48-Hour Fasting: Benefits and Downsides
A 48-hour fast can be very beneficial if done right but it can be very exhausting as well. Before we dive into the benefits and downsides of the hardcore, 48-hour fast, lets first see what fasting is and the different types of fasting.
What is Fasting?
Fasting is the voluntary abstention from food (and sometimes drink) for a set period of time. People do it for health, spiritual, or lifestyle reasons. There are many types of fasting, depending on the goal.
Types of Fasting
1. Intermittent Fasting (IF)
One of the most popular modern approaches.
- 16:8 – Fast for 16 hours, eat in an 8-hour window (e.g., 12–8 pm).
- 5:2 – Eat normally 5 days a week, restrict to ~500–600 calories on 2 non-consecutive days.
- OMAD (One Meal A Day) – You eat one big meal daily.
2. Time-Restricted Eating
Similar to IF but emphasizes aligning eating with circadian rhythms—eating during daylight hours only.
3. Prolonged Fasting
Fasting for 24 hours or more. Some go 48, 72 hours or even a full week, often for autophagy or reset purposes.
4. Religious Fasting
Found in many traditions:
- Ramadan (Islam): No food or drink from sunrise to sunset.
- Lent (Christianity): Certain foods avoided or meals reduced.
- Yom Kippur (Judaism): A 25-hour fast.
- Buddhism & Hinduism: Various fasting rituals.
Benefits of Fasting
- Fat loss – Especially when combined with strength training.
- Improved insulin sensitivity – Helps regulate blood sugar.
- Autophagy – Your body clears out damaged cells during extended fasts.
- Mental clarity – Some people feel more focused while fasting.
- Hormonal balance – Growth hormone and testosterone can increase.
- Digestive rest – Your system gets a break.
Things to Watch Out For
- Hunger, irritability, fatigue (especially in the beginning).
- Nutrient deficiencies if done long-term without balance.
- Not ideal for everyone (e.g., pregnant women, those with eating disorders, diabetics on insulin).
Pro Tip:
Before jumping into the 48-hour fast, start slow. Try 12:12 (12 hours fasting, 12 eating) and slowly build up if you’re new. Hydration is key—even if you’re not eating, water, black coffee, and tea can help.
48-Hour Fasting: Benefits and Downsides
What happens in your body
During a 48-hour fast, your body progresses through several metabolic phases. After ~12–24 hours, glycogen stores deplete and the body shifts to fat burning (ketosis). By 24–48 hours, autophagy — cellular “self-cleaning” — ramps up significantly, and growth hormone spikes to preserve muscle mass.
48-Hour Fasting: Benefits
Metabolic
- Significant fat loss, especially visceral fat
- Improved insulin sensitivity and lower blood glucose
- Deep ketosis, providing the brain with ketone fuel
Cellular & Longevity
- Peak autophagy: clearance of damaged proteins and organelles
- Reduced inflammation markers (IL-6, TNF-α)
- Potential reduction in oxidative stress
Hormonal
- Growth hormone can increase 2–5x, protecting lean mass
- Lower insulin and IGF-1 levels, linked to longevity pathways
Mental
- Many people report heightened mental clarity once past the initial hunger (usually 18–24 hrs)
- Ketones are a clean, stable fuel for the brain
48-Hour Fasting: Downsides & Risks
Physical discomfort
- Headaches, dizziness, fatigue (especially hours 12–24)
- Muscle cramps from electrolyte loss (sodium, potassium, magnesium)
- Nausea and digestive discomfort
Physiological concerns
- Risk of refeeding syndrome if the fast is broken incorrectly (eating too much, too fast)
- Muscle catabolism is minimal but not zero — especially without protein for 48 hours
- Hypoglycemia risk, particularly in diabetics or those on certain medications
Practical & psychological
- Social disruption (meals are social events)
- Strong hunger, irritability (“hanger”), difficulty concentrating initially
- Can trigger disordered eating patterns in susceptible individuals
Who should NOT do it
- People with Type 1 diabetes or insulin-dependent Type 2
- Those with a history of eating disorders
- Pregnant or breastfeeding women
- People who are underweight or malnourished
- Anyone on medications that require food
48-Hour Fasting: Tips if you try it
- Electrolytes are non-negotiable — salt water, magnesium, potassium
- Break the fast gently: start with broth, then small amounts of easily digestible food (not a feast)
- Stay well-hydrated (water, black coffee, plain tea are fine)
- Pick a low-stress, low-activity 48-hour window for your first attempt
Overall, a 48-hour fast is well-tolerated by most healthy adults and can offer real metabolic and cellular benefits — but it’s not something to do frequently or without preparation. Once a month is a common approach for those who practice it regularly.
Supplements During a 48-Hour Fast
The core rule: anything that triggers an insulin response or provides significant calories breaks the fast. Here’s how common supplements break down:
✅ Safe to Take (Won’t Break the Fast)
Electrolytes (actually essential during extended fasting)
- Sodium — plain salt or sodium capsules
- Magnesium (glycinate or citrate) — also helps with sleep and cramps
- Potassium — low-dose supplements or salt substitutes
- Phosphorus — usually covered if electrolytes are balanced
Vitamins & Minerals
- Vitamin D3 — fat-soluble, but the small amount of fat carriers in a capsule is negligible
- Vitamin K2 — same as D3, trace amounts
- Vitamin B12 — especially sublingual (under the tongue), zero calories
- Zinc — fine, but take with a little water to avoid nausea on an empty stomach
- Vitamin C — fine in normal doses; avoid megadoses (can cause stomach upset when fasting)
Other
- Creatine — no calories, no insulin response
- Caffeine / black coffee — technically not a supplement but worth noting; fine and even beneficial during fasting
⚠️ Gray Zone (Technically Okay, but With Caveats)
Omega-3 (Fish Oil) A common question — the answer is nuanced:
- Fish oil does contain calories (~9 cal/gram of fat)
- A typical 2-capsule dose = ~20 calories
- It causes a very minor insulin response, generally considered negligible
- Most fasting researchers consider it acceptable for health-focused fasts
- If your fast is strictly for autophagy or metabolic purposes, some prefer to skip it and take it with the meal that breaks the fast
Fat-soluble vitamins (A, E)
- Same logic as omega-3 — tiny fat content, borderline acceptable
- Best taken when breaking the fast if you want to be strict
Multivitamins
- Many contain fillers, binders, or small amounts of carbs/sugars
- Check the label — some are fine, many are better saved for eating windows
❌ Will Break the Fast
- BCAAs / amino acids — trigger insulin and mTOR activation (counteracts autophagy)
- Protein powders — obvious caloric load
- Collagen peptides — same as above
- Gummy vitamins — almost always contain sugar
- Probiotics with prebiotic fiber — feed gut bacteria and can stimulate digestion
- Any supplement with maltodextrin, dextrose, or sugar as a filler
The strictest approach: only electrolytes during the 48-hour fast, everything else with your first meal.