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How to Lean Bulk: The Complete Guide to Gaining Muscle Without Fat

Last updated: May 2026

A lean bulk — sometimes called a clean bulk — is a controlled muscle-building phase where you eat slightly above maintenance to support muscle growth while keeping fat gain to a minimum. It’s the opposite of “eat everything and sort it out later.”

Done correctly, you finish a lean bulk noticeably more muscular without needing an aggressive cutting phase to undo damage. Here’s exactly how to do it.

Step 1: Calculate Your Maintenance Calories

Before you can eat above maintenance, you need to know what maintenance actually is. Your Total Daily Energy Expenditure (TDEE) is the number of calories that keeps your weight stable given your current activity level.

Use the Mifflin-St Jeor equation as your starting point, then multiply by an activity factor (1.2–1.725 depending on how active you are). This gives you your daily maintenance number.

Related Reading

BMR vs TDEE: What’s the Difference? →

Step 2: Add a Conservative Calorie Surplus

A lean bulk uses a tightly controlled surplus — enough to fuel muscle growth, not so much that excess calories spill into fat storage.

Recommended surplus for a lean bulk:

For context, a typical 175 lb (79 kg) man adds approximately 250–500 calories; a 135 lb (61 kg) woman adds about 200–400 calories. Research consistently shows that larger surpluses accelerate fat gain without proportionally accelerating muscle growth — the extra calories don’t build more muscle, they just store as fat.

Step 3: Set Your Protein Target

Protein is the non-negotiable variable. Without adequate protein, the surplus calories have nothing to build with.

Target: 0.7–1.0g of protein per pound of body weight (1.6–2.2g/kg)

Many lifters use 1g/lb as a convenient daily target within this range. Spread it across 4–5 meals, with 20–30g per sitting to maximize muscle protein synthesis at each meal.

Related Reading

Macros for Muscle Gain: Protein, Carbs, and Fat Targets →

Step 4: Fill the Rest with Carbs and Fat

After protein is set, divide the remaining calories between carbohydrates and dietary fat:

A lean bulk emphasizes whole, minimally processed foods: oats, rice, potatoes, lean meats, eggs, Greek yogurt, fruits, vegetables, olive oil, nuts. Processed junk food is limited — not because it’s inherently evil, but because it makes it harder to maintain the precise surplus a lean bulk requires.

Step 5: Track Your Progress Weekly

A lean bulk is managed, not guessed at. Weigh yourself daily and calculate a 7-day rolling average to filter out water fluctuations. Use that trend to guide adjustments.

Target rate of weight gain: 0.25–0.5% of bodyweight per week

For a 180 lb lifter, that’s 0.45–0.9 lbs per week. Anything faster and you’re likely accumulating more fat than muscle. If the scale hasn’t moved after two weeks, add 100–150 calories. If you’re gaining faster than your target, trim the same amount.

Step 6: Train for Hypertrophy

A calorie surplus without resistance training produces fat, not muscle. The training stimulus is what signals your body to use the surplus for tissue synthesis.

A lean bulk pairs best with:

Who Should Lean Bulk?

A lean bulk suits most people who want to build muscle without significant fat gain. It’s especially common among:

If your body fat is already elevated (men above ~20%, women above ~30%), consider a short fat-loss phase first before entering a muscle-building surplus. Improving body composition before bulking improves nutrient partitioning.

Related Reading

What Is a Lean Bulk? Definition, How It Works, and Is It Worth It →

Common Lean Bulking Mistakes

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Dennis Kiplimo
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Dennis Kiplimo

Dennis Kiplimo is a Registered Nurse and founder of Denstar Fitness. He publishes fitness calculators and writes about training, nutrition and health on Medium.

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