Understanding Net Carbs Versus Total Carbs

As the founder of CFP Weight Loss and author of The CFP Method, I’ve guided thousands of adults aged 45-54 who struggle with hormonal changes, joint pain, and failed diets. The question of whether to count net carbs or total carbs on a low-carb diet or ketogenic diet is one of the most common. Simply put, total carbs include every gram of carbohydrate in a food. Net carbs subtract the grams of dietary fiber and, in some calculations, sugar alcohols. For example, an avocado with 17 grams total carbs, 13 grams fiber, yields just 4 grams net carbs.

Why Net Carbs Usually Work Better for Sustainable Fat Loss

For most people over 45 managing blood pressure, diabetes, or menopause-related weight gain, focusing on net carbs allows greater intake of nutrient-dense vegetables without triggering blood-sugar spikes. Fiber slows glucose absorption, which is why subtracting it makes physiological sense. In The CFP Method, I recommend beginners start with a 25-35 gram net-carb daily target to enter and stay in nutritional ketosis while keeping meals simple and affordable—no expensive specialty products required. This approach has helped clients lose 30-60 pounds without joint-pain flare-ups because they can still enjoy fiber-rich salads and broccoli that support gut health and steady energy.

When Total Carbs May Be the Smarter Choice

However, some individuals with stubborn insulin resistance or those using a therapeutic ketogenic approach for blood-sugar control do better counting total carbs. If you notice ketosis test strips stay negative despite limiting net carbs to under 20 grams, switch to total carbs for two weeks. This removes hidden carbs from processed “sugar-free” items that contain maltitol or other sugar alcohols that can still raise glucose. My clinical observations show that once insulin sensitivity improves after 8-12 weeks, most can return to net-carb counting and maintain 1-2 pounds of weekly fat loss while protecting lean muscle.

Practical CFP Guidelines for Beginners

Begin by reading every label for two weeks using net carbs, then test ketones with urine strips or a blood meter. Track how you feel—energy, joint comfort, and hunger levels. If cravings persist, drop to total carbs temporarily. Pair this with my 15-minute daily movement sequences that respect sore knees and busy schedules. Insurance barriers and past diet failures often disappear when you focus on real food, proper sleep, and stress reduction rather than obsessive macro counting. Consistency with whichever method keeps your personal carb threshold under control is what drives lasting results. Start simple, adjust based on your glucose readings if you have diabetes, and celebrate non-scale victories like looser clothing and stable blood pressure.