OMAD Calculator- One Meal a Day Calorie, Protein and Macro Planner

OMAD Calculator – One Meal a Day Calorie, Protein and Macro Planner | Super-Calculator.com
Important Medical Disclaimer

This calculator is provided for informational and educational purposes only. It is not intended to replace professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a qualified healthcare professional before making any medical decisions. The results from this calculator should be used as a reference guide only and not as the sole basis for clinical decisions.

OMAD Calculator

Calculate your one meal a day calorie target, protein grams, carbohydrate and fat macros, BMI classification, 23-hour fasting phase timeline, and daily eating schedule based on your body metrics, activity level, and goal.

Imperial (lbs / ft)
Metric (kg / cm)
Weight154 lbs
Height5 ft 7 in
Feet
Inches
Age35 yrs
Biological Sex
Activity Level
OMAD Goal
Protein Level
Meal Time6:00 PM
OMAD Daily Calorie Target
0 kcal
BMR: 0 - TDEE: 0
PROTEIN
0g
grams
0 kcal - 0%
CARBS
0g
grams
0 kcal - 0%
FAT
0g
grams
0 kcal - 0%
BMR
0
TDEE
0
BMI
0
BMI Classification Normal Weight
24.2
Underweight Normal Overweight Obese
Macro Calorie Breakdown
Protein
0g
Carbs
0g
Fat
0g
Total
0 kcal
24-Hour OMAD Fasting Schedule
23:1 Fast:Eat
7 PM - 6 PM: Fasting (23h)
6 PM - 7 PM: Eating (1h)
Autophagy peaks at 16-23h fasted

Reference ranges for your key OMAD metrics - position markers update with your inputs.

Daily Calorie Target 0 kcal
1,2001,5002,0002,5003,000+
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Protein Intake (g/kg body weight) 0 g/kg
0.8g/kg1.2g/kg1.6g/kg2.0g/kg2.5g/kg
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BMI (Body Mass Index) 0
1618.5222530+
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Calorie Adjustment from TDEE 0 kcal
-1000+-750-4000+500
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Visual breakdown of your OMAD meal calorie distribution across protein, carbohydrates and fat.

0 kcal
0 kcal
0 kcal
0 kcal
Protein
0g / 0 kcal
Carbs
0g / 0 kcal
Fat
0g / 0 kcal
Total
0 kcal
MacronutrientGramsCalories% of Total

Metabolic phases during your 23-hour OMAD fasting window. Phases begin after your meal ends and progress through the day.

Fasting Phase Progression (23 Hours)
Digestion
0-4h
Glycogen
Depletion
4-12h
Lipolysis
12-18h
Ketosis +
Autophagy
18-23h
Fasting PhaseDurationPrimary ProcessKey Benefit
Digestion and Absorption0-4 hoursNutrient uptake, elevated insulinAmino acid delivery, glycogen refill
Glycogen Depletion4-12 hoursGluconeogenesis, falling insulinBlood glucose stabilisation
Lipolysis and Fat Oxidation12-18 hoursTriglyceride breakdown, early ketonesFat burning accelerates
Ketosis and Autophagy18-23 hoursKetone production, cellular recyclingBrain clarity, cellular repair
Eating Window1 hourAll calorie and nutrient intakeFull daily nutrition in one sitting

How OMAD compares to other intermittent fasting protocols on key practical and physiological dimensions.

ProtocolEating WindowFast DurationAdherenceBest For
16:88 hours16 hoursHighBeginners, long-term maintenance
18:66 hours18 hoursModerate-HighStepping stone to OMAD
20:4 (Warrior Diet)4 hours20 hoursModeratePre-OMAD adaptation
OMAD (23:1)1 hour23 hoursModerate-LowMaximum fasting benefits
5:2 ProtocolUnrestricted x52 very low-cal daysModerateSocial flexibility
Alternate Day FastingAlternate daysFull 24h fastsLowAggressive fat loss

About This OMAD Calculator

This one meal a day calculator is designed for adults who want a precise, personalised starting point for the OMAD diet protocol. It computes your daily calorie target, protein grams, carbohydrate and fat macros, and BMI classification using your current weight, height, age, biological sex, activity level, and goal. The tool serves anyone exploring OMAD for weight loss, metabolic health improvement, or extended fasting benefits, providing the nutritional foundation for a single daily meal that meets all energy and macronutrient needs.

All calorie calculations use the Mifflin-St Jeor Basal Metabolic Rate equation, published in 1990 and validated as the most accurate BMR formula for the general adult population by the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics. Your BMR is multiplied by a standard activity factor (1.2 to 1.9) to produce Total Daily Energy Expenditure. Protein targets follow the International Society of Sports Nutrition range of 1.4-2.2 grams per kilogram body weight. A minimum calorie floor of 1,200 kcal for women and 1,500 kcal for men is applied regardless of goal to prevent adaptive thermogenesis. BMI is calculated using the standard WHO formula and plotted on a classification zone bar.

The four result tabs extend the core calorie output with additional clinical context. The Reference Ranges tab shows each key metric - calorie target, protein per kilogram, BMI, and calorie adjustment - plotted against safe and optimal zones with colour-coded position markers. The Macro Calorie Breakdown tab provides a visual waterfall chart and table showing gram and calorie contributions of protein, carbohydrates, and fat. The Fasting Phase Timeline tab maps the four metabolic stages of the 23-hour fast. The OMAD vs Intermittent Fasting Comparison tab contextualises OMAD against other protocols. Consult a registered dietitian or physician before starting OMAD if you have any health conditions.

Important Medical Disclaimer

This calculator is provided for informational and educational purposes only. It is not intended to replace professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a qualified healthcare professional before making any medical decisions. The results from this calculator should be used as a reference guide only and not as the sole basis for clinical decisions.

OMAD Calculator: One Meal a Day Calorie, Protein and Fasting Window Planner

The One Meal a Day (OMAD) protocol is one of the most restrictive forms of intermittent fasting, condensing an entire day's nutrition into a single eating window of one hour or less. Unlike 16:8 or 18:6 fasting protocols, OMAD demands a full 23-hour fast each day, making caloric and macronutrient precision essential for safety and effectiveness. This calculator helps you determine your personalised OMAD calorie target, protein requirements, and macro distribution based on your body metrics and goals.

Whether you are exploring OMAD for weight loss, metabolic health, or cognitive clarity, understanding the numbers behind your single daily meal is the foundation of doing it safely. Inadequate protein during extended fasting periods can accelerate muscle loss, while insufficient calories may trigger hormonal adaptations that undermine long-term progress.

Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR) - Mifflin-St Jeor Equation
Men: BMR = (10 x weight kg) + (6.25 x height cm) - (5 x age) + 5
Women: BMR = (10 x weight kg) + (6.25 x height cm) - (5 x age) - 161
The Mifflin-St Jeor equation is currently the most widely validated formula for estimating resting energy expenditure in adults. Developed by M.D. Mifflin and S.T. St Jeor in 1990, it has been validated across diverse populations and is recommended by the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics over older equations such as Harris-Benedict.
Total Daily Energy Expenditure (TDEE)
TDEE = BMR x Activity Multiplier
Activity multipliers: Sedentary (desk job, no exercise) = 1.2 | Lightly active (1-3 days/week) = 1.375 | Moderately active (3-5 days/week) = 1.55 | Very active (6-7 days/week) = 1.725 | Extremely active (physical job + daily training) = 1.9
OMAD Calorie Target
OMAD Calories = TDEE + Calorie Adjustment (Goal-Based)
Weight loss: 20-25% deficit from TDEE | Maintenance: TDEE | Muscle gain: 10-15% surplus from TDEE. A minimum floor of 1,200 kcal (women) and 1,500 kcal (men) is applied regardless of goal to prevent severe metabolic suppression.
Protein Requirement on OMAD
Protein = 1.6 - 2.2 g per kg of Body Weight
The International Society of Sports Nutrition recommends 1.6-2.2 g/kg for adults engaged in resistance training. For sedentary individuals, 1.2-1.6 g/kg is sufficient. On OMAD, hitting the higher end of this range is advisable to offset any muscle protein breakdown occurring during the 23-hour fasted period.

What Is OMAD and How Does It Work?

OMAD stands for One Meal a Day, a dietary approach where all daily calories are consumed within a single, typically one-hour eating window. The remaining 23 hours constitute a fasting period during which no caloric foods or drinks are consumed, though water, black coffee, and plain tea are generally permitted.

The physiological rationale for OMAD centres on prolonged fasting-induced metabolic states. During the fasted period, insulin levels fall sharply after the initial post-meal absorption phase. Falling insulin levels signal adipose tissue to release stored triglycerides for energy use through a process called lipolysis. Simultaneously, growth hormone levels rise significantly during extended fasting, which may help preserve lean body mass.

After approximately 12-14 hours of fasting, hepatic glycogen (liver sugar stores) becomes depleted and the body begins producing ketone bodies from fatty acids in the liver. These ketones serve as an alternative fuel for the brain and other tissues. The degree of ketosis varies by individual and prior metabolic health, but most OMAD practitioners enter at least mild ketosis during their fasting window.

It is important to distinguish OMAD from starvation. OMAD is a time-restricted eating pattern - the total caloric intake across the day remains aligned with metabolic needs, but compressed into one sitting. Starvation involves chronic caloric insufficiency without regard to timing.

Calculating Your Calorie Needs on OMAD

The most critical number for OMAD success is your calorie target. Because you are consuming everything in one meal, accidental under-eating or over-eating is far more consequential than it would be across five smaller meals. Getting your calorie target right prevents two common failure modes: severe restriction that breaks down muscle and suppresses metabolism, and inadvertent over-eating that nullifies any intended caloric deficit.

Your calorie calculation begins with Basal Metabolic Rate - the energy your body burns at complete rest just to sustain organ function, cellular repair, and thermoregulation. The Mifflin-St Jeor equation is used in this calculator because it outperforms older formulas in clinical validation studies and accounts for the key variables: weight, height, age, and sex.

BMR is then multiplied by an activity factor to produce your Total Daily Energy Expenditure (TDEE). This is the number of calories you would need to maintain your current weight with your current activity level. Your OMAD calorie target is then adjusted up or down from TDEE depending on your goal - weight loss, maintenance, or lean mass gain.

Key Point: The Minimum Calorie Floor

On OMAD, it is tempting to eat as little as possible to accelerate weight loss. This is counterproductive. Consuming fewer than 1,200 kcal (women) or 1,500 kcal (men) per day triggers adaptive thermogenesis - the body down-regulates metabolic rate and increases muscle catabolism to preserve fat stores. Most clinical guidelines recommend a deficit of no more than 500-750 kcal per day for sustainable fat loss.

Protein: The Most Critical Macro on OMAD

Of all macronutrients, protein deserves the most careful attention on OMAD. During a 23-hour fast, muscle protein synthesis rates decline and net protein balance can turn negative if dietary protein is insufficient. When you finally eat, a concentrated protein bolus is required to reverse this deficit and stimulate muscle protein synthesis for the next 24 hours.

The research on protein timing and frequency has evolved significantly. Earlier dogma suggested protein absorption was capped at approximately 20-40 grams per meal for muscle protein synthesis. More recent studies suggest the body can absorb and utilise much larger protein doses - they are simply processed more slowly. A 2023 study published in Cell Reports Medicine found that protein synthesis remained elevated for up to 12 hours after a large protein meal, supporting the feasibility of meeting daily protein needs in a single sitting.

Practical protein targets on OMAD range from 1.6 g/kg of body weight for sedentary individuals to 2.2 g/kg for those performing regular resistance training. For a 75 kg person, this translates to 120-165 grams of protein in a single meal - achievable but requiring deliberate food selection. High-quality protein sources that deliver complete amino acid profiles include chicken breast (31g per 100g), salmon (25g per 100g), eggs (6g per egg), Greek yoghurt (10g per 100g), and legumes combined with grains.

Macronutrient Distribution on OMAD

Beyond protein, fat and carbohydrate ratios depend heavily on individual preference, metabolic health, and training demands. There is no single correct macronutrient distribution for OMAD - the approach accommodates both low-carbohydrate and higher-carbohydrate dietary patterns.

For those who train intensively, carbohydrates serve as the primary fuel for high-intensity effort. Consuming the majority of daily carbohydrates in the post-workout meal window is a common strategy, as muscle glycogen resynthesis is most rapid in the hours following exercise. If you train in the afternoon and eat your OMAD meal in the evening, this timing works naturally.

For individuals following OMAD without structured exercise, or those already adapted to fat as a fuel source, lower-carbohydrate distributions (100-150g carbohydrates) may reduce post-meal blood glucose spikes that could otherwise disrupt energy levels later in the fast.

Fat intake fills the remaining caloric budget after protein and carbohydrate targets are met. Healthy fat sources - olive oil, avocado, nuts, fatty fish - also slow gastric emptying, which helps extend satiety throughout the fasting window. This is particularly important for those new to OMAD who struggle with hunger during the 23-hour fast.

Key Point: Micronutrient Density Matters More on OMAD

Compressing all nutrition into one meal dramatically reduces the number of food exposures per day. This makes micronutrient diversity harder to achieve. Prioritise nutrient-dense foods - leafy greens, coloured vegetables, organ meats, seeds - and consider a comprehensive multivitamin. Electrolytes (sodium, potassium, magnesium) deserve particular attention as extended fasting increases renal excretion of these minerals.

OMAD Fasting Window and Meal Timing

One of the most practical questions for OMAD beginners is when to schedule the single daily meal. The answer depends on lifestyle, social commitments, sleep quality, and workout schedule - but the timing of the eating window has measurable physiological effects.

Early Time-Restricted Eating (eTRE), where the meal window falls in the morning or early afternoon, has shown superior metabolic outcomes in several studies. A 2020 trial in the New England Journal of Medicine found that eTRE improved insulin sensitivity, blood pressure, and oxidative stress markers compared to late-day eating windows of identical caloric content. The circadian alignment of nutrient intake with the body's digestive and metabolic peak (which occurs in the first half of the waking day) appears to amplify the benefits.

However, the practical reality for most people is that social eating, family dinners, and work schedules make early OMAD difficult to sustain. An evening meal between 5 PM and 8 PM is the most common OMAD window. While not optimal from a circadian standpoint, evening OMAD is far more adherent - and long-term adherence is the single most important variable for dietary success.

A useful middle ground is a mid-afternoon meal between 12 PM and 2 PM. This captures some of the circadian benefit of earlier eating while remaining compatible with most work schedules. It also allows pre-meal exercise in the morning or late morning fasted state, which some research suggests enhances fat oxidation during training.

Body Composition Goals and OMAD Calorie Strategy

The calorie strategy on OMAD should be tailored to your specific body composition goal. The three common goals are fat loss, maintenance, and lean mass building (recomposition or lean bulk).

For fat loss, a deficit of 300-500 kcal below TDEE is a well-supported range. Larger deficits (500-750 kcal) can accelerate initial weight loss but increase the risk of lean mass loss, fatigue, and hormonal disruption, particularly for women. On OMAD specifically, the fasting period itself creates a degree of metabolic stress, so aggressive deficits are less necessary than on conventional eating patterns.

For maintenance, OMAD at TDEE calories is metabolically neutral - you preserve body weight and composition while enjoying the health benefits of extended daily fasting including improved autophagy, metabolic flexibility, and insulin sensitivity.

Building lean muscle on OMAD is possible but challenging. Muscle protein synthesis requires both adequate protein and a caloric environment that supports anabolism. A modest surplus of 150-300 kcal above TDEE, combined with the upper end of protein targets (2.0-2.2 g/kg), and consistent progressive resistance training, creates conditions for lean mass accretion. The process is slower than conventional bulking with multiple meals, but comes with far less fat gain.

BMI and Healthy Weight Context for OMAD

Body Mass Index (BMI) provides a useful screening reference for OMAD calorie targets, though it is not a diagnostic tool. BMI is calculated as weight in kilograms divided by the square of height in metres. Standard WHO classifications: Underweight below 18.5, Normal weight 18.5-24.9, Overweight 25.0-29.9, Obese 30.0 and above.

Individuals with a BMI below 18.5 should approach OMAD with particular caution. Extended fasting in an already lean or underweight individual carries higher risks of lean mass loss, micronutrient deficiency, and disordered eating patterns. For those with BMI above 30, OMAD may be clinically appropriate under medical supervision, as prolonged daily fasting has shown promising results in metabolic syndrome and type 2 diabetes management in several clinical trials.

BMI does not account for muscle mass, body fat distribution, or ethnicity-related differences in metabolic risk. A 90 kg individual with high muscle mass may register as overweight on BMI but have an optimal metabolic profile. Conversely, a "normal" BMI individual with high visceral fat is at greater metabolic risk than BMI alone suggests. Use BMI as one data point alongside waist circumference and body fat percentage where available.

Hydration During the OMAD Fasting Window

Hydration requires active management on OMAD. The body typically obtains a significant proportion of daily water from food - roughly 20-30% on mixed diets. Compressing food intake to one meal means the remaining 23 hours must be covered by pure fluid intake alone.

Target a minimum of 2.5-3.5 litres of water daily during the fasting window. Signs of inadequate hydration on OMAD include headaches, difficulty concentrating (beyond the initial adaptation period), constipation, and elevated resting heart rate. These symptoms are often misattributed to fasting itself when hydration is the correctable cause.

Electrolytes are lost through urine at a higher rate during extended fasting due to reduced insulin-driven sodium reabsorption in the kidneys. A small amount of sodium (from salt added to water or a low-calorie electrolyte supplement), potassium (from foods at your meal), and magnesium (through supplementation if dietary intake is insufficient) prevents the fatigue and muscle cramps commonly reported in the first two to four weeks of OMAD adaptation.

Who Should Not Do OMAD

OMAD is not appropriate for all individuals regardless of calorie targets. Absolute and relative contraindications include:

  • Type 1 diabetes: The 23-hour fasting period creates unpredictable blood glucose dynamics and substantially increases hypoglycaemia risk, particularly in insulin-dependent individuals.
  • Pregnancy and breastfeeding: Increased nutrient demands during these periods are incompatible with single-meal eating patterns. Frequent, nutrient-dense feeding is the evidence-based standard for maternal and foetal health.
  • History of eating disorders: The restrictive, rule-bound nature of OMAD can reinforce disordered eating cognitions. Clinical guidance from a registered dietitian or therapist is essential before attempting any fasting protocol with this history.
  • Underweight status (BMI below 18.5): Further caloric restriction through extended fasting worsens lean mass status and micronutrient sufficiency.
  • Children and adolescents: Growth requirements and developmental nutrition needs make prolonged daily fasting inappropriate under 18.
  • Certain medications: Medications requiring food for absorption or those with strict dosing schedules relative to meals may be incompatible with a once-daily eating window. Always consult a prescribing physician before starting OMAD if you are on regular medication.
Key Point: OMAD Adaptation Period

Most people experience significant hunger, brain fog, irritability, and fatigue in the first two to four weeks of OMAD. This is not evidence that OMAD is harmful - it reflects the metabolic transition from glucose-primary to fat-primary energy metabolism. The majority of individuals who persist through the adaptation window report substantially reduced hunger and improved energy stability by week four. Starting with 16:8 or 18:6 intermittent fasting and progressively narrowing the eating window over several weeks significantly reduces adaptation discomfort.

OMAD and Exercise Performance

Training while fasted on OMAD is a topic of significant interest and ongoing research. The practical reality depends heavily on training type, intensity, and individual metabolic adaptation.

Low to moderate intensity aerobic exercise (below approximately 65% VO2max) is generally well-tolerated in a fasted state once metabolic adaptation to OMAD is established. Fat oxidation rates are highest in the fasted state, and moderate aerobic work can be performed effectively without carbohydrate availability in well-adapted individuals.

High-intensity interval training (HIIT) and maximal strength training are more problematic in a fasted state. Both rely heavily on glycolytic (carbohydrate-dependent) energy pathways. Performance on multi-set resistance training and explosive work typically declines by 10-20% in a fasted state relative to a fed state in research settings. Strategic scheduling - placing the most intense sessions immediately before or shortly after the single meal - mitigates this performance cost.

For those prioritising muscle retention or growth, resistance training within two to four hours of the OMAD meal maximises the overlap between training stimulus and post-meal protein availability. This "train, then eat" or "eat, then brief session" window is the most studied and consistently beneficial arrangement for body composition on OMAD.

OMAD vs Other Intermittent Fasting Protocols

OMAD sits at the extreme end of the intermittent fasting spectrum. Comparing it to other protocols helps frame realistic expectations:

16:8 Intermittent Fasting - An 8-hour eating window with a 16-hour fast. Widely studied, accessible for most people, and shows consistent benefits for weight management and metabolic health with low barriers to adherence. This is the recommended entry point for most people new to fasting.

18:6 and 20:4 Fasting - Progressively narrower eating windows. 20:4 (the "Warrior Diet" protocol) is essentially a stepping stone to OMAD, with a 4-hour eating window. Results in greater fat oxidation and autophagy induction than 16:8 but with moderately more adaptation difficulty.

5:2 Protocol - Five normal eating days and two very low-calorie days (500-600 kcal) per week. Less restrictive on a daily basis than OMAD but equally effective for weekly caloric deficit creation. Generally better tolerated and more flexible for social eating.

Alternate Day Fasting (ADF) - Full fast days alternating with feeding days. More metabolically aggressive than OMAD for some individuals but allows unrestricted eating on feeding days. Compliance is the primary challenge.

OMAD offers the most daily fasting hours and potentially the deepest autophagy activation, but at the cost of the highest adherence difficulty and the greatest nutritional precision required.

Practical Meal Composition for OMAD

Translating calorie and macro targets into an actual OMAD meal requires practical planning. A 2,000 kcal OMAD meal is approximately two to three times the size of a typical restaurant entree - manageable in volume when composed of whole, nutrient-dense foods rather than calorie-dense processed options.

A typical balanced OMAD plate might include: a large protein source (200-250g of chicken, fish, or equivalent - approximately 50-60g protein), a substantial serving of vegetables (400-500g by weight), a moderate serving of complex carbohydrates (150-200g cooked rice, potato, or legumes), healthy fats from olive oil, avocado, or nuts, and dairy or additional protein source to reach protein targets.

Food volume is a key practical tool. Foods with high satiety per calorie - leafy greens, cruciferous vegetables, fibrous whole grains, lean proteins - allow a satisfying, large-volume meal within calorie targets. Calorie-dense foods (oils, nuts, cheese, nut butters) are effective for hitting calorie targets when appetite is limited but can make overshooting calories inadvertently easy.

Key Point: Fibre on OMAD

Fibre intake deserves specific attention on OMAD. The recommended daily fibre intake is 25-38 grams, and achieving this in a single meal requires deliberate effort. Adequate fibre supports gut microbiome diversity, slows glucose absorption from the meal, and promotes satiety during the subsequent fast. Target foods: lentils (8g per 100g cooked), chickpeas (7g per 100g), broccoli (2.6g per 100g), avocado (6.7g per 100g), oats (10g per 100g dry).

Long-Term Sustainability and OMAD Cycling

OMAD practiced continuously for months or years is a controversial area. Proponents point to long-term practitioners who maintain healthy body composition and metabolic markers indefinitely. Critics cite the potential for hormonal disruption (particularly in women), social isolation around food, and the risk of orthorexic tendencies in susceptible individuals.

A pragmatic middle path is OMAD cycling - periods of strict OMAD alternating with more conventional eating patterns. For example, strict OMAD on weekdays with 16:8 or unrestricted eating on weekends. This approach captures the metabolic benefits of extended fasting while reducing the social and psychological burden of unrelenting restriction.

Women may benefit from cycling OMAD with menstrual cycle phases. Research - still emerging but biologically plausible - suggests that the luteal phase (the two weeks before menstruation) is associated with increased caloric needs and potential hormonal sensitivity to prolonged fasting. Relaxing OMAD restriction during this phase while maintaining it during the follicular phase is a strategy used by many female OMAD practitioners to manage energy and mood.

Monitoring Progress on OMAD

Because OMAD involves significant dietary change, regular monitoring is more important than on conventional dietary patterns. Weekly body weight measurements (taken under consistent conditions - morning, post-toilet, before food or drink) are more informative than daily readings, which fluctuate significantly with hydration and food volume in the gut.

Monthly progress photos and circumference measurements (waist, hips, chest, arms) provide body composition data that scale weight cannot. Many OMAD practitioners report scale weight plateaus while continuing to lose body fat and gain muscle - visible in photos and measurements even when the scale is static.

Bloodwork every three to six months is advisable for sustained OMAD practitioners. Relevant markers include fasting glucose, HbA1c, fasting insulin, lipid panel, complete blood count, ferritin, vitamin B12, vitamin D, and thyroid function. These provide early warning of any nutritional gaps or metabolic changes that dietary adjustments can correct before they become clinical problems.

Scientific Evidence for OMAD and Extended Fasting

The scientific evidence base for OMAD specifically is more limited than for broader intermittent fasting protocols - most high-quality trials have studied 16:8 or 5:2 designs rather than true 23:1 OMAD. However, the mechanistic and extrapolated evidence is supportive.

A 2022 study in the New England Journal of Medicine by Lowe et al. compared OMAD to three meals per day at matched calories and found no significant difference in weight loss over 12 weeks, suggesting OMAD offers no metabolic advantage over conventional eating at equal calories. However, participants in this study were not adapted OMAD practitioners, and the short duration may have captured the adaptation difficulty period rather than steady-state OMAD physiology.

Longer-term fasting studies consistently show improvements in insulin sensitivity, reduction in inflammatory markers, and - in animal models - extension of healthspan through autophagy pathways. Whether these benefits translate proportionally to humans practicing sustained OMAD remains an active research question.

The most robust evidence for extended daily fasting comes from studies of time-restricted eating broadly, Ramadan fasting research (which approximates OMAD timing), and mechanistic studies on autophagy induction. Collectively, this evidence supports the physiological plausibility of OMAD benefits while highlighting the need for more long-duration human trials.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many calories should I eat on OMAD?
Your OMAD calorie target is based on your Total Daily Energy Expenditure (TDEE), which accounts for your basal metabolic rate and activity level. For weight loss, subtract 300-500 kcal from TDEE. For maintenance, eat at TDEE. For lean mass building, add 150-300 kcal above TDEE. Regardless of goal, a minimum floor of 1,200 kcal (women) and 1,500 kcal (men) applies to prevent metabolic suppression. This calculator computes your personalised target using the Mifflin-St Jeor equation.
Is it safe to eat only once a day?
For healthy adults without contraindications, OMAD is generally safe when calorie and protein targets are met. Risks increase with pre-existing conditions including type 1 diabetes, eating disorder history, pregnancy, or underweight status. The main safety considerations are adequate protein intake to prevent muscle loss, sufficient micronutrient diversity in the single meal, and electrolyte management during the fasting window. Consulting a healthcare professional before starting OMAD is advisable, particularly if you have any underlying health conditions or take regular medications.
How much protein do I need on OMAD?
Protein requirements on OMAD are 1.6-2.2 grams per kilogram of body weight per day. For a 70 kg individual, this is 112-154 grams of protein consumed in the single meal. Research published in Cell Reports Medicine confirms that the body can absorb and utilise protein from large single meals for muscle protein synthesis over 8-12 hours following consumption, addressing earlier concerns about single-meal protein absorption limits. Prioritise complete protein sources: poultry, fish, eggs, dairy, and legume-grain combinations.
What time should I eat my OMAD meal?
There is no single optimal time, but earlier eating windows (morning to early afternoon) show superior metabolic outcomes in circadian rhythm research, with better insulin sensitivity and blood pressure effects. However, evening meals between 5-8 PM are most common due to lifestyle compatibility and result in better long-term adherence. A practical compromise is a mid-afternoon meal (12-2 PM) that balances circadian alignment with social feasibility. The most important factor is consistency - eating at the same time daily helps stabilise hunger hormones and circadian-metabolic rhythms.
Will I lose muscle on OMAD?
Muscle loss on OMAD is a legitimate concern but is preventable with adequate protein and resistance training. During the 23-hour fast, muscle protein synthesis rates decline. The post-meal protein bolus can reverse this if it is sufficiently large (targeting the upper end of the 1.6-2.2 g/kg range). Regular resistance training provides the anabolic stimulus that makes dietary protein available for muscle repair and growth rather than oxidation. Studies on time-restricted eating generally find no significant muscle loss when protein targets are maintained, even on compressed eating windows.
Can I do OMAD if I exercise regularly?
Yes, but training timing and type matter. Low to moderate aerobic exercise is generally well-tolerated fasted once adapted to OMAD. High-intensity training and heavy resistance training performed fasted typically result in reduced performance, particularly before metabolic adaptation is complete. Scheduling intense training sessions within a few hours of the OMAD meal - either just before or just after eating - maximises performance and recovery. Ensure post-training protein intake is prioritised in the meal composition.
What is the difference between OMAD and 16:8 fasting?
16:8 intermittent fasting involves an 8-hour eating window and 16-hour fast, typically allowing 2-3 meals within the window. OMAD is a 23:1 protocol - one hour of eating and 23 hours of fasting, with all calories consumed in a single meal. OMAD induces a longer and deeper fasted state, potentially greater autophagy activation, and more hours of low insulin and elevated growth hormone daily. However, 16:8 is substantially easier to adhere to, nutritionally less demanding, and better studied. Most experts recommend starting with 16:8 and progressively narrowing the eating window toward OMAD.
Does coffee or tea break my OMAD fast?
Plain black coffee and unsweetened herbal tea contain essentially no calories and do not meaningfully raise insulin or disrupt the metabolic benefits of the fasted state. They are generally considered compatible with OMAD fasting windows. However, additions of milk, cream, sugar, sweeteners (particularly caloric ones), or specialty coffee drinks containing significant calories do break the fast. Bulletproof coffee (with butter or MCT oil) is debated - it prevents ketosis disruption for some but does trigger a caloric and slight insulin response that technically breaks a strict fast.
What happens to your body during the 23-hour OMAD fast?
During the first 4-8 hours post-meal: digestion and nutrient absorption occur, insulin is elevated. Hours 8-12: insulin falls, gluconeogenesis begins, liver starts mobilising glycogen. Hours 12-16: hepatic glycogen nears depletion, fat oxidation accelerates, early ketone production begins. Hours 16-23: ketones provide meaningful brain energy, growth hormone pulses occur, autophagy (cellular recycling) is significantly upregulated. This progression repeats daily, and the metabolic benefits - particularly autophagy and fat oxidation - accumulate with consistent practice over weeks to months.
How long does it take to adapt to OMAD?
The adaptation period for OMAD is typically 2-4 weeks, during which hunger, brain fog, fatigue, irritability, and difficulty concentrating are common. These symptoms reflect the metabolic transition from glucose dependence to metabolic flexibility. Electrolyte supplementation (sodium, potassium, magnesium) reduces symptom severity significantly. Most people who persist through the adaptation window report substantially reduced hunger and improved sustained energy by week 4. Gradually narrowing the eating window over 2-4 weeks rather than starting with immediate OMAD reduces adaptation discomfort considerably.
How do I calculate my OMAD macros?
Start with your protein target: 1.6-2.2 g per kg of body weight. Multiply grams by 4 to get protein calories. Then determine carbohydrate intake based on training demands (higher carbs for intense training, lower for sedentary lifestyles). Multiply carbohydrate grams by 4 to get carbohydrate calories. Remaining calories after protein and carbohydrates are allocated to fat; divide by 9 to get fat grams. This calculator performs these calculations automatically based on your weight, height, age, activity level, and goal selection.
Can OMAD help with type 2 diabetes?
Extended fasting protocols including OMAD show promising results for type 2 diabetes management in several clinical trials, primarily through improvements in insulin sensitivity and reduction in fasting blood glucose levels. However, individuals with type 2 diabetes - particularly those on insulin or sulfonylurea medications - should not start OMAD without direct medical supervision. Medication adjustments are typically required to prevent hypoglycaemia during fasting periods. Type 1 diabetes is a contraindication for OMAD. This calculator is not a medical tool and should not replace the guidance of your healthcare team.
What should I eat for my OMAD meal?
An effective OMAD meal prioritises protein first (lean meats, fish, eggs, legumes to reach 1.6-2.2 g/kg target), then fills remaining calories with nutrient-dense whole foods. A balanced structure: large protein source (200-300g meat or fish equivalent), generous vegetables (400-500g for micronutrients and fibre), complex carbohydrates scaled to training demands (sweet potato, rice, legumes), and healthy fats from olive oil, avocado, or nuts. Processed foods, while calorie-dense, typically lack the micronutrient diversity needed when eating only once daily.
Is OMAD effective for weight loss?
OMAD promotes weight loss primarily through caloric restriction - condensing eating into one window makes it easier for many people to maintain a deficit without tracking every calorie, as the compressed eating time naturally limits total intake. Research comparing OMAD to continuous caloric restriction at matched calories generally shows equivalent weight loss outcomes, suggesting the benefit is the deficit itself rather than any specific metabolic effect of the fasting window. Where OMAD may offer additional advantage is in reducing appetite hormones (ghrelin) over time, making the deficit easier to sustain.
Does OMAD affect sleep quality?
Meal timing relative to sleep can affect sleep quality on OMAD. A large meal consumed within 2-3 hours of bedtime is associated with reduced sleep quality for some individuals - particularly impaired slow-wave (deep) sleep - due to elevated body temperature and digestive activity. If your OMAD window is in the evening, consider finishing the meal at least 2-3 hours before your intended sleep time. Conversely, going to sleep deeply hungry is also disruptive. Adequate calories at the meal prevent the elevated cortisol response that can interfere with sleep onset when energy reserves are low.
Can women do OMAD safely?
Women can practice OMAD safely, but emerging research suggests female hormonal systems may be more sensitive to prolonged fasting signals than male systems. Extended daily fasting in some women has been associated with disrupted menstrual cycles, altered thyroid function, and elevated stress hormone output. These effects are most commonly reported in women with low body fat, high stress loads, or inadequate calorie intake. Cycling OMAD with the menstrual cycle - relaxing restriction during the luteal phase - is a practical adaptation. Women considering OMAD are encouraged to monitor menstrual regularity as an early indicator of hormonal stress.
How much water should I drink on OMAD?
Aim for 2.5-3.5 litres of total fluid intake daily on OMAD. Because approximately 20-30% of daily water typically comes from food on a conventional diet, and OMAD compresses all food to one sitting, the remaining 23 fasted hours require proactive fluid intake. Electrolyte additions to water (a small pinch of salt per litre, or a low-calorie electrolyte supplement) address the increased mineral excretion that occurs during extended fasting. Symptoms of inadequate hydration include headache, constipation, and reduced cognitive clarity - all commonly misattributed to fasting itself.
Will OMAD slow my metabolism?
Severe caloric restriction on OMAD (eating far below your TDEE) can trigger adaptive thermogenesis - the body's compensatory reduction in metabolic rate. This risk is present with any dietary protocol that creates too large a deficit. OMAD at appropriate calorie targets (typically a modest 300-500 kcal deficit from TDEE) does not cause greater metabolic adaptation than equivalent restriction through multiple meals. Some research on intermittent fasting suggests that the daily growth hormone elevation during the fasted period may partially protect against the lean mass loss that usually drives metabolic rate reduction during caloric restriction.
What is autophagy and does OMAD trigger it?
Autophagy is the cellular self-cleaning process by which damaged proteins and organelles are broken down and recycled. It is upregulated during fasting, caloric restriction, and exercise. Animal models show robust autophagy induction after 24-48 hours of fasting; human data suggests meaningful autophagy activation begins around 12-16 hours of fasting, deepening with duration. Daily OMAD creates approximately 23 hours of fasting, during which autophagy is likely significantly elevated relative to conventional eating patterns. Research on the precise human autophagy response to specific fasting durations is ongoing, and the clinical significance of autophagy optimisation in healthy adults is not yet fully established.
Can I do OMAD long-term?
Long-term OMAD is practiced by many individuals without apparent harm when nutritional adequacy is maintained. Key considerations for sustained practice: regular bloodwork to monitor nutritional status, adequate protein and micronutrient density in the single meal, electrolyte management, and monitoring of energy, mood, and hormonal health indicators. OMAD cycling - periods of strict OMAD alternating with wider eating windows - is a pragmatic approach for those who want the benefits without permanent restriction. There are no long-term human OMAD trials of sufficient duration to draw definitive conclusions about multi-year outcomes.
What is the BMR and how is it used in OMAD calculation?
Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR) is the number of calories your body burns at complete rest to sustain basic organ function, breathing, and cellular maintenance. It is calculated using the Mifflin-St Jeor equation, which accounts for weight, height, age, and sex. BMR alone underestimates actual calorie needs because it assumes complete rest. Multiplying BMR by an activity factor produces TDEE - your actual daily energy expenditure. Your OMAD calorie target is then derived from TDEE by applying your goal-based adjustment. BMR is the starting point for every personalised nutrition calculation in this tool.
Does OMAD work without calorie counting?
Many OMAD practitioners eat intuitively without explicit calorie tracking and achieve their body composition goals. The compressed eating window naturally reduces total calorie intake for many people simply by limiting the number of eating opportunities. However, intuitive OMAD can inadvertently result in either significant under-eating (risking muscle loss and metabolic adaptation) or over-eating (if the meal is very calorie-dense). Understanding your approximate calorie target - even if you do not track every meal - provides a useful reference point to assess whether your typical OMAD meal is broadly aligned with your goals.
What are the signs that OMAD is not working for me?
Signs that OMAD may not be a good fit include: persistent extreme hunger beyond 4 weeks of consistent practice, significant performance decline in training that does not resolve with meal timing adjustments, disrupted menstrual cycles in women, worsening sleep quality, increasing anxiety or irritability that does not improve post-adaptation, and unintended weight gain (which can occur if the single large meal inadvertently exceeds TDEE). Hair loss can indicate insufficient protein or micronutrient intake. If these signs persist despite correct implementation and calorie targets, OMAD may not be the right protocol, and a wider eating window may better suit your physiology.
How does OMAD affect cholesterol and heart health?
The impact of OMAD on cardiovascular markers depends heavily on meal composition. A 2022 study found OMAD was associated with increased LDL cholesterol compared to multiple daily meals - a finding that warrants attention, particularly for individuals with pre-existing cardiovascular risk. However, other studies on time-restricted eating show improvements in triglycerides, blood pressure, and metabolic syndrome components. The key variable appears to be dietary fat quality in the single meal: diets high in saturated fat raise LDL regardless of meal frequency, while those emphasising unsaturated fats show more favourable lipid profiles. Regular lipid monitoring is advisable for long-term OMAD practitioners.
What is the ideal macro split on OMAD?
There is no universally optimal macro split for OMAD - it depends on training type and metabolic health. A practical starting framework: protein 30-35% of calories (non-negotiable anchor), carbohydrates 30-40% for those training intensively or who perform better on higher carb intake, fat 25-35% to fill remaining calories and promote satiety. For sedentary individuals or those pursuing ketogenic OMAD: protein 25-30%, fat 55-65%, carbohydrates 10-15%. These are starting points to adjust based on hunger management, energy levels, and performance over the first 4-6 weeks of practice.
Can OMAD cause nutrient deficiencies?
Yes - nutrient deficiencies are a real risk on OMAD if meal composition is not carefully planned. A single meal covering all micronutrient needs requires genuine dietary diversity: multiple vegetable varieties, quality protein sources, whole grains, and healthy fats. Nutrients most commonly deficient on poorly planned OMAD include: magnesium (low in processed foods), vitamin D (limited dietary sources regardless of meal frequency), vitamin B12 (absent from plant foods), iron (particularly in premenopausal women), and fibre (25-38g daily is challenging in one sitting). A comprehensive multivitamin is reasonable insurance for sustained OMAD practitioners.
How do I start OMAD as a beginner?
The recommended approach is gradual window narrowing rather than immediate OMAD. Start with 16:8 for two to four weeks, then move to 18:6 for two weeks, then 20:4 for two weeks before attempting true OMAD. This progressive approach allows metabolic and hormonal adaptation to occur gradually, significantly reducing adaptation symptoms. Before starting, calculate your OMAD calorie target using this calculator, plan a sample meal that hits your protein target, and prepare electrolyte support for the first month. Choose a meal time compatible with your long-term schedule from day one - changing the eating window after adaptation requires re-adaptation.

Conclusion

OMAD is a powerful dietary protocol when implemented with nutritional precision. The single most important number to get right is your calorie target - too low and you risk metabolic adaptation and muscle loss, too high and the intended deficit is erased. Protein is the second critical variable: 1.6-2.2 g/kg per day in a single meal is achievable and essential for preserving lean mass during the extended daily fast.

This calculator provides your personalised starting point based on validated equations and current evidence-based nutritional guidelines. Use it as a reference for your initial meal planning, adjust based on your actual energy levels, hunger, and progress over the first four to six weeks, and revisit the calculations as your body weight changes.

OMAD is not suitable for everyone, and this calculator is an educational tool, not a clinical prescription. If you have any health conditions, take regular medications, or have a history of disordered eating, consult a registered dietitian or physician before starting any extended fasting protocol. The most effective dietary approach is always the one you can sustain safely over the long term.

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