Across 12 hours, most adults burn roughly 550–1,000 kcal at rest; fasting itself doesn’t “add” extra burn—it’s your usual metabolism running.
Smaller Body (50–60 kg)
Average Adult (65–75 kg)
Larger Body (85–100 kg)
Easy Overnight Fast
- Stop after dinner; 12 hours off
- Water, plain tea/coffee ok
- Break fast with protein + fiber
Gentle
Active Half-Day Fast
- Skip breakfast once in a while
- Add 30–45 min brisk walk
- Balanced first meal
Moves
Workday Fast With Chores
- Hydrate on schedule
- Stand and stretch each hour
- Keep load low-intensity
Steady
What 12 Hours Of Fasting Really Burns
Your body burns calories every hour. Heart, brain, muscles, liver—everything runs whether you eat or not. Most of that is basal or resting energy. Research shows resting metabolism is the biggest slice of daily burn, often around 60–70% for adults. The thermic effect of food sits near 10%, and the rest comes from movement. (Sources: Cleveland Clinic; NIDDK; TEF overview.)
So a 12-hour fast doesn’t flip a magic “extra burn” switch. It’s mainly half a day of your usual baseline. If those 12 hours include sleep, hourly burn tends to be a bit lower. Reviews suggest a drop during sleep close to ~15% compared with quiet wakefulness. That’s normal physiology, not a red flag.
One more nuance many folks miss: when you don’t eat, you also skip diet-induced burn from digestion. TEF averages near 10% of daily energy. No meal means no TEF from that meal. That’s why the math below talks in ranges, not a single number.
Broad 12-Hour Burn Ranges (Resting Or Desk Day)
The table uses common adult profiles and Mifflin–St Jeor resting equations (widely used by dietitians). It then takes about half for 12 hours. Sleep rows apply a small reduction.
| Body Profile | Est. 12-h Burn (kcal) | Assumptions |
|---|---|---|
| Female · 55 kg · 165 cm · 30 y (sleep) | ≈570 | Mifflin–St Jeor; 12 h sleep ~10% lower than rest |
| Female · 65 kg · 165 cm · 30 y (rest) | ≈685 | Quiet wakefulness or desk time |
| Male · 70 kg · 175 cm · 30 y (rest) | ≈825 | Half of RMR for the period |
| Male · 80 kg · 175 cm · 30 y (desk) | ≈875 | Very light movement across the 12 h |
| Male · 90 kg · 180 cm · 40 y (rest) | ≈915 | Quiet wakefulness |
| Female · 80 kg · 165 cm · 40 y (rest) | ≈735 | Quiet wakefulness |
Curious why these rows look modest? Because they’re resting math, not workout math. They reflect the energy your body spends just to run itself for half a day.
Do 12 Hours Of Fasting Burn Calories? Realistic Estimates
Yes, but not in a bonus way. You burn calories because you’re alive. Fasting changes fuel mix more than total burn in the short window. Without food coming in, the body taps stored glycogen and fat to keep everything powered. TEF drops because you’re not digesting a meal, while baseline needs keep humming. That’s the simple story behind the numbers.
How To Estimate Your Own 12-Hour Burn
Step 1: Get A Resting Estimate
Use Mifflin–St Jeor (RMR): Men = 10×kg + 6.25×cm − 5×age + 5; Women = 10×kg + 6.25×cm − 5×age − 161. A trusted calculator is here: Mifflin–St Jeor. This equation is well-validated in adults.
Step 2: Take Half For 12 Hours
Quiet hours? Take about 50% of that daily RMR. If it’s an overnight, you can trim ~5–15% from that 12-hour slice to reflect lower sleeping expenditure.
Step 3: Add Any Movement
Light chores, a stroll, or a brisk walk add on top. A common formula is kcal ≈ MET × kg × hours. Walking 3.5 mph is around 4.3 MET. You’ll find MET values in the Compendium of Physical Activities.
What About Eating Versus Not Eating?
Eating raises energy use through digestion. That bump is TEF. A recent reference chapter pegs TEF near 10% of daily energy on mixed diets. Protein skews higher than carbs or fat. So if you skip a 500 kcal breakfast, you remove the meal and the small TEF linked to it. Net change leans toward a deficit, but the “extra burn” idea doesn’t fit the biology.
Want a plain-English primer on metabolism and TEF? This one from Harvard Health is handy.
Worked Examples You Can Check
Example A: 70 kg Male, 175 cm, 30 y
RMR ≈ 10×70 + 6.25×175 − 5×30 + 5 = ~1,649 kcal/day. Twelve quiet hours ≈ ~825 kcal. Add a 30-minute brisk walk (4.3 MET): 4.3 × 70 × 0.5 ≈ 150 kcal. Day’s 12-hour total ≈ ~975 kcal.
Example B: 65 kg Female, 165 cm, 30 y
RMR ≈ ~1,370 kcal/day. Twelve quiet hours ≈ ~685 kcal. If those hours were all sleep, trim a bit (say ~5–10%). That lands near ~620–650 kcal.
Safety first: fasting isn’t for everyone. People who are pregnant, lactating, under 18, taking insulin or sulfonylureas, with a history of eating disorders, or under medical nutrition therapy need individualized care. When unsure, talk with your clinician.
First Meal After The 12 Hours
Protein, fiber, fluids, and a sane portion help you feel steady. TEF is higher for protein, so a balanced plate—eggs with vegetables and whole grains, or yogurt with fruit and nuts—often feels more satisfying than a sugary pick. Harvard’s piece on metabolism touches on this point and why strength work helps preserve lean mass, which anchors resting burn.
Table Of Common 12-Hour Fast Scenarios
Based on a 70 kg adult with RMR ~1,500–1,650 kcal/day. Movement calories use MET × kg × hours. Walk MET from the Compendium; calorie charts similar to Harvard’s show close figures for 30 minutes of walking.
| Scenario | Extra Activity Over 12 h | Est. 12-h Total |
|---|---|---|
| Overnight fast with sleep | None | ~700–800 kcal |
| Desk-day fast | Light office moving | ~800–900 kcal |
| Desk-day + brisk walk | 30-min walk at ~4.3 MET | ~950–1,050 kcal |
| Chores day | 60–90 min light chores | ~1,000–1,150 kcal |
What This Means For Weight Change
Body mass shifts with energy balance over time. Public health guidance suggests a steady rate near 0.5–1 kg per month per mild deficit, or ~0.5–1 kg per week for larger, supervised programs. The CDC explains the slow-and-steady approach and the value of sleep, stress control, and activity alongside food choices.
Many people like the 12-hour fast because it creates a simple eating window. If it helps you keep portions in check, great. If it pushes you to overeat later, the net can vanish. The tool isn’t the goal; the pattern you can live with is.
Sleep, Movement, And The Meter
Sleep changes the hourly meter a little, usually downward. That matches lab data showing lower expenditure during typical sleep. Pulling an all-nighter doesn’t “burn more.” It can even blunt next-day burn and hunger signals. Good sleep supports better choices during feeding windows.
Movement is the flexible knob. Brisk walking, cycling, lifting, yard work—these add to the 12-hour total. A simple move like a daily 30-minute walk can tack on around 120–170 kcal for many adults. The Compendium and Harvard’s calorie tables give ballpark figures by body weight.
Smarter 12-Hour Fast Tips
- Hydrate on a schedule. Plain water, mineral water, unsweetened tea, or black coffee fit a basic fast.
- Front-load protein at the first meal. Protein supports lean mass and increases TEF on that meal.
- Keep fiber high. Vegetables, legumes, whole grains, chia, or berries help fullness.
- Add light movement. A walk, light chores, stretch breaks—easy to maintain and it adds up.
- Lift 2–3 days a week. Strength work helps hold onto muscle during a calorie deficit.
- Sleep enough. Better sleep trims late-night snacking and steadies appetite.
- Watch beverages. Sugary drinks erase a deficit fast. Diet drinks are low-kcal but can stoke cravings for some.
- Break the fast, don’t binge. Eat until satisfied, not stuffed. Give the meal 10–15 minutes to land.
Why Your Number Might Differ
Two people with the same weight can have different resting burns. Lean mass, age, sex, medications, and past weight history all matter. Long workdays on your feet or lots of fidgeting push totals up. A full day on the couch pulls them down. That’s normal human variance.
Practical Takeaway
Across 12 fasting hours, most adults land somewhere near 550–1,000 kcal at rest. The wide band comes from body size, sleep versus quiet wakefulness, and any light movement. Fasting doesn’t turbocharge burn in that window; it mainly trims eating opportunities and removes TEF from skipped meals. If a 12-hour fast helps you eat calmly and train well, it can be part of a plan you can keep.
Further reading: Harvard Health on metabolism · NIDDK on eating and activity