Last updated: May 2026
What Is the Carnivore Diet? A Beginner’s Guide
The carnivore diet is an eating pattern that consists exclusively of animal products — meat, fish, poultry, eggs, and some dairy — with complete elimination of all plant foods. No vegetables, fruits, grains, legumes, nuts, or seeds. It is sometimes called the “zero carb” or “all-meat” diet.
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How Does the Carnivore Diet Work?
Carbohydrates are the body’s default energy source. When you stop consuming carbs entirely, your body shifts to burning fat for fuel through a metabolic process called ketosis. The liver converts fatty acids into ketones, which then replace glucose as the primary fuel for the brain and body.
The carnivore diet is the most extreme form of ketogenic eating — it produces ketosis not by limiting carbs to 20–50g per day (as standard keto does) but by essentially eliminating them to near zero. Depending on protein intake, a sustained ketogenic state may or may not be achieved, as high protein intake can trigger gluconeogenesis (the conversion of amino acids to glucose), which can limit ketone production.
How Does It Differ from Keto?
| Feature | Ketogenic Diet | Carnivore Diet |
|---|---|---|
| Carbohydrate intake | 20–50g/day | Near zero (~0–5g) |
| Plant foods | Allowed in limited amounts | Completely excluded |
| Fat percentage | 70–80% of calories | 60–80% (varies by version) |
| Food variety | Low carb vegetables, nuts, avocado allowed | Animal products only |
| Strictness | Moderate | Extreme |
What Can You Eat on the Carnivore Diet?
Everything on this list is from an animal source:
- Ruminant meats: beef (ribeye, NY strip, ground beef, brisket, chuck roast), lamb, bison, venison
- Pork: pork chops, pork belly, bacon (minimal added sugar), pork rinds
- Poultry: chicken thighs (skin-on), chicken wings, duck, turkey dark meat
- Fish and seafood: salmon, sardines, mackerel, tuna, shrimp, oysters, crab
- Organ meats: beef liver, heart, kidney, tongue — highest micronutrient density of any carnivore foods
- Eggs: whole eggs — all varieties, prepared any way
- Dairy (optional): butter, ghee, heavy cream, hard cheeses — higher-lactose products (milk, yogurt) are excluded by many practitioners
- Animal fats: beef tallow, lard, duck fat — used for cooking
- Bone broth: collagen, glycine, electrolytes
Versions of the Carnivore Diet
There is no single standardized definition of the carnivore diet. Different versions exist along a spectrum of strictness:
- Standard carnivore: All animal products including eggs, dairy, fish, and organ meats
- Beef-only: Predominantly beef with minimal other animal products — common among those using it as an elimination protocol
- Lion Diet: The most restrictive variant — only ruminant meat (beef, lamb), salt, and water
The strictest variants (beef-only, Lion Diet) are most commonly used as short-term elimination protocols to identify food sensitivities, not as permanent dietary approaches.
What Does the Research Say?
The scientific literature on the carnivore diet is extremely limited. A 2026 scoping review published in Nutrients (Lietz et al.) identified only nine human studies published between 2021 and 2025 — the totality of peer-reviewed research on the carnivore diet in humans. Most were case studies or survey-based, with no control groups and short durations. The authors concluded that “the quality of evidence is very limited.”
The largest dataset comes from Lennerz et al. (2021), a survey of 2,029 adults who self-reported following a carnivore diet for a median of 14 months. Key findings:
- 95% reported improved overall health
- Reduced BMI, improved energy, sleep, and mental health (self-reported)
- Improved CRP (inflammation marker) and triglycerides/HDL ratio
- 27% reported worsening lipid profiles — elevated LDL and total cholesterol
The survey was recruited from carnivore-diet social media communities and relied entirely on self-reporting, which limits the reliability of the findings.
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Typical Macronutrient Profile
A nutrient analysis of four carnivore diet meal plans (Goedeke et al., Nutrients 2024) used the following macronutrient targets as their framework:
- Fat: 70–75% of calories
- Protein: 25–30% of calories
- Carbohydrates: <5% of calories
In practice, the fat-to-protein ratio varies significantly between practitioners. Active athletes and bodybuilders often use higher protein ratios (40–50% of calories), while those pursuing ketosis more aggressively lean toward 70–80% fat.
Potential Nutrient Risks
The same 2024 nutrient analysis found that across four carnivore meal plans, intake consistently fell below recommended daily values for:
- Thiamin (Vitamin B1)
- Vitamin C
- Calcium
- Magnesium
- Potassium
- Dietary fiber (<1g/day vs 25–30g recommended)
Nutrients consistently exceeded: B12, riboflavin, niacin, zinc, selenium, phosphorus, and Vitamin A (often dramatically so, particularly with liver consumption).
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Who Should Not Try the Carnivore Diet
- Pregnant or breastfeeding women — nutritional inadequacies are unsafe during pregnancy
- Anyone with kidney disease — high protein intake increases renal stress
- People with type 1 diabetes — requires close medical supervision with any very-low-carb approach
- Those with eating disorder history — extreme restriction can trigger unhealthy patterns
- Anyone on medications that require food intake for dosing stability
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the carnivore diet the same as keto?
No. The carnivore diet is a subset of ketogenic eating but more extreme — it eliminates all plant foods, including the low-carb vegetables, nuts, and avocados that standard keto allows. Carnivore produces near-zero carbohydrate intake through its food restrictions rather than through precise macro tracking.
Do you lose weight on carnivore?
Many people do, particularly initially. The high protein and fat content suppresses hunger strongly, which naturally reduces total calorie intake. The diet also eliminates all processed high-calorie foods. The 2021 survey found a median BMI drop from 26.4 to 23.7 among long-term followers — though this reflects a self-selected group of diet enthusiasts, not a controlled study.
Is carnivore safe long-term?
Unknown. The 2026 scoping review concluded that “it is not currently possible to reliably assess the long-term safety of the CD” given the absence of longitudinal studies. Short-term risks are manageable with proper electrolyte management and organ meat inclusion; long-term risks — particularly cardiovascular, given consistent LDL elevations — require more research to assess.
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