss phrases on the internet. And it’s worth being honest with you: losing 5 pounds of actual fat in 7 days is not realistic for most people — but losing 5 pounds on the scale in a week absolutely is, through a combination of real fat loss and significant fluid reduction.
Understanding the difference matters — because chasing 5 lbs of fat loss in a week leads to unsustainable, counterproductive approaches, while achieving 5 lbs of scale weight reduction through legitimate means is entirely achievable and genuinely motivating.
Here’s the honest breakdown.
The Math of Actual Fat Loss
One pound of body fat contains approximately 3,500 calories. To lose 5 lbs of pure fat in 7 days, you’d need a daily calorie deficit of 2,500 calories — essentially not eating at all for most people.
This is:
- Physiologically impossible to sustain for a week without severe consequences
- Medically dangerous — it would cause significant muscle loss, metabolic disruption, and nutritional deficiencies
- Not what most people achieve even on crash diets, where a large proportion of rapid weight loss is water
Realistic fat loss in 7 days with an aggressive but sustainable approach: 1–2 lbs of actual fat.
The remaining 3–4 lbs that can genuinely show up on the scale in a week? That’s fluid — and it’s entirely real, entirely legitimate, and much faster to shift.
Why the Scale Can Show 5 Lbs Gone in a Week
The body stores significant amounts of water alongside glycogen (stored carbohydrate), sodium, and other compounds. This water weight can drop rapidly with specific dietary changes — and the scale measures everything, not just fat.
How 5 lbs can legitimately disappear in a week:
Glycogen and water reduction (2–3 lbs): Each gram of glycogen stored in muscle is stored with approximately 3g of water. Reducing carbohydrate intake significantly depletes glycogen stores — releasing 2–3 lbs of water alongside the glycogen itself. This happens within 2–4 days of significant carbohydrate reduction.
Sodium-related water retention (1–2 lbs): Reducing sodium intake dramatically reduces the fluid the body holds to maintain sodium concentration in blood. This shift can produce 1–2 lbs of apparent weight loss within 24–48 hours.
Gut content reduction (0.5–1 lb): High-fiber, high-volume diets produce more gut content. Reducing processed food, increasing lean protein, and reducing overall food volume reduces the weight of food in the digestive tract at any given time.
Actual fat loss (1–1.5 lbs): A genuine calorie deficit of 500–750 calories per day for 7 days produces 0.5–1.5 lbs of actual fat loss.
Combined: 5 lbs on the scale in 7 days is achievable — even if only 1–1.5 lbs of it is actual fat.
The 7-Day Plan That Produces Maximum Results
Day 1–2: The Rapid Fluid Shift
Dramatically reduce sodium:
- Eliminate all processed food, restaurant food, canned food, and takeout
- Cook from whole ingredients only — no added salt
- This alone produces 1–2 lbs of fluid reduction within 48 hours for most people
Reduce carbohydrates significantly:
- Eliminate bread, pasta, rice, potatoes, and processed carbs entirely for the week
- Focus on protein, vegetables, and healthy fats
- Glycogen depletion and associated water loss begins within 24 hours
Drink more water, not less:
- Counterintuitively, increasing water intake signals the body to release retained fluid
- Aim for 3+ liters per day
- This accelerates the sodium-driven fluid release
Results by end of Day 2: Many people see 2–3 lbs of scale reduction purely from fluid shifts.
Day 3–7: Sustaining the Deficit
Protein at every meal:
- Target 0.7–1g per pound of bodyweight
- Protein keeps hunger manageable during an aggressive but temporary deficit
- Preserves muscle while fat is lost
Calorie target:
- 500–750 calories below your maintenance (not more — larger deficits produce more muscle loss, not more fat loss)
- For most people: 1,400–1,800 calories per day depending on size and activity
Meal structure:
- Breakfast: 3 eggs scrambled with spinach and cherry tomatoes
- Lunch: Large salad with grilled chicken, cucumber, olive oil and lemon dressing
- Dinner: Salmon with steamed broccoli and green beans
- Snacks: Greek yogurt, hard-boiled eggs, raw vegetables
Zero liquid calories:
- Water, black coffee, unsweetened tea only
- This alone eliminates 200–500 calories per day for people who regularly drink sweetened beverages
Exercise That Helps in 7 Days
Significant fat loss from exercise in 7 days is limited — exercise burns calories but not enough to move the needle dramatically in this timeframe.
What exercise does contribute in a week:
- Additional calorie deficit of 200–400 calories per session
- Glycogen depletion that accelerates fluid loss
- Improved mood and motivation that supports dietary adherence
Best exercise for a 7-day push:
Daily walking: 10,000+ steps per day burns 300–500 additional calories daily — the most accessible and sustainable calorie burn available. As covered in our guide to how to lose weight by walking, walking is one of the most effective fat loss tools available.
One or two strength training sessions: Depletes muscle glycogen (accelerating fluid loss) and provides the muscle stimulus that helps ensure weight lost comes primarily from fat rather than muscle.
One HIIT session: 20–30 minutes of intervals burns significant calories and produces meaningful glycogen depletion. As covered in our guide to HIIT for beginners, even brief HIIT sessions produce substantial calorie burn.
Avoid excessive cardio: Long cardio sessions in a significant calorie deficit accelerate muscle loss. Moderate, varied activity is more effective than hours of running for this purpose.
What to Eat for Maximum Results
Best foods for 7-day rapid results:
Proteins (eat freely):
- Eggs (scrambled, boiled, omelette)
- Chicken breast or thighs (grilled, baked)
- Salmon and white fish
- Greek yogurt (unsweetened)
- Cottage cheese
- Canned tuna
Vegetables (eat abundantly):
- Leafy greens — spinach, arugula, kale, romaine
- Cucumber, celery, zucchini — very high water content, almost no calories
- Broccoli, cauliflower, green beans, asparagus
- Cherry tomatoes, bell peppers
Healthy fats (in moderation):
- Avocado (1/4–1/2 per day)
- Olive oil (1–2 tablespoons for cooking)
- Small handful of almonds or walnuts
Avoid completely for the week:
- All processed food and packaged snacks
- Bread, pasta, rice, and grains
- Sugar in any form
- Alcohol
- Dairy beyond Greek yogurt and cottage cheese (due to natural sugars and sodium)
- Fruit juices and smoothies
- Restaurant food
The Water Weight Reality Check
After the 7-day period, if you return to normal eating — particularly normal carbohydrate and sodium intake — a proportion of the weight will return as glycogen and fluid are restored. This is not failure or fat regain — it’s the body restoring normal fluid and glycogen stores.
This is why “5 lbs in a week” approaches are useful for:
- Fitting into something specific for an event
- Breaking a psychological stall and building momentum
- Kickstarting a longer fat loss effort with encouraging early results
They are not useful as a sustainable long-term approach — because the fluid component of the loss isn’t permanent unless you maintain the reduced carbohydrate and sodium intake indefinitely.
The Better Goal: Sustainable Fat Loss After the Week
If you use this week as a launchpad rather than a complete solution, the results are much more durable.
After the initial 7 days:
- Reintroduce moderate amounts of quality carbohydrates (whole grains, legumes, fruit)
- Maintain reduced sodium rather than returning to high levels
- Keep the protein-first eating pattern
- Continue the exercise habits started during the week
- Maintain a moderate (400–500 calorie) deficit for ongoing fat loss
This transition converts the rapid initial loss — mostly fluid — into a sustainable fat loss trajectory that continues producing results. The 1–1.5 lbs of actual fat lost during the week becomes part of a longer journey, and the fluid loss partially holds as long as sodium and carbohydrates remain lower than pre-diet levels.
As covered in our guide to how to lose weight with a calorie deficit, a moderate sustained deficit produces 0.5–1.5 lbs of fat loss per week — which adds up to 25–75 lbs over a year.
Managing Expectations Honestly
What you can realistically expect after 7 days of this approach:
- Scale: 3–6 lbs lower (mostly fluid and glycogen)
- Fat: 1–1.5 lbs actually lost
- Appearance: Noticeably less bloated, clothes fitting looser
- Energy: Variable — some people feel energized by clean eating, others feel depleted from carbohydrate reduction
- Hunger: Manageable with high protein intake, difficult without it
What you won’t achieve:
- 5 lbs of pure fat loss
- Permanent transformation from 7 days
- Abs appearing from a single week of eating well
The Bottom Line
Losing 5 lbs on the scale in a week is achievable — through a combination of glycogen and fluid reduction (2–3 lbs) and genuine fat loss (1–1.5 lbs). The scale number is real even if most of it isn’t pure fat.
The approach: dramatic sodium reduction, significant carbohydrate reduction, high protein, zero liquid calories, daily walking, and a modest calorie deficit.
Use this as a momentum-building jumpstart or event preparation — not as your long-term strategy. The habits started during this week are the most valuable part: if the protein-first eating, daily walking, and reduced processed food continue after the 7 days, the fat loss continues — and that’s where the real transformation happens.
For the complete sustainable fat loss framework that makes a 7-day jumpstart into lasting change, our guide to how to get rid of belly fat covers everything in one place.
Have you done a short-term rapid loss push — and did it help kickstart longer-term progress or did the weight come back? Share your honest experience in the comments.
