Fasting time calculation works in two directions: enter your fasting start time and desired duration to find when your fast ends, or enter your start and end times to find total fasting hours. Either way, the goal is a window that fits your real-life schedule well enough to sustain consistently.
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Use the IF Calculator →How to Calculate Your Fasting Window
The math is simple: subtract your eating window hours from 24 to get your fasting hours.
- 16:8 → 24 − 8 = 16 hours fasting
- 18:6 → 24 − 6 = 18 hours fasting
- 20:4 → 24 − 4 = 20 hours fasting
- OMAD → 24 − 1 = 23 hours fasting (approximately)
To find your fasting end time: add your fasting duration to your fasting start time.
Example: If your last meal finishes at 8pm and you’re doing 16:8 → 8pm + 16 hours = noon the next day. Your eating window is 12pm–8pm.
Important: overnight hours count toward your fast. A typical sleep schedule of 11pm–7am already gives you 8 hours of fasting with no hunger. Extending past breakfast into late morning is all that 16:8 requires.
Common Method Window Schedules
| Method | Example Eating Window | Fast Start | Fast End |
|---|---|---|---|
| 12:12 | 8am–8pm | 8pm | 8am |
| 14:10 | 10am–8pm | 8pm | 10am |
| 16:8 | 12pm–8pm | 8pm | 12pm |
| 16:8 (early) | 7am–3pm | 3pm | 7am |
| 18:6 | 1pm–7pm | 7pm | 1pm |
| 20:4 | 2pm–6pm | 6pm | 2pm |
| OMAD | 1 hour (e.g., 6–7pm) | 7pm | 6pm next day |
There is no single correct window — the best one is whichever you’ll actually stick to. Most people do best fitting the eating window around their social meals (typically lunch and dinner) and letting the fast overlap with sleep as much as possible.
What Happens During Each Phase of the Fast
Understanding the metabolic progression helps you interpret how you feel at different points in the fast and whether discomfort is expected or a sign to break early.
- Hours 0–4 (Fed): Digesting and using energy from the last meal. No fasting effects yet.
- Hours 4–12 (Transition): Insulin drops, the body begins shifting away from stored glucose as glycogen starts depleting.
- Hours 12–16 (Fat Burn): Body leans increasingly on stored fat as glucose availability drops. For most 16:8 practitioners, this is when the fast ends — right as fat burning is ramping up.
- Hours 16–20 (Ketosis): Ketone production rises, fat becomes the primary fuel source. Mental clarity often improves here. This is where 18:6 and 20:4 practitioners operate.
- Hours 20+ (Cellular Cleanup): Extended fasting may support autophagy — a cellular repair process. This phase is relevant mainly for longer fasts beyond typical IF windows.
How to Choose the Right Window for Your Schedule
Match the window to your existing meal rhythm
If you never eat breakfast naturally, 16:8 with a noon–8pm window probably requires no adjustment at all. If you train in the morning and need fuel, an early 7am–3pm window may be a better fit.
Start shorter and extend
If 16 hours sounds challenging, start with 12:12 or 14:10 for two weeks. Most people find the hunger adaptation easier to manage gradually. A 12-hour fast is the minimum that produces meaningful metabolic benefit.
Keep the window consistent
Shifting your eating window significantly from day to day disrupts your body’s circadian rhythm and makes hunger harder to manage. Pick a window and stick to it within an hour or two on most days.
5:2 Timing
The 5:2 method doesn’t use a daily fasting window — instead you eat normally five days per week and restrict to 500–600 calories on two non-consecutive days. The “fasting time” for 5:2 refers to planning which days to restrict and structuring those days around low-hunger times (e.g., keeping busy, fasting day on weekdays rather than weekends).
Frequently Asked Questions
Does the time of day matter for when you fast?
Research on circadian rhythm and metabolism suggests that eating earlier in the day (morning and early afternoon) is metabolically advantageous compared to eating late at night. However, the practical benefits of sustaining a consistent eating window — whatever time it is — outweigh theoretical circadian advantages that require a window many people can’t maintain socially.
Does black coffee break a fast?
Black coffee — no milk, no sugar, no additives — is generally accepted as not breaking a fast in the context of metabolic benefits and weight loss. The trace calories in black coffee are negligible and do not meaningfully raise insulin. However, any additions (cream, oat milk, sweeteners) do break the fast.
How do I know if my fasting window is long enough?
12+ hours is the minimum threshold for meaningful metabolic benefit. If you’re fasting 12–14 hours daily (often achievable just by not eating after dinner and skipping breakfast), you’re practicing intermittent fasting even if it doesn’t feel strict. A 16-hour fast consistently is where most research shows reliable weight loss and metabolic improvements.
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