How to lose weight cycling without sacrificing strength

If you're looking to lose weight cycling, here is a quick guide to reduce that number on the scales to improve your riding

rider looking at scales illustration
(Image credit: Future)

Body weight and composition are widely discussed, and sometimes hotly debated, topics among cyclists. That’s hardly surprising, given that your body weight – along with the cycling nutrition and training habits that got you there – has huge potential to influence your performance, for better or worse. How can an individual cyclist know what’s best for them? When does weight loss benefit performance, and when might it be detrimental? These are the questions this feature will investigate, to help you figure out whether you really need to lose weight.

When asked about how weight influences performance, cyclists generally talk about wanting to be lighter and narrower, so as to improve their power-to-weight ratio while decreasing aerodynamic drag. They are not wrong. But it’s also more complicated. Reaching optimal performance is about harmonising body weight with your training load, fuelling needs, sleep, rest and recovery. It’s about tailoring your own individual goals and strategy to find that sweet spot where you can maintain a healthy weight in a way that’s harmonious with all other aspects of your life. 

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Dr Eimear Dolan is a researcher in applied physiology and nutrition at the University of Sao Paulo, Brazil. Her main research interests include energy availability, body weight management, bone health and female athlete physiology.