How to Improve Your Metabolic Age
Introduction
Your metabolic age is an estimate of how your metabolism compares to the population average for different chronological ages. A metabolic age lower than your actual age suggests a faster, healthier metabolism; higher suggests a slower metabolic rate relative to peers. Unlike chronological age, metabolic age is modifiable through targeted lifestyle interventions.
What Determines Metabolic Age
Your metabolic age is primarily calculated by comparing your Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR) to average BMR values for different age groups. Since BMR is predominantly determined by lean muscle mass, metabolic age is essentially a proxy for how much functional muscle tissue you carry relative to your size and chronological age.
The Most Effective Strategy: Build Muscle
Resistance training is the most powerful tool for reducing metabolic age. Skeletal muscle burns approximately 13 calories per kilogram per day at rest. Adding 5kg of lean muscle — achievable in 12–18 months of consistent training for most adults — increases BMR by approximately 65 calories per day, meaningfully reducing metabolic age.
Sleep and Hormonal Optimisation
Growth hormone, the primary hormone driving muscle repair and fat metabolism, is secreted in pulses during slow-wave sleep. Chronic sleep deprivation reduces growth hormone output, accelerates muscle loss, elevates cortisol, and increases fat storage — all of which age your metabolism. Protecting 7–9 hours of sleep is a non-negotiable metabolic strategy.
Protein and NEAT
High protein intake (1.6–2.4g/kg) protects lean mass during caloric restriction and increases total daily energy expenditure through its high thermic effect. Simultaneously increasing non-exercise activity thermogenesis (NEAT) — walking more, standing more, taking stairs — can add hundreds of calories to daily energy expenditure without structured exercise sessions.
Frequently Asked Questions
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References & Sources
- Westcott, W.L. (2012). Resistance training is medicine: effects of strength training on health. Current Sports Medicine Reports, 11(4), 209–216.
- Nedeltcheva, A.V. et al. (2010). Insufficient sleep undermines dietary efforts. Annals of Internal Medicine, 153(7), 435.
- Phillips, S.M. (2012). Dietary protein requirements and adaptive advantages in athletes. British Journal of Nutrition, 108(S2), S158–S167.