The Plan:
Calculating your calories and macros
To get a rough baseline of how many calories to bulk, calculate your bodyweight x 15-16, and go from there.
150lbs -> 2,250-2400 calories to start
180lbs -> 2,700-2,880 calories
You don’t need to be putting on 5 pounds a week contrary to what people tell you. You should be shooting for ½ pound to 1 pound a week. If you’re gaining weight faster, lower the calories. If it’s slower, bring it up by 200 calories. It is a journey after all. It will take a couple weeks at a time to figure out your sweet spot.
Protein: .82-1g per pound
150lbs -> 123-150 grams of protein x 4 (calories per gram of protein) = 492-600cals
180lbs -> 148-180 grams of protein x 4 = 592-720cals
Fats: 20-25% of your daily intake
150lbs -> 2,250-2400 calories x .25 = 563-600cals / 9 (calories per gram of fat) = 63-67 g/day
180lbs -> 2,700-2,880 calories x .25 = 675-720cals / 9 = 75-80g/day
Carbs: Remainder of your caloric intake
150lbs -> 492-600cals (protein) + 563-600cals (fats) = 1,055-1200 cals / 4 (cals per gram carb) = 263-300g carbs
180lbs -> 592-720cals + 675-720 cals = 1267-1440 cals / 4 = 316-360g carbs
What Foods to eat?
90% from whole food sources:
Protein sources – turkey, beef, steak, chicken, fish, eggs, etc.
Carb sources – oatmeal, rice, potatoes, quinoa, beans, etc
Fat sources – nut butters, nuts, olive oil, egg yolks, etc.
While I definitely push eating higher quality foods listed above, if you’ve had 90% of your intake from there, and hitting the goal, or being too full all the time is still a problem, feel free to add more calorically dense items in like shakes and more savory snacks. This isn’t ideal, but as I said before, you have an uncommon goal. You need the calories to gain weight.
Stop comparing yourself!
Let’s use me as an example. I’m pretty average, and I’ll start putting on weight if I eat more than 2500 calories. Not terrible, not great. If I think back to my last 6 skinny clients, across the board they needed MINIMUM 3500 calories. And that’s being conservative. Most ended up needing 4000-4500 calories just to see the scale move up ½ a pound. That’s double the amount of calories I eat in a day.
Most of you in my position would go “God, that’s the dream I could easily eat 4500 calories today.” You probably can. But how about every single day, 7 days a week? Also, try keeping the quality of food high. It’s exhausting. Oh, and on top of that, most of my skinnier clients don’t have as big of an appetite as us average folk, and already get full off 2500 calories. This is why I allow that 10% for more calorically dense items.
Use body fat as a gauge
Not an exact science, but most gyms either have an InBody machine, or one of those handheld body fat testers. Use those once every other week or month to get a rough gauge. If you don’t have access to that use your abs. Once they start disappearing to the point you can’t even see the rough outline, it’s time to start a mini cut down to 10%.