Some people don�t seem to have a problem with this but they don�t realize the impact that muscle loss has on weight maintenance and weight gain. Once you lose the weight and a good amount of lean muscle mass you become a thinner but fatter person. Your body composition will show that even though you�re at your desired weight you have more fat than muscle which means that your body needs even less calories to survive. If you plan on maintaining a low calorie intake for the rest of your life this may not be a problem but most people can�t do that. They go back to their normal eating habits and soon enough they gain the weight back in the form of fat. The task of losing the weight again then becomes even more difficult because there is a lot more fat and a lot less muscle to help burn off that fat.
Another problem with low calorie dieting is that it triggers your body�s starvation mode. Your body perceives a famine so it conserves energy by slowing down your metabolism. In addition to this, low calorie dieting teaches your body to be more efficient at fat storage in case of future famine. So once you go back to your old eating habits, which most people invariably do, the weight gained will most likely get stored as fat. So how much can you cut back without triggering a fasting state, turning on fat storage, burning off valuable muscle, and depressing your metabolism? A 500-calorie a day deficit is the best way to safely and effectively lose weight long term but first you have to determine your ideal calorie intake by using a bmr/amr calculator. This will tell you how many calories your body needs to survive (bmr) and how many calories your body needs to support your activity level (amr). Once you have your number subtract 500 calories a day from your amr (not your bmr) and you have your ideal calorie intake.
Learn how to boost metabolism and lose weight the smart way with: Crack the Fat-Loss Code: Outsmart Your Metabolism and Conquer the Diet Plateau

