To maintain weight loss after a GLP-1, you replace the one thing the medication was doing for you, appetite control, with three habits that do the same work: hit a daily protein floor, strength train twice a week, and track your weight as a trend so you catch drift early. That is the entire system. Everything below is just detail on how to run it.
The mistake most people make is treating maintenance as a smaller version of losing weight. It is not. It is a different phase with a different job, and it deserves its own plan.
What changes when the medication stops
While you were on a GLP-1, your appetite was being held down for you. You did not have to think about fullness because the medication was managing it. When that support fades, appetite returns, and if nothing has taken its place, the gap gets filled the old way. The point of maintenance is to fill that gap on purpose, with habits instead of a prescription.
This is also why the transition is worth planning before you need it. The weeks after you stop are when the appetite swing is sharpest, and a system already in place beats one you scramble to build.
Set a protein floor
A protein floor is a daily minimum amount of protein to reach, set for your body rather than a generic number. It is the backbone of maintenance for two reasons. Protein is the most filling nutrient, so hitting your floor keeps you satisfied on the same food and quiets cravings. And protein is the raw material your body needs to hold onto muscle, which protects your metabolism.
Notice what a floor is not: it is not a calorie target. OffRamp does not count calories at all. You aim to reach one number, protein, and you let the rest take care of itself. Build each meal around a protein first, then add everything else, and the floor becomes easy to hit without math.
Keep two strength sessions a week
Protein gives your body the material to keep muscle. Strength training gives it the reason to. Without the resistance signal, extra protein alone will not fully protect lean mass. The two are a pair, and together they are the highest-leverage thing you can do, which is why we treat preventing muscle loss as the core of the whole plan.
You do not need a gym or long workouts. Two short, equipment-light sessions a week are enough: bodyweight squats, push-ups, band rows, a few dumbbell moves. Consistency beats intensity. The NIDDK weight-management guidance makes the same point, that pairing sensible nutrition with regular activity is what makes results stick.
Maintenance is not a smaller version of dieting. It is a different job: hold the line, protect the muscle, catch drift early.
Watch the trend, not the day
Your weight bounces day to day from water, salt, and sleep. One reading is noise. The direction over two weeks is signal. The entire value of tracking is to catch a real upward drift while it is still two or three pounds, when a small correction fixes it, rather than discovering it a year later as a project. A short daily check that feeds a trend line is all it takes.
Have a plan for food noise
When appetite returns, so does the mental chatter about food. If you are ready for it, it is a manageable nuisance. If it catches you off guard, it can unravel the other habits. Hitting your protein floor does a lot of the work here, since fullness turns the volume down on its own. For the rest, our guide to quieting food noise covers the practical tactics.
When maintenance gets automatic
The honest timeline: the first few weeks take the most attention, and after that the system mostly runs itself. In the beginning you are consciously building each meal around protein and remembering to log, and it feels like effort. Give it a month or two and the protein-first habit stops being a decision. You reach for the eggs or the yogurt without thinking, because that is simply how your meals are built now.
The same is true of the weigh-in. At first the scale can feel loaded. Once you are reading a trend line instead of a single morning's number, it becomes a two-second glance that tells you whether anything needs attention. Most days it does not, and you move on.
This is the quiet advantage of a system over willpower. Willpower asks you to decide the right thing every day, which is exhausting and eventually fails. A system asks you to set up a few defaults once, then coast on them. Maintenance done well is a little boring, and boring is exactly what you want. The drama of losing and regaining is the thing a good system is designed to remove.
How OffRamp makes it automatic
OffRamp packages this whole system into one app. It sets your protein floor and makes logging a two-second habit, includes short home strength sessions, and runs the Regain Radar on your weight trend so drift gets flagged early. It is the quiet infrastructure behind keeping the weight off after Ozempic or any GLP-1, whether you are still on the medication or have moved past it.


