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Weight Loss Percentage Calculator: How to Track Your Progress

Last updated: May 2026

Tracking weight loss as a percentage of your starting body weight is more meaningful than tracking raw pounds alone — especially when comparing progress over time or against other people with different starting weights. Here’s the formula, what the numbers mean, and how to use them.

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The Weight Loss Percentage Formula

The formula is straightforward:

Weight loss % = (weight lost ÷ starting weight) × 100

Or, using past and current weights:

Weight loss % = ((past weight − current weight) ÷ past weight) × 100

Example calculations

Working Backward: Target Weight from a Percentage Goal

If you want to know how much weight to lose to hit a specific percentage goal:

Target weight loss = starting weight × (goal % ÷ 100)

Example: Starting at 200 lbs, aiming to lose 10% → 200 × 0.10 = 20 lbs to lose.

What Percentage Is Healthy to Lose?

For overall health outcomes, losing 5–10% of starting body weight is generally considered clinically significant — this range is associated with measurable improvements in blood pressure, blood glucose, and cardiovascular risk factors.

For weekly rate, a healthy progression is:

Losing faster than ~1% of body weight per week increases the risk of muscle loss alongside fat — which is why a slower, steady rate preserves body composition better over time.

Related Reading

Intermittent Fasting for Weight Loss: How Much Can You Realistically Lose? →

Why Percentage Beats Tracking Pounds Alone

Raw pounds lost can be misleading when comparing progress between people. A person starting at 300 lbs losing 20 lbs has lost 6.7% of their weight. A person starting at 150 lbs losing 20 lbs has lost 13.3%. The effort and health impact of those two outcomes are very different.

Expressing weight loss as a percentage:

What the Percentage Doesn’t Tell You

The scale — and therefore any percentage based on it — measures total weight lost, not fat specifically. When you lose weight rapidly, a portion of that loss is often water and lean muscle, not just body fat.

A more complete picture of progress includes:

If you’re losing weight percentage at a healthy rate while maintaining or improving strength, that’s a good sign the loss is predominantly fat.

Related Reading

Fasting Calculator: How to Plan Your Window and Predict Your Results →

Why Weight Loss Sometimes Stalls

If your weight loss percentage stops moving, there are several common biological causes beyond simply eating too much:

Weight fluctuates by 1–3 lbs daily due to hydration, food volume, and hormones. Track your percentage over 2–4 week windows rather than day-to-day to see the real trend.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a good weight loss percentage per month?

Losing 2–4% of your starting body weight per month is a healthy, sustainable rate for most people. Faster than 4% per month increases the risk of muscle loss and metabolic adaptation. At 1% per week (the upper healthy bound), a 180 lb person would lose about 7 lbs per month.

Does 5% weight loss make a difference?

Yes — research consistently shows that even a 5% reduction in body weight produces measurable improvements in blood pressure, triglycerides, and blood glucose levels. You don’t need to reach your “goal weight” to start experiencing health benefits.

Is losing 10% body weight realistic?

Absolutely, and for most people it’s achievable within 3–5 months at a healthy pace. A 200 lb person losing 10% means losing 20 lbs — roughly 4–5 lbs per month, which falls within the sustainable 2–4% per month range.

Plan Your Weight Loss Schedule

Use our intermittent fasting calculator to find your eating window, calorie targets, and daily macros for fat loss.

Use the IF Calculator →
Dennis Kiplimo
Written by
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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