Protocols

OMAD: one meal a day, done properly

OMAD is the simplest protocol on paper and the easiest to do badly. The whole game is making one meal carry a full day of nutrition.

OMAD compresses all your eating into roughly one hour — about a 23-hour daily fast. The appeal is radical simplicity: no meal planning, no snacking decisions, one plate a day. The catch: that plate has to do everything.

Who OMAD suits (and doesn't)

Building a complete OMAD plate

The mistakes that sink OMAD

Step up, don't jump: 16:8 → 18:6 → 20:4 → OMAD, moving only when the current window feels easy for a couple of weeks. Many people find 20:4 the sweet spot and never need OMAD at all.

Find your right protocol

Kairo recommends a starting protocol from your experience and goal — and tells you when you're ready to step up.

Build my plan — free

Keep reading

16:8 vs 18:6 vs OMAD — which fits you → 5 common fasting mistakes →

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.