Does eating at night cause weight gain?

MIXED EVIDENCE
202+ in PubMed PubMed results Last checked May 2026
Late eating appears to promote weight gain through increased hunger, reduced energy expenditure, and altered metabolism, but the evidence is still developing.
Multiple high-quality studies show that eating later in the day increases hunger, decreases energy expenditure, and alters metabolic pathways in ways that could promote weight gain. However, some recent trials found no additional benefit of avoiding late eating when combined with other dietary interventions like the Mediterranean diet.
Overall confidence
75%
RCT quality
85%
Expert consensus
65%
RCTs found
202+ in PubMed
Largest trial
197
Date range
2017–2025
Effect size
small to moderate
Key studies
Cell Metabolism · 2022
Late eating increased hunger, decreased energy expenditure, and altered fat metabolism pathways
PubMed 36198293 ↗
Obesity Reviews meta-analysis · 2023
Earlier energy distribution resulted in 1.23 kg greater weight loss compared to later eating
PubMed 36530130 ↗
Nature Medicine TRE trial · 2025
Time-restricted eating showed no additional benefit over Mediterranean diet alone for visceral fat loss
PubMed 39775037 ↗
Caveats
The effects may be more pronounced in people with evening chronotypes, and the metabolic impact depends on overall diet quality and caloric intake patterns.

People also ask

What time should I stop eating to avoid weight gain?
Studies suggest finishing dinner by 6-8 PM rather than 10 PM may be beneficial for metabolism.
Does it matter what I eat late at night?
The timing effect appears independent of food type, though overall diet quality still matters most.
Can I lose weight just by changing meal timing?
Meal timing may help with weight loss but isn't magic - total calories and diet quality remain most important.
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BustMyMyth synthesizes published RCT evidence. It is not medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional. Sources: PubMed/MEDLINE, Cochrane Library, ClinicalTrials.gov.