Training

Fasting and working out, together

Fasting doesn't cost you your training — bad planning does. Line up your window and your workouts and you keep both.

The fear is that fasting burns muscle and kills workouts. In practice, with enough protein and sane timing, most people train well fasted or fed. The variables that matter: when you train, when you eat protein, and how hard the session is.

The three timing setups

Protein is non-negotiable

Aim for roughly 0.7–1 g per pound of body weight daily. A shorter eating window means each meal has to carry more protein — anchor every meal with a real source, and consider a protein-led snack if your window allows.

Hard days vs easy days

On hard-training days, put your biggest, most protein-rich meal in the 1–2 hours after the session, and add electrolytes. On rest days you need less fuel — protein stays high, everything else can come down, and it's fine to fast a little longer if you feel good.

The one warning sign: if lifts are dropping week over week or you're dizzy in sessions, you're under-fueling or under-salted — widen the window on training days or move training closer to food. Fasting should flex around training, not fight it.

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Keep reading

Protein timing on training days → Electrolytes & hydration while fasting →

General information only, not medical advice. Consult a healthcare professional before starting any fasting routine, especially if you are pregnant, under 18, have a medical condition, or a history of disordered eating.