Last updated: May 2026
The cut-or-bulk decision is one of the most asked questions in fitness — and one of the most overthought. The answer depends on your current body fat percentage, training experience, and goals. Here’s a clear framework for making the right call.
Calculate Your Recomposition Plan
Not sure if you should cut, bulk, or recomp? Our calculator helps you identify the right approach based on your starting point.
Defining the Three Options
Cutting (fat loss phase)
A cut is a dedicated fat loss phase where you eat in a calorie deficit (typically 300–750 cal/day below maintenance) with the goal of losing body fat while minimizing muscle loss. You will lose weight during a cut. The focus is getting leaner.
Bulking (muscle gain phase)
A bulk is a dedicated muscle gain phase where you eat at or above maintenance (typically 200–500 cal above maintenance for a “lean bulk”) with the goal of maximizing muscle growth. You will gain some weight during a bulk. The focus is getting bigger and stronger.
Body recomposition (maintenance)
A recomp is eating at roughly maintenance calories while doing consistent resistance training, targeting simultaneous fat loss and muscle gain. Weight stays roughly stable. Progress is slower on both fronts but moves you toward both goals simultaneously. Best suited for beginners and individuals returning from training breaks.
Decision Framework: When to Choose Each Option
| Your Situation | Recommendation | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Overweight (high body fat) | Cut | Excess fat has health and performance costs; fat loss is the priority |
| Underweight / very lean (low body fat) | Bulk | Not enough muscle or fat reserves to support effective recomp |
| Beginner trainee, moderate body fat (13–18% men / 21–26% women) | Recomp | Training sensitivity makes simultaneous fat loss + muscle gain highly achievable |
| Intermediate-advanced trainee, above 16% body fat (men) / 24% (women) | Cut first, then bulk | Lean mass gains are impaired at higher body fat; get leaner before pursuing muscle gain |
| Intermediate-advanced trainee, under 16% body fat (men) / 24% (women) | Cut or bulk based on preference | Either is viable; choose based on aesthetics or performance goals |
| “Skinny fat” (normal weight, low muscle) | Recomp (lean slight surplus if very lean) | Build muscle at maintenance; fat will decrease as muscle increases |
Women: add approximately 8% to all body fat percentages in this table. Men and women have different essential fat levels.
Related Reading
Body Recomposition: What It Is and Who It Actually Works For →
The Long-Term Logic: Why Most People Should Spend More Time Bulking
Building muscle takes years. Losing fat takes months. This asymmetry has major implications for how to spend your training time.
Most drug-free male lifters accumulate approximately 20–30 lbs of total additional muscle over their training career. For women, it’s approximately 12–20 lbs. Losing 20 lbs of fat takes 2–3 months at a moderate pace. Gaining 20 lbs of muscle takes 5–10+ years.
This means that if your long-term goal is both lean and muscular, the majority of your time should be spent in neutral-to-positive energy balance — at maintenance or slight surplus — allowing muscle gain to proceed. As training experience increases, it becomes harder and harder to build muscle in a deficit. Spending excessive time cutting reduces the total muscle you’ll carry throughout your life.
When to Cut: Reasons That Actually Matter
Health
Above approximately 25% body fat (men) or 35% body fat (women), the health risks of excess body fat become more clearly elevated — increased insulin resistance, elevated blood pressure, higher blood lipids, greater cardiovascular risk. If you’re above these thresholds, cutting is advisable regardless of training goals.
Aesthetics and preference
If you prefer how you look at a lower body fat percentage and that preference motivates you to train, that’s a completely valid reason to cut. You don’t need to justify wanting to look a certain way with health or performance rationale.
Performance
For sports where power-to-weight ratio, endurance economy, or weight classes matter, targeted cutting may improve competitive outcomes. This needs to be balanced against the muscle loss that aggressive cutting can cause.
When to Bulk: Reasons That Actually Matter
You want to maximize muscle growth
Building muscle in a calorie surplus is significantly faster than at maintenance or deficit. As training experience grows, this advantage becomes more pronounced. If building muscle is your primary goal and you’re not at a body fat level where health concerns are present, bulking is more efficient than recomping.
You’re approaching the lean end of your range
If you’ve cut to around 10% body fat (men) or 18% body fat (women), you’re too lean to continue cutting without health consequences. This is the ideal time to transition to a bulk and begin the muscle-building phase.
The Recommended Cut-Bulk Cycle
For intermediate-to-advanced trainees who want to optimize long-term physique development:
- Bulk range: 10–20% body fat (men) — bulk until hitting ~20%, then cut
- Cut range: Cut until hitting ~10%, then bulk
- Minimum bulk duration: 5 months — shorter than this doesn’t allow meaningful muscle gain
- Typical cut duration: 8–16 weeks depending on how much fat was gained during the bulk
- Women: Add ~8% to all these thresholds
The Myth That Being Leaner Helps You Build More Muscle
A common reason people give for wanting to cut before bulking is the belief that leaner people build muscle more efficiently. This appears to be false for resistance-trained individuals.
Research meta-regression of studies on resistance-trained subjects found no relationship between baseline body fat percentage and gains in fat-free mass following resistance training. In other words, your ability to build muscle while lifting weights is not meaningfully affected by whether you’re at 12% or 22% body fat going into a bulk. The belief stems from overfeeding studies in non-lifting populations that don’t generalize to gym-goers.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I bulk if I’m overweight?
Technically you can, but most experts recommend cutting first if body fat is above ~20% (men) or ~30% (women). The health risks of continued fat accumulation at high baseline body fat levels, combined with the reduced aesthetic satisfaction of adding more body fat to an already fat physique, generally make cutting the better first move. That said, if you’re at 22% body fat and have almost no muscle, a lean bulk focused on aggressive resistance training is defensible — muscle gain will improve the overall situation even without fat loss.
Should I do a body recomposition instead of cutting or bulking?
Recomp is most appropriate for beginners, detrained individuals, or the “skinny fat” phenotype. For intermediate-to-advanced trainees, dedicated phases (bulk, then cut, in cycles) produce better results than trying to do both simultaneously because the rate of progress on recomp is too slow to be satisfying or efficiently achieved.
Find Your Ideal Starting Approach
Our body recomposition calculator helps you determine whether cutting, bulking, or recomposing fits your starting body composition and goals.