Understanding Total Carbs vs Net Carbs
When clients ask me whether to track net carbs or total carbs, I always start with the basics. Total carbs include every gram of carbohydrate in a food, including fiber. Net carbs are total carbs minus dietary fiber and certain sugar alcohols. The idea behind net carbs is that fiber doesn’t raise blood glucose the same way digestible carbs do, so subtracting it gives a more accurate picture of metabolic impact. For most people over 45 dealing with insulin resistance, this distinction matters because rising insulin is the primary driver of fat storage, especially around the midsection.
How Carbs Affect Insulin and Metabolism After 45
After age 45, declining estrogen and testosterone make cells less sensitive to insulin. Even moderate carbohydrate intake can trigger larger insulin spikes than in your 30s. In my book The Metabolic Reset Protocol, I explain that each 10-gram increase in rapidly digested carbs can raise insulin by 20-30% in insulin-resistant adults. Total carb counting is stricter and works well for those with diabetes or prediabetes because it removes all guesswork. However, net carb counting allows more vegetables, nuts, and seeds without blowing your daily limit, making the plan sustainable.
Studies show that keeping total daily net carbs under 50-75 grams often improves fasting insulin within 4-6 weeks. This directly supports metabolic rate because lower insulin allows better access to stored fat for energy. When joints hurt and gym time feels impossible, lowering insulin through smarter carb choices becomes your most powerful tool.
Practical Guidelines That Actually Work for Beginners
For complete beginners overwhelmed by conflicting advice, I recommend starting with total carbs under 100 grams per day while learning to read labels. Once comfortable, switch to net carbs of 30-50 grams daily, focusing on high-fiber sources. This approach reduces the inflammation that worsens joint pain and helps stabilize blood pressure and blood sugar without complicated meal plans. A typical day might include eggs with spinach (3g net carbs), grilled chicken over broccoli (6g net), and salmon with asparagus (5g net). These choices keep you full, protect lean muscle, and require no expensive programs insurance won’t cover.
Why This Method Succeeds Where Diets Fail
Most people who have failed every diet before succeed with this method because it directly addresses hormonal changes rather than just calories. By controlling insulin through either total or net carb tracking, you reduce cravings within days and lose fat even when exercise is limited. Track for two weeks using a simple app, note energy and joint comfort, and adjust. The goal isn’t perfection but consistent progress that rebuilds metabolic health without embarrassment or overwhelm. Many clients lose 8-15 pounds in the first six weeks while watching their A1C and blood pressure improve naturally.