Updated May 2026 · 8 min read · Based on peer-reviewed clinical research
Intermittent fasting (IF) has become one of the most popular dietary approaches of the past decade. Proponents claim it burns fat faster, improves metabolic health, and is easier to maintain than traditional calorie restriction. Critics say it's no better than simply eating less.
The research has caught up. Here's what the evidence actually shows — and who IF genuinely works for.
The short answer: Intermittent fasting works primarily because it helps most people eat fewer calories overall. It offers no metabolic magic — but for people who find time-restricted eating easier to maintain than calorie counting, it's a genuinely effective strategy.
What Is Intermittent Fasting?
💡 The bottom line: IF works by restricting eating time, which naturally reduces calorie intake. Studies show IF and continuous calorie restriction produce identical fat loss when total calories are matched — choose whichever fits your lifestyle better.
Intermittent fasting is an eating pattern that cycles between periods of fasting and eating. The most common approaches are:
Method
How It Works
Difficulty
16:8
Fast for 16 hours, eat within an 8-hour window (e.g. 12pm–8pm)
Easy for most people
18:6
Fast for 18 hours, eat within a 6-hour window
Moderate
5:2
Eat normally 5 days/week, restrict to ~500 kcal on 2 non-consecutive days
Moderate
OMAD
One meal a day — all calories consumed in one sitting
Difficult for most
The 16:8 method is by far the most studied and most commonly followed. For most people, it simply means skipping breakfast and not eating after 8pm.
Common intermittent fasting protocols — daily eating windows
What the Research Shows
Weight loss: comparable to calorie restriction
Multiple randomised controlled trials — including a large 2020 study published in the New England Journal of Medicine — found that intermittent fasting produces similar weight loss to continuous calorie restriction when total calorie intake is matched. IF is not metabolically superior; it produces fat loss because it reduces overall food intake.
Metabolic benefits: real but modest
Some studies show improvements in fasting insulin, blood glucose, and triglycerides with IF — independent of weight loss. However, these improvements are generally modest and largely attributable to the calorie deficit rather than the fasting itself. Researchers are still debating whether time-restricted eating has direct metabolic benefits beyond calorie reduction.
Muscle retention: a potential concern
Some research suggests that extended fasting windows may slightly increase muscle protein breakdown compared to evenly distributed protein intake. This concern is most relevant for older adults and those doing resistance training. Ensuring adequate protein within the eating window (1.6–2.2g/kg) largely mitigates this risk.
Adherence: the real advantage
The strongest case for IF isn't metabolic — it's behavioural. Many people find it easier to simply not eat during certain hours than to track calories at every meal. Studies consistently show that people who do IF tend to maintain their approach longer than those on traditional calorie-restricted diets.
Who IF Works Well For
People who aren't hungry in the mornings and naturally skip breakfast
Those who find calorie tracking tedious and prefer simple time-based rules
People with busy morning schedules who benefit from fewer meal decisions
Those who tend to overeat at night (adjusting the eating window earlier can help)
Who Should Be Cautious
Pregnant or breastfeeding women — increased nutritional demands make fasting inappropriate
People with a history of eating disorders — restrictive eating patterns can trigger disordered behaviours
Those on diabetes medication — fasting can cause hypoglycaemia; medical supervision required
Athletes training twice daily — compressed eating windows can make adequate fuelling difficult
People who get very hungry and irritable when fasting — adherence will be poor and the approach is unlikely to be sustainable
Common Mistakes
Overeating in the eating window
IF only works if total calorie intake is reduced. Eating very large meals to "make up" for the fasting period negates the deficit entirely. Many people unconsciously consume their full maintenance calories — or more — once the eating window opens.
Not eating enough protein
Compressing calories into a shorter window makes it harder to hit protein targets. Prioritise protein-rich foods at every meal in your eating window. Use our High Protein Foods guide for practical sources.
Expecting it to work faster than calorie restriction
IF is not a metabolic shortcut. At the same calorie intake, IF and traditional dieting produce identical fat loss. The advantage is adherence, not biology.
⚠️ If you have any medical condition, take medication, or have a history of disordered eating, consult your healthcare provider before starting intermittent fasting.
Frequently Asked Questions
Research consistently shows that intermittent fasting and continuous calorie restriction produce similar weight loss when total calorie intake is matched. Intermittent fasting works by reducing the window available for eating, which naturally lowers calorie intake for many people. It does not have a unique metabolic advantage beyond calorie restriction.
During a true fast, only zero-calorie or near-zero-calorie drinks are allowed: water, plain black coffee, plain tea (no milk or sugar). Adding milk, cream, or sweeteners breaks the fast to varying degrees depending on the definition used. Electrolytes (without calories) are acceptable and recommended for extended fasts.
IF is not appropriate for pregnant or breastfeeding women, children, people with a history of eating disorders, type 1 diabetics, or anyone on medications that require food with doses. People with type 2 diabetes should consult a doctor, as IF can affect blood glucose and medication needs significantly.
Some research suggests IF may have a slight advantage for muscle preservation compared to continuous restriction at the same calorie deficit, potentially due to growth hormone pulses during fasting. However, the most important factor for muscle preservation during any fat loss approach is adequate total daily protein intake (1.6–2.4g/kg).
The 16:8 protocol (16-hour fast, 8-hour eating window — e.g. eating 12pm–8pm) is the most practical starting point for beginners. It requires skipping breakfast and can be achieved by simply not eating after 8pm and waiting until noon the next day. It fits most work schedules and allows normal social eating in the evenings.