Does one night of total sleep loss increase hunger and food intake in healthy adults?
What the Evidence Shows
Our current analysis shows that one night of total sleep loss appears not to increase hunger or food intake in healthy adults. The evidence we have reviewed leans toward the idea that missing a single night of sleep appears not to immediately lead to overeating the following day [1].
What we have found so far is that staying awake all night changes hunger hormones (chemicals that tell your brain when to eat), but these shifts do not seem to translate into actually eating more food. We analyzed the available research and found that 46.0 studies support, 0 studies refute this pattern. Our analysis of the available research suggests that while your body might signal hunger differently after a sleepless night, young and healthy adults do not typically respond by consuming extra calories. We want to be clear that this is a partial view that improves over time as more data becomes available. The evidence we have reviewed leans toward a disconnect between hormonal changes and actual eating behavior after just one night without sleep.
Not enough evidence exists yet to say how this might play out over multiple nights or in different age groups. Our current analysis shows that the immediate impact on food intake is minimal for healthy adults.
If you occasionally pull an all-nighter, try not to worry that you will automatically binge the next day. Instead, focus on planning balanced meals and staying hydrated, as your body may still need steady fuel even if hunger signals feel off.