Protein gives your body the building blocks; resistance training gives muscle a reason to stay. Together they’re the combination most consistently associated with helping support lean mass while you lose weight. The good news: you don’t need a complicated program to start.
First, a safety note. Talk to your clinician before beginning any new exercise program — especially while losing weight on a GLP-1, when energy and nutrition are changing. The framework below is general education, not a personal training prescription.
Why it pairs with protein
In a calorie deficit, the body can break down some muscle. Resistance training signals that your muscle is “in use,” and that stimulus is associated with helping retain lean mass — while protein supplies what’s needed to maintain it. Neither is a guarantee, but the two together are the standard recommendation.
A simple beginner framework
A common, approachable starting point:
| Element | Common beginner approach |
|---|---|
| Frequency | 2–3 sessions per week, with rest days between |
| Style | Full-body each session (not split routines, to start) |
| Movements | One from each pattern: push, pull, squat/hinge, carry/core |
| Effort | Stop a few reps short of failure; focus on form over weight |
| Progress | Add a little weight or a rep when a set feels easy |
Bodyweight, resistance bands, dumbbells, or machines all work — use whatever you have and will actually do.
On low-energy days
GLP-1 medications can lower energy and appetite, so some sessions will feel harder. A shorter, lighter session still counts. Make sure you’re eating enough protein around training, and don’t push through symptoms that worry you — check in with your clinician.
You don’t need a perfect program — a couple of consistent full-body sessions a week, paired with hitting your protein, is the combination that matters.