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Fasting Calculator: How to Plan Your Window and Predict Your Results

Last updated: May 2026

A fasting calculator tells you two things: when to eat and how much to eat within your chosen fasting schedule. Getting those two variables right — your eating window and your calorie target — is what separates effective intermittent fasting from simply skipping meals and feeling terrible.

Calculate Your Fasting Window and Calorie Targets

Enter your weight, activity level, and preferred fasting method for a personalized eating schedule and daily calorie breakdown.

Use the IF Calculator →

The Three Main Intermittent Fasting Methods

16:8 — The most popular starting point

Fast for 16 hours and eat within an 8-hour window each day. A typical window is 12pm–8pm, which means skipping breakfast and stopping eating after dinner. Most of the fast overlaps with sleep, making it easier to sustain than it sounds.

This is the best entry point for most people — it fits most schedules, requires no calorie counting on fasting days, and produces consistent results when maintained.

5:2 — Two low-calorie days per week

Eat normally for five days and reduce calorie intake to 500–600 calories on two non-consecutive days (e.g., Monday and Thursday). The 500–600 calorie target on fast days should come from high-protein, high-fiber foods to control hunger.

This method works well for people who don’t want to restrict their eating window daily but can tolerate two structured low-calorie days per week.

Alternate-Day Fasting (ADF)

Fast every other day, either completely (zero calories) or with a reduced intake of 20–25% of normal calories on fasting days. A 2016 peer-reviewed study found zero-calorie ADF to be “safe and tolerable, producing short-term weight loss and improving body composition and metabolic parameters.”

ADF is more demanding than 16:8 or 5:2 and is better suited to people who have already done shorter fasting protocols.

Related Reading

Fasting Time Calculator: How to Schedule Your 16:8, 18:6, or 5:2 Window →

What the Research Says About Fasting for Weight Loss

A 2022 randomized controlled trial assigned 139 obese participants to either time-restricted eating or daily calorie restriction for 12 months. Both groups followed a calorie-restricted diet of 1,200–1,800 kcal/day. Results at 12 months: mean weight loss of 8.0 kg in the time-restricted eating group versus 6.3 kg in the calorie restriction group. Time-restricted eating produced 27% more weight loss even when total calorie targets were similar.

A 2021 comprehensive review found:

How Much to Eat During Your Eating Window

The fasting window is not a license to eat without limits. Your calorie target during the eating window should be based on your TDEE (Total Daily Energy Expenditure) minus your target deficit:

The key mistake on IF is under-eating during the eating window, which causes energy crashes and muscle loss, or over-eating to compensate for the fast, which eliminates the calorie deficit entirely.

Related Reading

BMR vs TDEE: Which Number Should You Use? →

How to Manage Hunger During Fasting Periods

Hunger on IF peaks during the first 1–2 weeks and generally decreases significantly as the body adapts. Strategies that help:

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Related Reading

Intermittent Fasting for Weight Loss: How Much Can You Realistically Lose? →

Frequently Asked Questions

What can you consume during a fast without breaking it?

Water, black coffee, plain tea, and zero-calorie electrolytes are generally accepted as not breaking a fast. Anything containing calories — including small amounts of milk, juice, or broth — technically ends the fasted state.

Does IF work if you don’t change what you eat?

Partially. The eating window naturally limits total daily food intake for most people, creating a passive calorie deficit. However, if you eat hypercaloric foods during your window, you can easily negate that deficit. IF works best when the eating window is filled with nutrient-dense, protein-rich foods rather than used as permission to eat freely.

Which fasting method is best for beginners?

16:8 is the most sustainable starting protocol for most people. It requires no calorie counting on fasting days, the fast overlaps heavily with sleep, and it can be adjusted (starting at 12:12 or 14:10) as you build tolerance. Start there before considering more demanding protocols like 5:2 or ADF.

Calculate Your Fasting Schedule

Our IF calculator gives you a personalized eating window, daily calorie targets, and protein breakdown based on your weight, activity level, and goal.

Plan My Fasting Schedule →
Dennis Kiplimo
Written by
Dennis Kiplimo

Dennis Kiplimo is a Registered Nurse and founder of Denstar Fitness. He publishes fitness calculators and writes about training, nutrition and health on Medium.

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