How to start.
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01
Check the exclusions
A full day without food is off the table if you're pregnant or breastfeeding, or have any eating disorder history. On insulin or sulfonylureas it risks serious hypoglycemia. Ask your prescriber.
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02
Go dinner to dinner
Finish dinner at 7 p.m., eat again at 7 p.m. tomorrow. You skip breakfast and lunch and sleep through a third of it.
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03
Drink through it
Water, black coffee, plain tea. Most of what people read as hunger at hour 18 is thirst plus not having anything to do.
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04
Break it like an adult
Eat a normal dinner, not a celebration. Eating back double is how a monthly fast ends up doing nothing at all.
Why it works.
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Metabolic switch
Beyond roughly 12 hours without food, liver glycogen runs down and the body shifts from glucose to mobilized fatty acids and ketones, a switch a 24-hour fast clears comfortably.
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Fat loss
Four weeks of strict alternate day fasting (36 hours off, 12 hours on) cut intake about 37 percent on average and reduced fat mass, especially trunk fat, improving the fat to lean ratio.
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Ketones up
In the same 4-week trial, beta-hydroxybutyrate rose in healthy non-obese adults and stayed elevated even on the non-fasting days, alongside reduced LDL and triiodothyronine.
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Lower inflammation
The 4-week alternate day fasting arm lowered sICAM-1, an age-associated inflammatory marker, with no adverse effects recorded across more than 6 months of follow-up.
Who swears by it.
Mark Mattson
Johns Hopkins neuroscientist, former NIA neurosciences chief, roughly 25 years researching intermittent fasting and author on it.
Krista Varady
University of Illinois Chicago professor who has run alternate-day fasting trials in people with obesity for two decades.
Stephen Anton
University of Florida researcher, lead author of the review defining the fasting metabolic switch at about 12 hours.
John's take.
First, the part that isn’t negotiable. Skip this entirely if you’re pregnant or breastfeeding. Skip it if you have any history of an eating disorder, because a full day without food is the single easiest habit on this site to weaponize against yourself, and dressing it up as a longevity protocol doesn’t make it safer. And if you take insulin or a sulfonylurea, going a day without eating risks serious hypoglycemia unless your prescriber changes your doses first. I’d rather lose the reader than have this page be somebody’s excuse.
Now the claim this whole category is built on. You’ve read that autophagy switches on at hour 16, or 18, or whatever number the graphic used. There is no such number. Autophagy timelines in humans are not established. The supporting work is largely animal research, human studies lean on indirect markers, and timing likely varies by organ, by age, and by metabolic health. Nobody has watched your cells and clocked the moment. So when someone tells you to hold out four more hours to hit autophagy, they’re quoting a mouse and rounding it into advice. The thing that does have a timeline is the metabolic switch, and it fires around hour 12, once liver glycogen empties. Which means a 24-hour fast spends roughly half its length running on fat and ketones, and also means you didn’t need 24 hours to get there.
What I actually think of the monthly version: it’s a discipline habit with a thin evidence coat. Be clear-eyed that once a month is far less than any trial has tested. Stekovic ran fasting every other day for four weeks to get reduced trunk fat, lower LDL and a drop in one inflammation marker, and even those participants only netted a 37 percent calorie cut because the fasting days were true zero. A single day off food, twelve times a year, should be expected to deliver a fraction of that, if anything measurable at all. I still do it, for an honest reason that has nothing to do with autophagy: it recalibrates what hunger means. Skipping a meal stops being an emergency. That’s a psychological return, not a metabolic one, and I’d rather say so than sell you a mouse study.
Common questions.
Does a 24 hour fast trigger autophagy?
Nobody actually knows, and anyone giving you an hour mark is guessing. Autophagy timelines in humans are not established. Animal work supports fasting-induced autophagy, but human studies rely on indirect markers, no confirmed hour mark exists, and timing likely varies by organ, age and metabolic health. Claims that it switches on at a specific hour aren't supported.
How long until fat burning starts?
Around 12 hours. Once liver glycogen runs down, the body shifts from glucose to mobilized fatty acids and ketones. A 24-hour fast clears that switch comfortably, spending about half its length in fat and ketone metabolism. Going all the way to 24 hours isn't required to flip it, which is worth knowing before you white-knuckle hour 20.
What are the real 24 hour fast benefits?
The measured ones come from harder protocols than a monthly fast. Four weeks of alternate day fasting cut intake about 37 percent, reduced fat mass (especially trunk fat), raised beta-hydroxybutyrate, and lowered LDL and the inflammatory marker sICAM-1. No adverse effects appeared over 6 months in healthy non-obese adults. Reliable, but not dramatic.
Is fasting once a month enough to do anything?
Honestly, probably not much. Once a month is far less than any trial has tested. Stekovic's participants fasted every other day for four weeks to get their results. Monthly fasting should be expected to deliver a fraction of those effects, if any, and its impact on body composition or aging markers is essentially untested.
Who should not do a 24 hour fast?
Anyone pregnant or breastfeeding, anyone with a history of an eating disorder, and anyone taking insulin or sulfonylureas, where a full day without food risks serious hypoglycemia unless the prescriber adjusts doses first. This is the one habit where I'd rather you skip it than try a modified version on your own.
What's the biggest mistake people make?
The rebound. Stekovic's participants only netted a 37 percent calorie cut because their fasting days were true zero and they didn't binge afterward. If you break a 24-hour fast by eating back double at dinner, the fast does nothing metabolically and nothing for weight. Break it with a normal meal, not a reward.