When to stop eating?
peeweenovak1056
Posts: 1 Member
Is there a suggested time we should stop eating for the day to maximize weight loss?
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Replies
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"Maximizing weight loss" is an awful goal or aspiration.
You should be aiming to lose at a sensible, sustainable and healthy rate not the fastest possible rate.
Your total food across the day (or week) matters and not when you finish eating for the day.
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The ideal thing is to stop eating when you've eat the calorie level that results in a sensibly moderate weight loss rate suitable for your current size, to keep energy high, manage potential health risks from underfueling/undernutrition, and make the process sustainable enough to stick with long enough to lose the desired amount of weight.
For most people, that's something in the 0.5-1% of current weight per week range, with a bias toward the lower end of that range . . . a strong bias if not so obese that current weight itself is an acute health risk.
What time of day that calorie level is reached doesn't matter, except insofar as it makes the process easier to stick with, for a given individual. Time-restricted eating makes sticking with a calorie goal easier for some people, harder for others. We find out which we are by experimenting. (I'm a non-faster; I lost weight just fine without doing it.)
Other than that, it makes no difference. It's really trendy, though, so it makes for cool conversation fodder.
One caveat: Eating very late, then weighing in first thing in the AM, may result in a higher average scale weight than if eating stops 12-16 hours before bed. But the difference isn't fat - the thing most of us really care about, right? - it's that we haven't urinated/defecated/sweat/exhaled out as much of the waste-weight from the food and drink we most recently consumed. Personally, I care about body fat, not that stuff. YMMV.4 -
Calories in, calories out. Time that that happens doesn't matter with your body and weight loss. Some people like to push those calories into a long day and eat frequently over many hours, and some people consume them in very short periods of time and quit eating for the day. Both ways work as long as you consume fewer calories than you burn.3
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When you're dead. The weight melts right off!
But mostly what the others said. They be smart.4 -
I think this stop eating after 7 pm or whatever came about as a way for people to stop snacking on high calorie low nutrition type TV snacks in the evening after dinner.
and for many people that is probably an easy way to cut calories
But there is nothing magic about the time and if high calorie TV snacks are not an issue for you, it is irelevant.
and if you are calorie counting you will soon see where you are 'wasting calories' and how you could adjust to cut down.5 -
Doesn’t matter, you can eat all of your calories at 11pm, and if it’s a deficit you will lose3
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Agree with all the above, as long as you're within calorie goals, you'll lose. But I have a friend who lives by the clock and stops eating at 6:00. If I call her and it's 5:50 she'll call me back so she can eat something first. She swears it's what's kept her from gaining. But I bet it's exactly what @paperpudding said, it's only because she avoids the high calorie snacky choices later. AFAIK, she doesn't count calories.4
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I agree with the above. Though, I been trying out a new tactic I leave enough calories in my diary for a protein shake at night before bed then I brush my teeth. Once the teeth are cleaned, nothing is getting pass my lips until the next morning.3
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I think that so much depends on you and your eating habits. I've read quite a few posts by @AnnPT77 recently where she talks about the personalization of the weight loss journey. I think that really makes sense.
I am working at stopping eating after dinner (I usually finish dinner around 8). It is relatively easy for me to plan delicious and satisfying meals and snacks for myself during the day that fit my calorie goals. As the night gets later, and I get more tired, it is more and more difficult for me not to eat many snacks.
When are your challenging times to eat within your goals?
I'm actually recommitting to work on this today. I lost 50 pounds about four years ago and kept 45 of it off for two years. The death of a friend and Covid led me to slip back in some older eating habits and I gained 32 pounds back. I have since lost 15- and have been seesawing up and down about 4 pounds for at least 6 weeks now.
To get past my sesaw, one of my plans is to eat dinner and not eat anymore snacks. The other plan (to help me keep the motivation) was to come back to the community and read more and maybe do some posting.
So thanks for your question - and good luck!6 -
What time you eat is meaningless. How much is all that matters.1
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As I prefer to eat many small meals, I stop eating right before I brush my teeth and go to bed.
Like others said, it's the total amount of calories that is important for weight loss.2 -
peeweenovak1056 wrote: »Is there a suggested time we should stop eating for the day to maximize weight loss?
From a biological standpoint, not really...it doesn't really matter...you are burning calories 24/7. The vast majority of these kind of "rules" out there don't really have a biological effect on weight management. They are means of helping one control calories.
I myself do not log food or calories, though I am very mindful of my nutrition and have calorie awareness...I just physically do not log them. I have rules that I more or less adhere to, and there are exceptions to those rules but so long as the exceptions don't become the norm it's no big deal.
For example, one of my "rules" is no takeout or eating out during the week when I'm trying to cut weight. Take out or dining out is for Fridays or Saturdays and typically only a once per week kind of thing. Can someone lose weight dining out every day? Absolutely. Does it just make my life and calorie management easier if I don't? Yup. Do I allow for more leeway in maintenance? Yup. For me, this works very well and I don't have issue adhering to this...for others, it may not due to circumstance or any number of things.
The common notion of stop eating at 6PM would never work for me...in fact, I wonder who it really works for? I can't personally fathom who is home early enough from work, etc to have dinner on the table at 6PM, but maybe that's just the particular world I live in. On a good day I'm just getting home from work or shuttling my kids around between soccer and track practices around 6PM...usually a little later. We can sometimes swing dinner around 7 or 7:30, but it's usually more like 8PM for my wife and I.1 -
I find it easier to lose weight if I stop eating at dinner, I don't eat in the evenings. But I guess it is different for everyone, a lot of people who do intermittant fasting don't eat breakfast, I could never do that I like to eat when I get up.
So for me having that "cut off" time at dinner helps me control my daily calorie intake.2 -
The common notion of stop eating at 6PM would never work for me...in fact, I wonder who it really works for? I can't personally fathom who is home early enough from work, etc to have dinner on the table at 6PM, but maybe that's just the particular world I live in. On a good day I'm just getting home from work or shuttling my kids around between soccer and track practices around 6PM...usually a little later. We can sometimes swing dinner around 7 or 7:30, but it's usually more like 8PM for my wife and I.
off topic I know - and I do not dispute what works for you and I do not dispute that timing, in itself, has no relevance on weight loss (said as much in my previous post) - but for many people eating dinner at 6 pm is not impossible.
Not me - we eat dinner on average around 7:30 - 8:00 - but to many people here that seems quite late. We are the exception, not the norm
I know my son starts works at 8, finishes at 4, is home by about 4:30.
His wife is currently on maternity leave - they have dinner around 5:30
even if he were the one cooking, having dinner on the table at 6 would be well within realm of easy.
and of course retired people, those working from home, part timers who don't work full day etc etc - can have dinner as early as they want.
so yes, I think is is just the particular world you live in that makes this seems unworkable.
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I find it easier to lose weight if I stop eating at dinner, I don't eat in the evenings. But I guess it is different for everyone, a lot of people who do intermittant fasting don't eat breakfast, I could never do that I like to eat when I get up.
So for me having that "cut off" time at dinner helps me control my daily calorie intake.
This works for me too.
Mindless snacking is a problem for me in the evening even if I have a filling dinner.
So it's been better for me to draw a line after my main meal around 4pm.
This wouldn't work for most people but it fits into my schedule.
I lost 50 lbs doing this.0 -
For the last six weeks, I've stopped eating at 7pm. I used to snack right up to bedtime, loved to lay in bed, watch movies and eat. Then the next day eat, and snack all day. So stopping at 7pm has cut out a lot of calories for me without having to think about it. I make exceptions for nights out etc. But so far, this is helping me lose weight.1
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I try to stop eating at 7 PM simply because I want the night to digest everything. I also try to stop drinking stuff at that time because I don't like peeing all night. I am not doing this to lose more than 2 pounds a week though. Slow and steady. I did lose 15 pounds this month but almost half was the first week and most of that was likely water weight. I don't expect or want more than an 8 pound loss this next month. When I was getting ready to join the military I had to enter the DEP program and lose 16 pounds. The recruiter taught me the part on stopping eating at 7 PM. I do believe though that it really doesn't matter when you eat your calories for the day....it all counts the same. But I've already stared why I stop eating at 7 PM.0
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paperpudding wrote: »I think this stop eating after 7 pm or whatever came about as a way for people to stop snacking on high calorie low nutrition type TV snacks in the evening after dinner.
and for many people that is probably an easy way to cut calories
But there is nothing magic about the time and if high calorie TV snacks are not an issue for you, it is irelevant.
and if you are calorie counting you will soon see where you are 'wasting calories' and how you could adjust to cut down.
Exactly. The no eating after "X"pm is simply because the average person that eats a traditional morning breakfast, lunch, snack, and dinner has already eaten to maintenance at the conclusion of dinner therefore anything they eat after is surplus leading to weight gain. But if you fast and skip breakfast, have a light/moderate lunch, normal dinner, you may have some calories to play around with and still hit a deficit even having a snack/dessert a couple hours after dinner.2 -
stop trying to focus on the 10%. focus on the 90%- do what works for YOU.1
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