Do you find yourself covering up with a t-shirt, even in stifling weather, to hide those bulgy fat deposits around your armpits? You’re not alone. Getting rid of armpit fat is a primary concern for millions of exercisers. Unfortunately, many of them are not going about it the right way.
As a veteran personal trainer, I’ve guided hundreds of men and women in their fat loss quest. In the process, I’ve developed a four-pronged approach to unsheathing those upper arms. In this article, I’ll lay out each of those four steps to help you get rid of unsightly armpit fat the right way – and keep it off!
Four Steps to Getting Rid of Armpit Fat
Here’s a proven approach to eliminating armpit fat that will also slim down the rest of your body.
1. Cardio and Resistance Exercise
Contrary to what many people believe, you cannot spot-reduce body fat. In other words, you can’t do exercises for a specific part of the body, like the upper arm or chest, and expect to reduce armpit fat. When you burn calories from exercise, those calories come from excess calories that store fat energy from your entire body weight, not just in one area.
Armpit fat is essentially a weight gain problem. Your workout strategy for reduced armpit fat should consist of a combination of cardio and resistance training. The cardio will burn fat cells, helping you achieve a daily negative caloric balance. This means that your body requires more energy in the form of calories than it is being supplied. Therefore, it has no choice but to use stored energy in the form of body fat to function.
The best form of cardio for you is the one you enjoy most and will be most likely to stick with. Look for an activity that allows you to burn around 250 calories in 30 minutes and do it every day.
Here are three effective calorie-burning forms of cardio:
Treadmill
Rowing machine
Elliptical
Resistance training will increase your level of lean muscle mass. This will increase your metabolism, making you a better fat burner. I recommend beginning a weights workout program that works all of your major muscle groups two to three times per week.
Check out this full-body workout that’s geared specifically toward women.
2. Smart Nutrition
As stated in the previous section, the key to consistent fat loss is establishing and maintaining a caloric deficit. Cardio exercise will help with this, but the primary way to do it is to eat less food. A pound of fat contains roughly 3,500 calories, so to lose it, you’ve got to create a 3,500-calorie deficit. The body will then call on 3,500 stored calories to meet the shortfall.
A fat loss of one pound per week is a good goal. You’ll have to create a 500-calorie daily deficit (3500 divided by 7 = 5) to achieve that goal.
The first step in achieving this is determining how many calories you are taking in right now. This is known as your total daily energy expenditure (TDEE). You can easily find one of these on your preferred search engine.
Now subtract 500 calories from this figure. This will give you your daily caloric goal. If you don’t exceed that number each day, you will lose excess fat. That fat won’t be drawn from the area around your armpits, but some of it will.
You must monitor your caloric intake to keep within your caloric goal. The best way to do this is to use a calorie-tracking app. There are lots of apps to choose from. Here are three of the best:
Lose It!
MyFitnessPal
FatSecret
Now that you know how to achieve that critical daily negative caloric balance, let’s discuss what you should eat. Try to get rid of as much processed food as you can. Replace it with foods as close to their natural state as possible.
Eat plenty of lean proteins (think lean cuts of meat, eggs, dairy, nuts, and whey isolate protein powder), vegetables, fruits, and healthy fats like fatty fish, avocado, and coconut oil.
An ideal macronutrient ratio for fat loss is:
Protein: 40-50%
Carbohydrate: 10-30%
Fat: 30-40%
3. Stress Reduction
There is a direct connection between stress and weight accumulation. When you get stressed, your body dramatically increases its production of cortisol, which is – no surprise – known as the stress hormone. One consequence of this is the seemingly insatiable urge to eat sweet foods. These foods have become known as comfort food, and they inevitably consist of too much sugar and too many carbs.
So, reducing your stress level will help you control your food cravings. Here are some strategies to help you keep stress under control:
Prioritize Sleep
Getting a good night’s sleep every night is key to handling stress. Here are eight tips for doing so:
Ensure your bedroom is not too hot or cold and your bed is comfortable.
Go to bed and get up at roughly the same time each day. Sleeping late is not a good idea as it can make it harder to get to sleep the following night.
Cut down on tea, coffee, alcohol, and other stimulants. Replace these with herbal teas and milky drinks.
Use your bed to make love and sleep. Not for arguments, working, or watching TV.
Prepare for bed by having a warm bath and switching off from daytime worries.
When in bed, prepare for sleep by practicing relaxation and drifting off into a soothing place in your imagination.
If you wake up in the night, practice relaxation again.
If you can’t get back to sleep, get up and do something boring. When you feel tired, go back to bed.
Practice Mindful Eating
Sit down at the table when eating
Chew your food slowly, as this will aid digestion and stop you from overeating
To lose weight, keep fattening foods out of the house
Go to the supermarket after you have eaten
Buy fruit bars instead of sweets and chocolates
Drink several glasses of water a day
Learn to stop eating before you are too full
Ask yourself what else you can do to deal with stress. Divert yourself into another activity. Practice a relaxation technique, go for a walk, clean your teeth, or keep yourself occupied in another way.
4. Improved Posture
Poor posture can contribute to armpit fat. When you slouch with hunched shoulders, you accentuate fat folds between your chest and arms. Underarm fat will also be more noticeable.
Here are four cues for proper posture:
The knee joint directly above the ankle joint
The hip joint directly above the knee joint
The shoulder joint is in line with the hip joint
From the side, the ear, shoulder, hip, knee, and ankle joints should form a vertical line
The most common postural problem is hunched shoulders, which impact armpit fat the most. Fixing the hunched shoulder issue will help you lose armpit fat.
Here are a couple of exercises that will help you fix a hunched shoulder posture:
Table Stretch
Find a table with the top at waist height. Place your feet hip-width apart and point straight ahead. Lean forward and rest your hands, palms down, on the table. You want your legs and your upper body to form a ninety-degree angle.
Relax, letting your head fall forward between your shoulders, and let your shoulders relax.
Hold for one minute.
Do three sets of one minute with a one-minute rest between sets.
Standing Shoulder Squeezes
Stand with your feet pointing straight ahead and shoulder-width apart. Lift your arms to the sides so they are even with your shoulders. Bend your elbows so that they form ninety-degree angles to the front.
Move your elbows backward, gently contracting and squeezing the muscles between your shoulder blades together. Concentrate on feeling the muscles between your shoulder blades contracting.
Do 20 reps.
What is Armpit Fat?
Armpit fat is a fatty build-up between the armpits and the chest muscles. It’s also called auxiliary breast tissue, which makes it sound like it only affects women. While it’s more common among females, armpit fat can also affect men.
Armpit fat can result in bulgy protrusions, especially when a woman wears a bra. Women are more likely to suffer from armpit fat because they have much higher levels of the female sex hormone estrogen.
Estrogen is a fat-storage hormone. It accumulates fatty tissue in three critical areas of the body: the hips, thighs, and armpits. That’s why women tend to accumulate fat in these areas, while men tend to pile it all on the stomach.
Women are more prone to hormonal fluctuations, especially during menopause and when they are pregnant. This also contributes to armpit fat accumulation.
Conclusion
A key message from this article is that armpit fat cannot be lost in isolation. Body fat distribution is non-discriminatory. The armpit fat problem is part of the overall body fat problem.
As a result, you’ve got to use the same strategies as you would to lose overall body fat to get rid of the armpit fat problem. Those strategies are exercise (both cardio and resistance training), negative calorie balance nutrition, stress reduction, and – this one is unique to reducing armpit fat – improved posture.
Apply these strategies consistently, and you will steadily but surely get rid of that armpit fat for good.