Intermittent Fasting Examples
These worked examples illustrate how different intermittent fasting protocols can be tailored to unique lifestyles, specific challenges, and varied objectives. From optimizing cognitive function to improving metabolic health, discover how IF can be integrated effectively into daily routines.
Worked Examples
See the inputs and outcome together
Each scenario keeps the starting point, the outcome, and the actual lesson in one place so the page reads like a decision notebook, not a data dump.
- 1
Beginner 16:8
A newcomer to fasting picks the 16:8 protocol with a first meal at noon.
The eating window runs 12:00 PM to 8:00 PM with a 16-hour fast and three suggested meals inside it.
Protocol
16:8
First Meal Time
12:00
16:8 is the easiest place to start because most of the fast is overnight. Skipping breakfast and eating noon to eight is a small behavioural change, which is why adherence is so much higher than on stricter protocols.
- 2
Tighter 18:6
An experienced faster moves to 18:6 with a first meal at 1:00 PM.
The window narrows to 1:00 PM through 7:00 PM, an 18-hour fast still fitting three meals.
Protocol
18:6
First Meal Time
13:00
Trimming two hours off the window pushes more of the day into the fasted state. Front-load protein and fibre early in a six-hour window, since hitting daily nutrition targets gets harder as the window shrinks.
- 3
Gentle 14:10
Someone who finds 16:8 too restrictive opts for 14:10 starting at 9:00 AM.
The window stretches from 9:00 AM to 7:00 PM, a 14-hour fast that keeps breakfast on the table.
Protocol
14:10
First Meal Time
09:00
A ten-hour window still captures much of the metabolic benefit while letting you eat breakfast. For people who train in the morning or struggle with hunger, the easier protocol you actually stick to beats the strict one you quit.
- 4
Aggressive OMAD
An advanced faster runs one meal a day at 6:00 PM.
The window collapses to a single hour, 6:00 PM to 7:00 PM, with a 23-hour fast and one meal scheduled.
Protocol
OMAD
First Meal Time
18:00
OMAD is the most restrictive end of the scale and hard to hit protein and micronutrients within one meal. The tool flags it for a reason: use it deliberately and make the single meal genuinely nutrient-dense, not just large.
Patterns
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Sources & References
- Intermittent fasting: What is it, and how does it work? — Harvard Health Publishing
- Intermittent Fasting: What you need to know — Johns Hopkins Medicine
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