The idea that fasting jacks up calorie burn comes from a kernel of truth: short-term fasting can spike norepinephrine, slightly raising resting energy expenditure—maybe 3-10% in studies like Zauner et al. (2000). But this is temporary. Push it longer, and your body dials down metabolism to conserve energy, as seen in prolonged calorie restriction studies (e.g., the Minnesota Starvation Experiment). A 2018 meta-analysis (Harris et al.) found IF and continuous calorie restriction deliver the same fat loss when calories are equal. No metabolic magic here—fat burns only when you’re in a deficit, not because of some fasting-induced furnace.
So why does IF work for some? It’s less about biology and more about behavior. A condensed eating window—like 8 hours or less—makes it harder to cram in the same calories that piled on the weight. Digestion takes time: eating a meal triggers processes (chewing, gastric emptying, nutrient absorption) that need hours to wind down before hunger fully resets. In a short window, you’re restarting that cycle over and over, which can blunt appetite. Say you used to graze all day, racking up 3,000 calories. Now, in 6 hours, your stomach’s still processing round one when round two hits—less room, less hunger, fewer calories eaten. It’s not that IF “burns more”; it’s that you’re naturally capped at, say, 2,000 calories without forcing it.
This isn’t universal—some still overeat in tight windows—but for those who struggle with constant snacking, IF’s structure can enforce a deficit without the mental tax of counting. The insulin or autophagy perks get hyped, but they’re side benefits, not fat-loss drivers. Success stories online often reflect this: less intake, not a revved engine. IF’s a tool, not a cheat code.