Your first week of fasting: what to expect
The first week is the only hard week. Knowing what's coming — and why — is the difference between pushing through and quitting on day 3.
Days 1–2: the ghost of breakfast
Your body expects food at your old meal times and sends hunger on schedule. This isn't starvation — it's habit hormones (ghrelin) firing at the usual hour. Ride each wave with water or black coffee; it passes in 10–20 minutes.
Days 2–4: the headache window
If a dull headache or wooziness shows up, it's almost always sodium, not food. As insulin drops, your kidneys flush salt and water. A pinch of salt in a glass of water usually fixes it within the hour. This is the most preventable reason people quit.
Days 3–5: the energy dip
Some people feel flat mid-week as the body shifts to running longer on stored fuel. Keep training light this week, walk daily, and don't stack a new diet on top — change when you eat first, what you eat later.
Days 5–7: the click
Hunger starts arriving at your new mealtimes instead of all day. Mornings feel clearer than expected. The evening no-snack rule starts feeling normal. This is the rhythm settling in — week two is dramatically easier than week one.
When to stop
Persistent dizziness, heart palpitations, or feeling genuinely unwell are stop signs, not badges — eat, and talk to a professional before continuing. Discomfort should be mild and improving by the day.
Start week one with a real plan
Kairo maps your window to your schedule and walks you through exactly what to eat — so week one is as easy as it can be.
Build my plan — freeGeneral 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.