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Why do I still feel ’fat’ after losing weight?

Robbie Puddick (RNutr)
Written by

Robbie Puddick (RNutr)

Content and SEO Lead

Dr Rachel Hall
Medically reviewed by

Dr Rachel Hall (MBCHB)

Principal Doctor

11 min read
Last updated June 2026
title

Jump to: Is it normal to still feel ‘fat’ after losing weight? | Why our self-image takes longer to change than our body | Why losing weight quickly on Mounjaro or Wegovy can make the mind-body lag stronger | When loose skin becomes the new focus | How to improve your body image after weight loss | When it’s more than phantom fat, and where to get support | Frequently asked questions | Take home message

Still feeling ‘fat’ after losing a lot of weight happens because our mind’s sense of our own size can’t keep up with the rate of physical changes often seen during weight loss.

Researchers call this mismatch a ‘mind-body lag’. Online, it’s more often called ‘phantom fat’.

For a while, the body in the mirror and the size our mind expects don’t match, which is why we can still feel bigger than we are.

This is more pronounced after fast weight loss, particularly after surgery or if you’re on Mounjaro or Wegovy.

Important safety information: This article is about body image and emotional wellbeing after weight loss, and is for general information only. It isn’t a substitute for personalised medical or psychological advice. If feelings about your body are persistent, or they’re affecting your mood or daily life, please speak to your GP or a qualified mental health professional.

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Is it normal to still feel ‘fat’ after losing weight?

Continuing to feel heavier than we are is one of the most common experiences people report after losing a significant amount of weight.

In one study, researchers assessed 40 women 18 to 30 months after weight-loss surgery. Most still saw themselves as larger than they had become.1

The women who held on to an older self-image also reported lower energy, more difficulty in social situations, and lower mood, despite having lost a great deal of weight.1

People tend to describe it in similar ways. The body in the mirror still looks like the old one, and photographs can feel as though they show someone else.

Some people say they don’t recognise their own reflection at all.

Why our self-image takes longer to change than our body

When we lose weight, we can often see the physical changes quite quickly, such as the number on the scales going down or our clothes feeling looser.

The way we picture our own body changes far more slowly.

That picture builds up over time, from old memories, from how others have treated us, and from self-critical thoughts that don’t disappear when we lose weight.

A systematic review of 15 studies found that body image often doesn’t improve on its own after major weight loss, and that our earlier view of ourselves tends to persist.2

Part of this experience is about identity. If we have lived at a higher weight for a long time, it can become part of how we see ourselves and how others respond to us.

That can stay with us after the weight has gone, because it was built on much more than our size.2

Most of this research is on people who have had weight-loss surgery, where the change is large and fast. Still, it can occur after significant weight loss of any kind.

So our body has changed, but our mind is still working from an older picture, which is why a smaller body can still feel like the old one.

Why losing weight quickly on Mounjaro or Wegovy can make the mind-body lag stronger

Mounjaro and Wegovy tend to lead to faster, larger weight loss than lifestyle changes alone.

When the body changes that quickly, it moves further ahead of our self-image, so the mismatch can feel more pronounced.

These medications also quieten ‘food noise’, the constant background thoughts about food that many of us live with.

As that settles, our day-to-day relationship with food changes quickly too, which is another adjustment.

So feeling larger than we are isn’t a failure, or a sign that something is wrong with us.

It’s a normal and expected experience, because our self-image has simply had less time to catch up than it would after slower weight loss.

When loose skin becomes the new focus

If we had a negative body image before losing weight, the weight loss won’t always resolve it on its own. For some of us, that dissatisfaction shifts to a different part of the body instead.

The same systematic review found that unhappiness with our weight is often replaced by unhappiness with loose or excess skin, which is a common physical change after losing a large amount of weight.2

Fast weight loss can also mean losing some muscle along with fat, which can leave the body feeling softer or less toned than we expected. Our GLP-1 muscle and protein planner explains how to hold on to muscle while losing weight.

Our guide on whether Mounjaro can cause loose skin covers what’s normal, what helps, and when skin removal is and isn’t needed.

Loose skin and lost muscle are real, physical changes. They can also become a new focus for our existing negative body image, which is one reason feeling ‘fat’ can continue even as the body keeps changing.

How to improve your body image after weight loss

The aim isn’t to learn to love a smaller body, but to feel less critical of the body we have, whatever its size.

A review and meta-analysis of weight-management programmes found that, with the right support, body satisfaction improves.3

  • Wear clothes that fit the body you have now. Holding on to old clothes or buying for a size you’re working towards keeps your self-image tied to the past.
  • Cut down on comparison. A feed full of before-and-after photos keeps your attention on how your body looks, so following fewer of those accounts can help.
  • Don’t avoid mirrors or photographs. Avoiding your reflection tends to keep it feeling unfamiliar, and looking at yourself calmly and regularly helps the body you have now start to feel like your own.5 If looking makes the feeling worse rather than better, that’s a sign to seek support rather than continue as you are.
  • Notice what your body can do, not only how it looks. Walking further, taking the stairs more easily, or sleeping better are all signs of progress that have nothing to do with appearance.
  • Question the critical thoughts. When a harsh thought about your body turns up, it can help to ask whether it’s actually true. Research interviewing people years after weight-loss surgery found that those who challenged these thoughts, rather than dwelling on them or avoiding their reflection, tended to have a more positive body image.5
  • Be as fair to yourself as you would to a friend. In a randomised trial, a brief self-compassion exercise improved how women felt about their bodies.4
  • Consider talking therapy or other structured psychological support. Reviews of this area suggest it can help improve body image after weight loss.2,3

Our body image won’t change overnight, but it tends to improve over time as we keep using these steps.

Our guide on improving your relationship with food looks at the patterns underneath how we eat and how we see ourselves.

When it’s more than phantom fat, and where to get support

For most of us, the mind-body lag eases as time passes and as we put the steps above into practice.

For some people, the feelings are stronger and don’t settle.

Even more than a decade after weight-loss surgery, some people still find body image and self-esteem difficult, which is a good reason to seek support rather than wait for it to pass.5

Phantom fat is not the same as body dysmorphic disorder, a mental health condition where someone spends a great deal of time distressed about one or more perceived flaws in their appearance. The table below sets out the main differences.

Mind-body lag (‘phantom fat’) Body dysmorphic disorder
How common it is Very common after significant weight loss Less common, and usually needs professional treatment
What it feels like Your self-image hasn’t caught up with your body yet Intense, lasting distress about one or more perceived flaws
Where attention goes Your size overall, the mirror, and old photos Often a specific feature, checked or hidden repeatedly
Effect on daily life Unsettling, but it doesn’t tend to dramatically affect quality of life Can take up hours a day and interfere with work and relationships
How it tends to change Eases with time and small, steady steps Tends to persist without professional treatment
When to seek help If it isn’t easing, or it’s affecting your mood As soon as it’s interfering with daily life

If your distress doesn’t ease, or it’s affecting your mood, your relationships, or your daily life, it’s worth speaking to someone.

In England, you can refer yourself to NHS talking therapies without going through your GP first, or you can start by speaking to your GP.

If your eating starts to involve restriction, bingeing, or a level of control that feels frightening, speak to your GP or contact Beat, the UK’s eating disorder charity, which runs free support services.

Frequently asked questions

What is phantom fat?

Phantom fat is the everyday name for a ‘mind-body lag’, where we keep seeing and feeling ourselves at our old size after our body has changed. It describes how we perceive ourselves, even after achieving significant weight loss.

Is it normal to still feel ‘fat’ after losing weight?

Yes. After major weight loss, many people keep seeing themselves at their old size. In one study, this was still the case 18 to 30 months on.1

How long does it take to stop feeling heavier after losing weight?

There’s no fixed timeline, and it varies from person to person.

In one study, many people still felt this way 18 to 30 months after weight-loss surgery.1 It tends to ease faster when we work on it actively.

Why do I feel heavier the more weight I lose?

We tend to pay closer attention to our body, loose skin or lost muscle can become a new focus, and our self-image is still catching up with the change.2

Why don’t I recognise myself after losing weight?

Our mind works from a stored picture of our body that updates more slowly than the body itself. Until it catches up, our reflection can look like someone else’s.

Is phantom fat the same as body dysmorphia?

No. Phantom fat is a common adjustment that usually eases with time.

Body dysmorphic disorder is a diagnosable condition involving intense, lasting distress about appearance, and it usually needs professional treatment.

Does feeling larger than you are after weight loss mean I’ll regain weight?

Not on its own. How we feel about our body and whether we keep the weight off are different things, though the distress that we leave unaddressed can start to affect how we eat.

Weight is most reliably kept off by maintaining the habits we built while losing it, and our weight-regain prevention planner can help.

Can losing weight on Mounjaro or Wegovy change how I see my body?

It can make the lag feel stronger, because the weight often comes off quickly and ‘food noise’ quietens, leaving our self-image less time to adjust. It still tends to ease with time and support.

How can I feel better about my body after weight loss?

Wearing clothes that fit now, cutting down on comparison, looking at yourself in mirrors and photos rather than avoiding them, being as kind to yourself as you would to a friend, and considering talking therapy all have evidence behind them.3,4

When should I speak to someone about how I feel about my body?

If the distress is persistent, affecting your mood or daily life, or your eating feels out of control, speak to your GP, refer yourself to NHS talking therapies, or contact Beat.

Take home message

Feeling larger than we are is one of the most common experiences people describe after significant weight loss. It happens because our body changes faster than the mental picture we hold of it, which researchers call a ‘mind-body lag’ and many people call ‘phantom fat’.

That mental picture builds up over time, so it doesn’t change as quickly as our physical appearance does.2

Losing weight quickly on Mounjaro or Wegovy can make the gap feel wider because our self-image has even less time to adjust. This is a gap in perception, not a sign that the weight loss has failed or that we’ll regain it, and for most of us, it eases.

It also responds to a few practical steps, such as wearing clothes that fit now, cutting down on comparison, looking at ourselves rather than avoiding mirrors, being kinder to ourselves, and getting support when we need it.3,4

If the feelings are persistent, or they’re affecting daily life, it’s worth speaking to a GP, referring yourself to NHS talking therapies, or contacting Beat.

At Second Nature, we combine weight-loss medication with coaching from registered nutritionists and dietitians because it’s the habits and support around the medication that help maintain results over time.

In a peer-reviewed evaluation of our programme, members lost an average of 19.1% of their body weight at 12 months, and 77.7% lost at least 10%.6

Second Nature's Mounjaro and Wegovy programmes

Second Nature provides Mounjaro or Wegovy as part of our Mounjaro and Wegovy weight-loss programmes.

Why choose Second Nature over other medication providers, assuming you're eligible?

Because peace of mind matters.

We've had the privilege of working with the NHS for over eight years, helping people across the UK take meaningful steps toward a healthier, happier life.

Our programmes are designed to meet people where they are, whether that means support with weight loss through compassionate one-to-one health coaching, or access to the latest weight-loss medications (like Mounjaro and Wegovy) delivered alongside expert care from a multidisciplinary team of doctors, psychologists, dietitians, and personal trainers.

At the heart of everything we do is a simple belief: real, lasting change comes from building better habits, not relying on quick fixes. We're here to support that change every step of the way.

With over a decade of experience, thousands of lives changed, and a long-standing record of delivering programmes used by the NHS, we believe we're the UK's most trusted weight-loss programme.

We hope to offer you something invaluable: peace of mind, and the support you need to take that first step.

Lose weight your way and keep it off

GLP-1 medication, expert support, and a programme that fits your life

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References

  1. Perdue, T.O., Schreier, A., Swanson, M., et al. (2020). Majority of female bariatric patients retain an obese identity 18-30 months after surgery. Eating and Weight Disorders, 25(2), 357-364.
  2. Mento, C., Silvestri, M.C., Muscatello, M.R.A., et al. (2022). The role of body image in obese identity changes post bariatric surgery. Eating and Weight Disorders, 27(4), 1269-1278.
  3. Chao, H.-L. (2015). Body image change in obese and overweight persons enrolled in weight loss intervention programs: a systematic review and meta-analysis. PLOS ONE, 10(5), e0124036.
  4. Toole, A.M., LoParo, D., Craighead, L.W. (2021). Self-compassion and dissonance-based interventions for body image distress in young adult women. Body Image, 38, 191-200.
  5. Jiretorn, L., Engström, M., Laursen, C., et al. (2024). ‘My goal was to become normal’: a qualitative investigation of coping with stigma, body image and self-esteem long-term after bariatric surgery. Clinical Obesity, 14(3), e12657.
  6. Richards, R., Whitman, M., Wren, G., et al. (2025). A Remotely Delivered GLP-1RA-Supported Specialist Weight Management Program in Adults Living With Obesity: Retrospective Service Evaluation. JMIR Formative Research, 9(1), e72577.
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