Originally Posted by
Robert Santana
Not a problem! My experience has been that as a lifter gets stronger, fat can be lost on higher calories and it typically takes more calories to maintain bodyweight after a cut. This has been my own firsthand experience too. I can lose fat on around 2500-3000 calories whereas pre SS I aimed for 1800 because I didn't train as hard and wasn't as muscular. I also did this by choice so there is an argument to be made that I could have lost on higher calories. I do not think lifting will double your energy expenditure per se, but you could get an extra meal or two in then you would otherwise be able to after a couple of years of serious training.
What I will say is that the calories necessary to cut below a person's "set point" doesn't seem to change and if anything that number gets lower. For instance, I'm 185 right now. To get to 175 or maybe even 170 I can accomplish this on 2500 calories. Now if I want to get down to 160-165 I will likely need 1800-2000 calories. So remember, this depends on total fat mass. As your fat mass gets lower, your body fights back and downregulates metabolic rate (I.e. adaptive thermogenesis). Outside of this situation, I find that lifters need more calories over time assuming strength is increasing.