Ketogenic Diet & Suitable Fat Loss

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Ketogenic Diet & Fat Loss:
Why Fat Intake Must Be Adjusted

A common oversight that can stall weight loss on keto — and how to correct it

The ketogenic diet has become widely known as an effective tool for weight loss. Carbohydrates are reduced to a minimum, insulin levels fall, and the body shifts into fat-burning mode. So far, so good. But there is a critical nuance that most standard keto guidance overlooks — and for an overweight person whose goal is to lose visceral fat, it matters a great deal.

The Key Principle

If you want your body to burn its own stored fat, you must give it a reason to do so. A diet that is too high in fat provides all the fuel the body needs from food — leaving stored visceral fat untouched.

Standard Keto vs. Keto for Fat Loss

Standard ketogenic diet guidelines keep dietary fat very high — typically 70–75% of total calories — in order to maintain ketosis and provide the body with an alternative fuel source to glucose. This approach is well suited to therapeutic uses such as epilepsy management, neurological support, and metabolic stabilisation. But it was not designed with visceral fat reduction as the primary goal.

For an overweight person, there are effectively two sources of fat available as fuel: fat eaten in the diet, and fat stored in the body. The body will always preferentially burn whichever is most readily available. If dietary fat is very high, stored fat simply does not need to be mobilised.

Macronutrient Standard Keto Keto for Visceral Fat Loss
Carbohydrate Same
Under 20–50g per day
Same
Under 20–50g per day
Protein Moderate
~20–25% of calories
Adequate
~25–35% — sufficient to preserve muscle
Dietary Fat Very High
70–75% of calories
Reduced
Lower — body fat fills the energy gap

How the Body Responds

When carbohydrate intake is kept very low, insulin levels fall and the body enters ketosis — a metabolic state in which fat, rather than glucose, becomes the primary fuel. This hormonal environment is the essential condition for fat loss. But ketosis alone does not guarantee that stored fat is being burned — it only means the body is capable of burning fat.

The caloric deficit is what determines whether stored fat is actually mobilised. By reducing dietary fat intake — while keeping carbohydrates very low and protein adequate — the body must draw on its own fat reserves to meet its energy needs. The stored visceral fat essentially becomes part of the diet.

The body does not distinguish between fat from the plate and fat from adipose tissue. It simply burns whatever fat is available. Low carbohydrates provide the hormonal environment. Reduced dietary fat provides the energetic incentive.

The Role of Protein

Protein intake deserves particular attention in this approach. When calories from fat are reduced, adequate protein becomes important to preserve lean muscle mass. Muscle is metabolically active tissue — it contributes to resting energy expenditure and should be protected during any period of fat loss. A generous protein intake also tends to be more satiating, which naturally supports adherence.


Practical Summary

  • Keep carbohydrates very low — under 20–50g per day — to maintain ketosis and keep insulin suppressed
  • Keep protein adequate — sufficient to maintain muscle, roughly 1.2–1.6g per kg of target body weight
  • Reduce dietary fat below standard keto levels — this is what creates the deficit that draws on stored visceral fat
  • Do not fear hunger — mild hunger is a signal that the body is drawing on its own reserves
  • Intermittent fasting combines naturally with this approach, extending the periods of low insulin and active fat mobilisation
This approach is sometimes described as a protein-sparing modified fast, or simply a lower-fat ketogenic protocol. It is metabolically distinct from therapeutic keto, where very high fat intake serves a specific clinical purpose. For weight loss, the goal is different — and the fat ratio should reflect that.
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