Strong Support

Eating meals later at night leads to higher peak blood sugar levels after eating and lower fat burning compared to eating the same meals earlier in the evening, even when total calories are the same.

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Evidence from Studies

Supporting (2)

54

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Eating dinner late at night makes your blood sugar spike higher after eating, even if you eat the same food and don’t go to bed right away. This study shows that your body just handles food worse when it’s late.

Eating breakfast earlier helps keep blood sugar lower at night, even if you eat the same amount of food. This study shows that people who eat later have higher blood sugar overnight, which supports the idea that late meals make blood sugar harder to control.

Contradicting (0)

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No contradicting evidence found

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