An honest comparison
Intermittent Fasting (16:8) vs Military Diet
Intermittent Fasting (16:8) and Military Diet both target weight loss and metabolic health — but through different mechanisms, with different evidence bases, and for different populations. The honest comparison favours one over the other only for specific reader profiles; for many adults, the right answer is "neither, here's what fits."
At a glance
| Metric | Intermittent Fasting (16:8) | Military Diet |
|---|---|---|
| Sustainability | 7/10 | 2/10 |
| Short-term effect | 6/10 | 4/10 |
| Long-term effect | 6/10 | 2/10 |
| Cost / month | Free | ~$80 |
| Visible results | ~14 days | ~5 days |
| Evidence quality | moderate | contested |
Who should pick Intermittent Fasting (16:8)
Intermittent Fasting (16:8) fits adults who tre works for adults who don't enjoy breakfast, who already eat 2-3 meals/day, who travel or have erratic morning schedules, and who find structural rules easier than calorie counting.
Who should pick Military Diet
Military Diet fits adults who anyone wanting 5-7 days of structured low-calorie eating before an event.
The honest verdict
Intermittent Fasting (16:8) scores 7/10 on sustainability and 6/10 long-term, with moderate evidence. Military Diet scores 2/10 sustainability and 2/10 long-term, with contested evidence. Intermittent Fasting (16:8) edges ahead long-term in our reading. The choice should be driven by which one you can actually sustain.
Why both might fail you (and what to do instead)
Both can fail when the underlying drivers (sleep, stress, ultra-processed-food saturation, metabolic adaptation in repeat dieters) aren't addressed. If you've already tried both or one and bounced, the issue isn't macros — it's protocol fit. The Metabolic Damage Assessment maps your profile to a starter protocol that addresses the actual gap.
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Still not sure which fits?
The Metabolic Damage Assessment maps your profile to a starter protocol matched to your specific patterns — not a generic comparison.