If your first reaction to “intermittent fasting with type 1 diabetes” is…”Oh my gosh, my blood sugar would be so low! I could never do that!” …then definitely keep reading.
In this guide, I will cover everything you need to know about intermittent fasting with type 1 diabetes.
What’s the point of intermittent fasting?
There are 3 general reasons a person might want to pursue intermittent fasting.
- Weight loss: This is the most obvious and most common reason to give it a try.
- Simplicity: Reducing the number of hours each day that you have to think about food, track food, make decisions around food, and cook food can be really freeing! Instead of frantically and unexpectedly skipping meals because of a hectic schedule, intermittent fasting allows you to properly and methodically skip eating during parts of the time.
- Energy: Once you get going, and you’re no longer freaking out about, “How hungry will I feel!?!”…this approach to eating can actually give you quite a boost of energy because your body will be burning fat for fuel instead of relying on sugar from your blood. Body fat is an endless source of energy.
Before we get started: if your blood sugar drops just because you don’t eat for a handful of hours, you’re taking too much background/basal insulin via pump or injection. Talk to your CDE or primary care doctor about “basal testing.” (Or check out Gary Scheiner’s book, ‘Think Like a Pancreas’ and do the basal testing yourself!)
Basal testing literally consists of purposefully skipping a meal (or two) in order to see if your insulin keeps your blood sugar steady, or if your blood sugar significantly rises or falls out of your personal goal range. If it rises, you’re not getting enough background/basal insulin. If it falls, then you’re clearly getting too much.
How intermittent fasting works
When you wake up with an in-range blood sugar (ideally between 70 to 130 mg/dL as a person with type 1 diabetes…the 130 mg/dL being on the higher end but offering some room for imperfection in a complex disease) and you don’t eat breakfast, which means you don’t take a bolus of insulin, your body will continue to burn fat for fuel because you have yet to introduce actual fuel. You have yet to turn on that switch telling your body to rely on glucose for fuel instead of fat.
The moment you eat or drink something containing calories, your body says, “Alright! Now it’s time to burn glucose!”
What an intermittent fasting schedule looks like
There are a lot of different ways you can approach fasting, and after doing this for several years on and off, I’ve found I can flexibly create my own approach that feels most natural to me.
Here are 3 of the most popular fasting schedules, adapted from Dr. John Berardi’s guide to intermittent fasting:
- 24-hour fast: You eat dinner on Thursday (for example), and then you don’t eat again until dinner on Friday. This should generally only be performed once per week. (Read Dr. Berardi’s guide to see what happens if you do a 24-hour fast too often.)
- 16-hour fast: You eat dinner on Thursday (for example), and then you don’t eat again until 1 or 2 p.m. the next day. It’s important to note that you should still eat a normal day’s worth of calories during that 8-hour eating window. If you’re trying to lose weight, that amount of calories might only be 1200 to 1600, but you still need to get your calories while following a fasting program.
- Periodic fast: You suddenly decide to go 24 hours without eating, unrelated to your fasting or eating schedule throughout the rest of week. I like using it when I know I’m going to be eating a really heavy meal (Thanksgiving, holidays, pizza or Chinese food, etc.). I’ve also used this when I know I’m going to be sitting in a car for a long time on a road-trip, or if I know I’m going to be somewhere new with my kids and I really don’t want to risk any low or high blood sugars – I just want to remove diabetes from the equation altogether so I’ll fast as long as I can that day.
If you search the web on intermittent fasting, you’ll find there are people who emphasize that fasting for weight loss needs to coincide with very clean eating and attention to nutrition, while you’ll find others who say they fast all day and then eat pizza every night.
If you’re trying to lose weight, you’ll really want to lean towards the clean-eating and attention to nutrition (with treat days planned of course, for long-term success and adherence), but if you’re trying to maintain your weight, I think intermittent fasting offers a lot of wiggle-room for less healthy eating.
During the holidays, for example, I let my eating choices slide quite a bit compared to my normal routine, but I was still following a 16-hour or 24-hour fasting schedule most days of the week, so I didn’t actually gain weight beyond a little carb-laden bloating and water retention.
But won’t I be hungry?
Guess what, it’s okay to be a little hungry. After you stop freaking out about your belly not feeling full 24/7, and push through it around 10 a.m., you might actually notice that you feel a little bit awesome. A little more clear-headed, a little more focused, even a little more energy.
Drink some water – it’s good for you anyway – and embrace that feeling of your body just being empty. Yes, there are many ways to lose weight by eating every 3 to 4 hours, but that’s not the only way to eat, and it’s not the only way to lose weight.
Are you someone who is always thinking about their next meal? Always snacking?
As Dr. Berardi explains:
“Intermittent fasting can be helpful for in-shape people who want to really get lean without following conventional bodybuilding diets, or for anyone who needs to learn the difference between body hunger and mental hunger.”
But if you’re an athlete or intense exerciser...you might simply find that you really need that morning fuel because of your athletic pursuits! That’s okay! That just means intermittent fasting isn’t for you.
But isn’t eating breakfast really important?
Eating breakfast can absolutely be a crucial part of weight loss and maintaining a healthy metabolism, but it’s not the only way, and more recent research has really diminished how important breakfast really is.
“There haven’t been any conclusive studies that found eating breakfast to have a positive effect on weight loss or weight maintenance,” explains sports nutritionist and registered dietician, Leslie Bonci, as reported in Popular Science.
Also, the idea that skipping breakfast causes weight gain is over-simplified and very false. It’s not the act of skipping breakfast that can cause weight gain, but that in those studies it’s observed that a large majority of those who skip breakfast also lack other healthy habits overall.
“It could be that eating breakfast is simply a marker of a healthy lifestyle and, in itself, doesn’t protect against obesity,” explains Science Alert.
“Several randomized trials (where people are randomly assigned to a certain behaviour, such as eating breakfast or skipping breakfast) have not found any evidence to suggest that skipping breakfast causes weight gain. Despite the association between skipping breakfast and weight gain, experiments specifically designed to try and establish cause and effect haven’t provided evidence that skipping breakfast causes you to put on weight.”
How to do intermittent fasting with type 1 diabetes
As a person with type 1 diabetes, you might even notice that you feel…a little free, because you aren’t worrying about whether you’re going to be high or low after your breakfast.
The awesome part of this for people with type 1 diabetes is this: your blood sugar is steady, steady, steady all morning long until you end your fast by eating at 11 a.m. or 2 p.m. or dinnertime…depending on which fasting schedule you follow.
I’ve also found that if I do a 24-hour fast before a carb-heavy meal like pizza, I’ve found that fasting actually cuts down significantly on the insulin I need for that meal.
If you stick to your fasting program consistently, you’ll find you lose weight and you gain insulin sensitivity, which means: you’ll need to decrease your background/basal insulin rates! This is a good thing! This is part of weight loss with diabetes, but if you aren’t expecting it, you’ll be annoyed and frustrated with the low blood sugars.
How to adjust high or low blood sugar when fasting
Waking up with an in-range blood sugar is extremely helpful, but obviously, we’re not perfect and things happen. Here’s how to manage your plan for fasting if your blood sugar is not in your ideal range when you wake up:
- If you wake up a little high, sure, you can take a reduced correction dose (read ‘Think Like a Pancreas’ if you don’t know your own correction dose), and carry on with the fast, but introducing that bolus of insulin could be enough to switch on your body’s need to burn glucose for fuel. (For legitimate “dawn phenomenon” high blood sugars, you may simply need a bolus correction of insulin every morning that really is part of your “basal” insulin but is applied via pump or injection as a bolus. If this prevents morning fasting highs, it’s part of your fasting regimen!) *Read more about managing “dawn phenomenon” here.
- If you don’t take that correction dose of insulin, then you’re just spending the next several hours with a high blood sugar…which is counterproductive if our overall goal is health…right? So definitely take the insulin you need in order to be at healthy blood sugar levels–that’s your first priority.
- If you wake up low, then you obviously have to eat and fasting is no longer going to work. You’d be better off eating a healthy breakfast, fueling your metabolism since it’s already burning glucose for fuel, and trying again tomorrow.
- If you routinely wake up with blood sugars that are too high or too low, you need to go back and do some basal testing or test your insulin-to-carbohydrate ratios that you’re using for the food you eat before bed.
- Or this sneaky blood sugar problem: You need to stop binge-eating late at night. If you’re currently up at midnight eating yourself out of house and home, focus on this first before pursuing intermittent fasting. People often blame high blood sugars in the morning on “the dawn phenomenon” when it’s actually the result of late-night binge-eating.
It’s not a magic trick. It’s not a fad. It’s just basic science of how the body responds in a fasted environment.
Exercising in the Morning When Fasting…Is Actually Easier!
When you’re fasting during your exercise, your blood sugar isn’t going to burn up and drop–this is a good thing! Exercising while fasting (which means you did not just take a bolus of insulin for food or a high blood sugar) is easier because your body will burn body fat for fuel instead of glucose. I didn’t believe it either when I first learned this from the bodybuilders at my gym many years ago, but it works.
You will find that with weight-lifting or other anaerobic workouts, your blood sugar will possibly rise during a fasted workout, which means you might actually need a bolus of insulin for that type of workout. This will not take away from your fasted efforts, it simply helps use the glucose that’s being generated from the glycogen in your muscles being broken down due to your anaerobic workout!
I LOVE fasted cardio! In fact, I make sure that all of my exercise sessions happen either fasted in the morning or fasted in the evening (by not eating anything after 1 p.m. and then getting on the treadmill around 7 pm. This ensures that all bolused rapid-acting insulin is well out of my system. It works. When I used to lift weights, I did find that I needed 1 unit of insulin in the morning if I was doing a fasted weightlifting workout.
So in a nutshell:
- wake up with an in-range blood sugar (or correct a slight high with half of your usual correction)
- begin your workout while fasted
- check your blood sugar halfway through your workout during the first few experiments for safety’s sake
- if your anaerobic workout proves to raise your blood sugar, take half of what you would take to correct that high — but take it when you start exercising to prevent the high in the first place
- if your workout is aerobic (cardio), just continue your workout — you shouldn’t see a rise in blood sugar from aerobic fasted exercise
- check your blood sugar at the end
- shower (thank you)…and enjoy the rest of your fasting
Frequently Asked Questions
Is intermittent fasting safe for people with type 1 diabetes?
Absolutely! But you need to make sure your insulin doses and medications are properly tuned. For type 2s taking diabetes medications that intentionally lower blood sugar, you’ll likely want to talk to your doctor about taking that dose with your first meal versus “in the morning” if you intend to fast in the morning.
For type 1s, as discussed extensively above, your insulin doses should be finely tuned (even if you don’t ever plan to fast) so that you can miss meals and your blood sugar is generally steady and in a healthy range. Adjusting your insulin doses to meet this standard is called “basal testing.” If you’ve never done any basal testing to assess the accuracy of your personal insulin doses, definitely do that first. And do it even if you don’t ever intend to fast. It’s essential to diabetes management.
Again, as explained earlier, during your first week of fasting, check your blood sugar often during your fasting window to see how your body responds. And if you stick with it long-term, you’ll find you definitely will need to reduce your basal rates (even within a week or two) because intermittent fasting has the awesome benefit of…increasing your sensitivity to insulin!
What can you drink during intermittent fasting?
During the time-frame that you’re not eating calories, you shouldn’t be drinking any calories either. Black coffee or tea or water or seltzer (or diet soda, if you must) are all safe to drink. In general, I don’t encourage the consumption of drinks loaded with fake sweeteners. Drinks like Vitamin Water, even the sugar-free version, still contains calories. Read your labels carefully, and if all else fails, ditch the “diet” products for some all natural, chemical-free plain water!
Do you need to do intermittent fasting if you already follow a ketogenic diet?
You’re obviously going to be burning more fat than the rest of us after eating a ketogenic breakfast, but even some of that breakfast will be converted to glucose and require a bit of insulin to digest, so intermittent fasting still applies to keto-folks, too.
Adding fasting to an already disciplined ketogenic diet will definitely help your weight-loss progress.
Just beware, however, that if you don’t already understand how to eat enough on a ketogenic diet, adding fasting to the mix can be a recipe for a binge.
I highly recommend studying and practicing ketogenic eating for a few months before adding fasting to it. It’s very common for new low-carb eaters to eat too little because they are still afraid of eating too much fat. And fat, as you’ve probably heard, is a pretty crucial part of a successful ketogenic diet!
Why I love intermittent fasting as a mom
I can wake up in the morning, drink a cup of black coffee and guzzle some regular ol’ water, then pack our bags and head out the door to the playground or playgroup or the library. I can chase my kids around all morning long and I don’t have to worry about my blood sugar.
If I woke up at 90 mg/dL, I know my blood sugar is still in that zone.
I didn’t have to spend any time making my own breakfast. Or trying to find the time to make my own breakfast. I don’t have to worry about getting real, healthy food into my own belly until we come home from our morning activity, and I get the kids lunch and get everybody settled.
(If you’re not a mom of two children, let me tell you that finding time for your own breakfast is actually incredibly challenging some days amongst the diaper changes and the bottles and playtime and the…on and on and on! When that second kid pops out, parenting is ON in full-power-mode 24/7.)
By 1 or 2 p.m., I’m not starving, I actually feel pretty energized after that morning fast. And making myself a healthy meal feels very doable because the busiest part of the day is behind us.
Should you try intermittent fasting?
If all of the above sounds appealing to you, give it a try!
A few things to keep in mind when trying intermittent fasting with type 1 diabetes:
- Do you currently have a healthy relationship with food? If not, I would address that first. Fasting is not ideal for the yo-yo dieter or someone trying to recover from an eating disorder. Visit We Are Diabetes or check out my book on Emotional Eating with Diabetes or Diabetes Burnout to get started.
- Take good notes! The first week you try fasting, write down the insulin you took before bed, what your blood sugar was in the a.m., etc., so you can pinpoint any diabetes-related variables that are causing lows or highs in your blood sugar during the fasting period. For example: if you’re still up at midnight eating chips and ice cream, you can absolutely bet that will raise your blood sugar during the hours of 6 a.m. to 12 p.m. when you’re fasting. Some people blame dawn phenomenon for what is actually late-night binge-eating.
- During the first few fasts, check your blood sugar often. Even though fasting itself shouldn’t cause low blood sugars, your insulin doses simply might not be accurate! And nothing will reveal that sooner than fasting. Check your blood sugar often and take good notes. Learning how to study and adjust your insulin doses is a crucial part, I believe, of long-term success in life with type 1 diabetes.
- It doesn’t have to be 100% to benefit you: If I wake up and feel really hungry and genuinely feel an intense need to eat, then I listen to my body, and I eat breakfast. If I want to go out to breakfast (once in a blue moon) with my family, then I eat breakfast. It’s not a big deal! Make it work for you. Follow the program as much as you can, and don’t freak out when life gets in the way.
- You may find it useful for a few months, then back to a normal schedule. I’ve found that intermittent fasting has been really wonderful for me for several months at a time. And then I take a break from it for a couple of months, and then I naturally feel ready to follow that schedule again. Listen to your body and find what works for you.
- Be patient. If you fail a day of fasting because you gave in and ate one of those goddamned office muffins, relax. I’m a big believer that creating your own life around nutrition is a very long work in progress. Be constantly open to evolving, learning, trying new things, and never never never shaming yourself for being imperfect. It’s one big science project. Enjoy the project, stop punishing yourself, and learn to love the food you eat. Food can be fun, even when you’re trying to lose weight!
Learn. Study. Experiment. Repeat!
Update: I recorded this video where I talk more about why I do fasted cardio, how I do it, and the benefits. Please let me know what you think in the comments below
I‘m successfully losing weight doing a 16:8 or some days 18:6 fast (and I have tried MANY things that didn’t work, so love that this does). My Endo is happy for me to be doing it too! I’m about a month in and just this last week as soon as I break the fasting period and eat my BGs skyrocket extremely quickly and I have significant insulin resistant, needing huge amount of insulin (and lots more than I would have previously needed) to bring me within range. Why would this be happening and do you know how I could modify things so that this stops? I feel the huge amounts of insulin I am now needing are going to reverse the positive effects of the fast on weightloss.
As long as you’re not overeating outside of your fast I wouldn’t be too worried about the amount of insulin you need to inject to stay in range. I often see people needing substantially more insulin for the first meal when they break a long fast rather than if they eat first thing in the morning. To limit the risk of a very high rise you can try experimenting with pre-bolusing
Thank you for your reply! My worry is the my insulin needs are significantly more than I would usually need…I’m talking 5 to 6 times what I would normally need (almost feels like I am just blousing water). I have had success losing weight by doing a 16:8 or 18:6 fasting schedule, eating a small healthy lunch that is relatively low in calories (300-400) and then I eat a healthy dinner (I don’t count the calories, but am ensuring its a nutritious meal and stop eating when I feel satiated). I am not eating between meals during the eating window.
This change in insulin needs has come on suddenly as if something has shifted with my metabolism. I am feeling disheartened and don’t see how I can safely continue as I am skyrocketing out of control at lunch and dinner. I am surprised there isn’t more information available on this subject as I have come across a couple of other people on diabetes Facebook pages that have experienced the same problem.
I agree, it’s really not something that is talked about a whole lot. We don’t write about it as I haven’t come across any research-based material on the phenomena. I have the same experience, so I always eat a small carb meal (min 15 grams of carbs) right when I wake up. That does it for me, but it of course doesn’t really fit with your wish to fast. An option could be using Afrezza (inhaled insulin for your first meal). It works similarly to insulin in people not living with diabetes, so that might be able to help you deal with the initial rise.
Just to confirm, if I give myself insulin in the morning to lower a higher glucose level (from the dawn effect), this WILL break my fast? Or if during my fast, I see my glucose slowly going up and I correct.. This also WILL break my fast? I have been IF for 2 months now and I’m still confused about bolusing..
Thanks!
If your blood sugars go up or are elevated you need to inject rapid-acting insulin. Think about it like this, if someone without diabetes does IF their body regulates the insulin levels automatically. So if the body needs more insulin it will release it, but that doesn’t mean that person is breaking the fast. Same thing for you, the only difference is that you have to do the job of managing your blood sugars
Hello! My husband is type 1. He exercises 5 mornings a week— 3 strength workouts (1 hour full body workouts), and 2 days he does an hour walk. We have been trying to figure out how he can do fasting, and we are so confused by what you say about strength training making your blood sugar rise. That hasn’t been his experience at all—the strength training and the walking both tank his blood sugar. He has been working out consistently for a year or two, and every morning needs to start with a little bit of toast to get him through his workout without tanking. His blood sugar is usually 100-130 when he wakes and he is on the tandem pump with control IQ and dexcom. Is there something he is doing wrong?
A lot people will see a blood sugar increase when they do anaerobic exercise (such as heavy resistance training) but don’t worry if your husband doesn’t. Maybe just see it as one less thing you have to worry about ?
I have been fasting for a couple of months ago. It’s blown me away. I first did it mostly as an experiment. Since my type one diagnosis at age 14 (I am now 51), I have had a terrible relationship with food. I will not say I have an eating disorder, but I most definitely suffered from disordered eating. A compulsion. An obsession. Occasional binge eating.
Even though I’m in great shape, very fit and active, and I know everything I need to know about nutrition and health in general, I couldn’t fix that one thing. Fasting has actually pretty much fixed that. At least it has during my fasting windows! And it doesn’t bother me during my eating windows either, to be fair. That was a massive bonus that I honestly wasn’t expecting!
I have energy, I feel great, and I am so glad that I decided to give it a go (believing at the time that I’d probably last one day, if that, before saying ”no thanks, not for me”).
I would honestly recommend it to anyone and everyone!
I did not do it to lose weight. I do not have any to lose. I now do it for all the other reputed health benefits. And yep, I feel on top of the world!
My usual weekly routine is a few 14hr fasts, two or three 16hr ones, one day off, and one day where I just do a minimum of 12hrs. That works just right for me.
For me, fasting is now a lifestyle, and certainly not a diet 🙂
I’ve been doing the 22:2 fast. My bs has been in normal range and I feel great with plenty of energy to workout. However, I went to test for keytones and it says I have moderate to large keytones. Definitely not normal for me. I still feel great besides being nervous about DKA … is that something I need to worry about when fasting or do I only need to worry if my bs was high or if I’m sick?
Based on your note I assume you live with insulin-dependent diabetes. DKA can happen if you do not have enough insulin on board, so it can happen without high blood sugars, although DKA and elevated blood sugars often go hand in hand. If you make sure you have insulin circulating at all times, the risk of DKA is minimized
Great article. Are there any books you would recommend on this topic for a type one diabetic ?
I’m usually a very active person and keen amateur cyclist. Currently off the bike with a lumbar disc injury but hoping to get back soon.
Thanks
Brad
I don’t know of any books that focus on T1D and intermittent fasting. There are a lot of good diabetes books out there though, you can check out our list of diabetes books here: https://diabetesstrong.com/diabetes-books/
Hi, I am doing intermittent fasting after reading your article. The only problem I am facing is after breaking my fast my blood sugar goes too high. Even when I am having healthy food, it generally needs 5 units of bolus, but after intermittent breaking fast, it takes 10 units for sugar to come down. What should I do?
I often find that there is a larger need for insulin after a prolonged fast. You can work with your medical team to increase your correction factor and carb ratio for the hours up until your first meal.
Hi, thanks for the great article, it really cleared up a few things for me.
I am a type 1, on a pump, and do the 16/8 fast.
I suffer from slight dawn phenom and although have my basal dosage rise during the early hours to combat this I can still be slightly high in the morning and need a half to full unit to get where I want to be.
I also do a weights session first thing, and find I need another 2.2 units dual waved over a hour to combat the rise I have from doing the exercise and was really concerned that this extra fasted insulin would be enough to break my fast.
But if you think about it, if I had a healthy pancreas, and did the same workout, my body would produce more insulin to combat the spike, and I would be none the wiser, it’s only because I have the CGM on that I can see this trend.
So maybe when Dr Jason Fung says you need to reduce the insulin in order to lose weight, it may be in regards to Food Insulin, and insulin by itself for the body’s natural rhythm in the absence of food is fine.
Anyway, thanks. I feel better about shooting up for exercise in the middle of my fast now.
I like the way you view it and am happy to hear that the article helped
I tried dropping sugar from my diet yesterday which i was consuming for many years. My long acting units was 24. So I stopped the processed carbs and dropped those carbs to 40g for my meals that day. I was taking my usual fast acting ratio of 1 unit for 10g. I noticed my sugars would not come down after meal but they stayed the same even with the insulin.
Any ideas what this could be?
Protein and fats can also impact blood sugars. If you’ve switched from carbs to fat, you’ll most likely notice that the blood sugar impact is prolonged as fat slows down the digestion and thereby absorption of glucose into the bloodstream. Large amounts of protein, especially without carbs can also impact blood sugars significantly
Thank you for this article, it’s very helpful as I recently started 16:8 (I am T1 using injection pens). Do you happen to know of any sources regarding insulin boluses for correcting highs breaking the fast? When I go for afternoon runs my bg often rises quite dramatically, but maybe I should instead do morning exercise as you suggested.
Also, I think I’m confused as to how a constant basal rate wouldn’t also break the fast if insulin in the system is the issue?
Thanks for your article, I’m already seeing much more stable bg thanks to fasting!
Everyone has insulin in their system 24/7 to survive, whether they live with diabetes or not, so I wouldn’t worry too much about corrections or your basal insulin. All that is taking care of is your hormones and making sure your system has enough energy to sustain you.
Generally, most will need a slightly higher rapid-acting dose when breaking the fast. You can calculate your “post-fast” carb ratio by including the usual correction in your dose. So for example, if you consistently have to take 2 units extra after your first meal plus let’s say 2 units for 20 grams of carbs. Then your post-fast carb ratio isn’t 10 but 5 (20 grams of carbs divided by 2+2 units = 5)