The answer to whether a skinny fat person should cut or bulk first is neither; you need to do both at the same time through a process called body recomposition. This involves eating in a slight 200-300 calorie deficit while lifting heavy weights. You're likely here because you're stuck in a frustrating loop. If you eat less to lose the belly fat, you end up looking smaller and weaker, but still soft. If you eat more to build muscle, the fat around your midsection just gets worse. You feel like you can't win. This isn't in your head; it's a real problem for anyone with a body fat percentage between 18-25% (for men) or 25-32% (for women) but not enough muscle mass. Cutting aggressively strips away the little muscle you have, and bulking aggressively just adds more fat. The solution is to stop thinking in terms of 'cutting' or 'bulking' and start thinking like a sculptor. Your goal for the next 3-6 months is to change your body's composition, not just your weight on the scale. You will build a foundation of muscle while simultaneously using your stored body fat as energy to fuel the process. This method is uniquely effective for you because your body is new to the stimulus of proper training and nutrition, allowing it to do two things at once that a more advanced lifter cannot.
It sounds contradictory, but building muscle while losing fat is entirely possible for someone in a 'skinny fat' state. Here’s why it works for you and not for a seasoned bodybuilder. Your body fat is simply stored energy. When you start a proper strength training program, you send a powerful signal to your body to build new muscle tissue. This process requires energy. At the same time, by eating in a small calorie deficit (around 200-300 calories below your maintenance), you create a minor energy shortfall. Your body needs to get that missing energy from somewhere. Instead of slowing down muscle growth, it pulls the required energy from your fat stores. Think of it like renovating a house while living in it. You're using the old materials (fat) to power the construction of the new framework (muscle). The biggest mistake people make is copying the advice meant for advanced lifters. An experienced lifter with 10% body fat has very little stored energy and their body is already highly adapted to training. For them, building muscle requires a dedicated calorie surplus (a bulk). Trying to lose fat requires a dedicated deficit (a cut). They must do them in separate phases. But as a relative beginner, your body is hyper-responsive to training. This 'newbie gains' window is a unique opportunity where your body is so primed for change that it can effectively do both jobs at once. By trying to do a hard cut or a dirty bulk, you're wasting this window. Body recomposition is the specific tool for the specific job of fixing the skinny fat physique.
Stop guessing and follow a precise plan. For the next 12 weeks, this is your entire focus. Forget about fad diets or celebrity workouts. This is a simple, repeatable system based on proven principles. Your goal is not weight loss; it's composition change. The scale is a liar during this phase. Trust the mirror, your clothes, and your strength numbers in the gym.
Precision is key. We're aiming for a small, sustainable deficit. Here's the simple math:
Your body needs a strong reason to build muscle. A full-body routine performed three times per week is the most effective way to provide that signal. Forget splitting your body into a chest day, back day, etc. You need to stimulate major muscle groups frequently. Alternate between these two workouts:
Workout A:
Workout B:
Your weekly schedule will look like this:
The only thing that matters is getting stronger. This is called progressive overload. Once you can successfully complete all sets and reps for an exercise (e.g., 3 sets of 8 on Bench Press), you must add 5 pounds to the bar in your next session. This is the signal for growth.
This is the second biggest mistake skinny fat people make. You cannot out-run a bad diet, and you will kill your muscle gains by doing too much cardio. Excessive cardio sends a competing signal to your body (an endurance signal, via AMPK activation) that interferes with the muscle-building signal from lifting (via mTOR activation). Your fat loss comes from the 200-300 calorie deficit in your diet, not from the treadmill. Limit cardio to two 30-minute sessions of low-intensity activity per week. This means walking on an incline or light cycling. It should feel easy. Its purpose is to improve cardiovascular health and burn a few extra calories without impacting your recovery and muscle growth.
You're used to extreme measures, so this balanced approach will feel strange at first. You won't be starving, and you won't be exhausted from workouts. This is by design. Consistency trumps intensity.
Once you've recomposed your body, you can transition to a traditional bulk. For men, this is when you are visibly lean, around 12-15% body fat. For women, this is around 20-23% body fat. At this point, your body is primed to add mass without excessive fat gain.
If you feel excessively hungry on your 200-300 calorie deficit, do not lower your calories further. Instead, focus on food quality. Increase your intake of fibrous vegetables and ensure you are hitting your 1g/lb protein target. Protein and fiber are highly satiating and will keep you full.
You should train your abs directly 2-3 times per week. This builds the muscle, making it more visible once the fat layer is gone. Focus on weighted exercises like cable crunches or leg raises for 3 sets of 10-15 reps. Doing 100 crunches a day will not burn the fat off your stomach.
If your weight and measurements have not changed for 2-3 consecutive weeks, you need to make one small adjustment. Either reduce your daily calorie intake by 100 calories or add one 20-minute session of low-intensity cardio. Only make one change at a time and see how your body responds for two weeks.
All content and media on Mofilo is created and published for informational purposes only. It is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition, including but not limited to eating disorders, nutritional deficiencies, injuries, or any other health concerns. If you think you may have a medical emergency or are experiencing symptoms of any health condition, call your doctor or emergency services immediately.