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Published 14th April 2026

Sardine fast: What is it, and is it healthy?

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  • The sardine fast is a viral 1- to 3-day diet where you consume absolutely nothing but sardines and zero-calorie drinks. 

  • Designed to force your body into a rapid state of ketosis, it reportedly produces rapid weight loss.

  • The initial 24-hour carbohydrate withdrawal often causes fatigue, headaches, and brain fog.

  • While sardines are very healthy, eating only one food is not a balanced diet. 

  • The lack of dietary fiber can disrupt the gut microbiome, and high sodium levels are a concern.

Recently, a rather strange diet has gone viral on the internet: the sardine fast. 

Below, we’ll outline what this new trend entails, why people are trying it, and whether it really works.

Importantly, we’ll also ask whether the fast is safe and if sardines are truly healthy. 

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Where did the sardine fast come from?

The “sardine fast” idea has been floating around for more than a decade. In 2012, Dr. Frederick Hatfield reportedly tried eating 1–2 tins of sardines a day after a cancer diagnosis. 

His goal was to get into a ketogenic state, where your body runs out of carbs to use as fuel, so it switches to burning fat.

This results in the production of ketones, which can be used as fuel instead.

Hatfield tried this approach based on the theory that reducing glucose availability might slow tumor growth.

The sardine diet didn’t go mainstream until 2023, when Dr. Annette Bosworth (an advocate for low-carb, keto-style eating) picked it up. 

How to do the sardine fast

The concept is quite simple: for 1-3 days, you only eat sardines. No other food or calorie-containing drinks are allowed. Even seasonings need to be zero-carb.

This is meant to be a fast-like reset, focusing on fats and protein. Sardines are used because they are rich in protein, high in omega-3 fats, and low in carbs. 

Choosing just one type of food also reduces decision fatigue for the first few days as you get into a state of ketosis. 

What effects might you notice?

People report mixed experiences with the sardine fast, but patterns have emerged. 

Some of the most common claims include weight loss and reduced cravings. One person who described a 3-day sardine fast said they lost weight by eating 16 tins over 3 days. 

It’s important to note, though, that this is not a sustainable way to eat, so unless you change your overall eating pattern, the weight will likely come straight back once you stop the fast.

The first 24 hours are often the hardest. 

One person reported that by lunchtime on day 1, they experienced severe weakness from carbohydrate deprivation and were unable even to open their next tin of sardines. 

This is a transition period that most people will go through. You may experience headaches, fatigue, brain fog, and lowered energy levels. By most accounts, this starts to improve during day 2.

The downsides of a sardine fast

The sardine fast is certainly not a balanced diet, and most nutrition professionals would not prescribe it as a long-term strategy. Here are the main concerns:

Zero dietary fiber 

Single-food diets like this eliminate not just digestible carbs but all the fiber and phytonutrients found in plant-based foods. 

Without fiber, your gut bacteria have nothing to feed on and ferment, which can disrupt the microbiome even over a short period. 

The gut microbiome has a critical role in metabolic health, and its composition responds rapidly to changes in dietary diversity and macronutrient balance.

High sodium content 

Canned sardines can contain 3–4 grams of sodium per serving, depending on the brand and packing liquid. 

Eating 2 to 4 tins per day over 3 days means your sodium intake is well above the recommended maximum amount of 6 g per day.

What are purines?

Sardines are relatively high in purines, which your body breaks down into uric acid. 

Uric acid is a powerful antioxidant at low levels, but in excess, it can cause health problems, such as kidney stones and gout flare-ups in people with the condition.

It's not suitable for everyone 

People with gout, kidney disease, high blood pressure, or a history of disordered eating should avoid the sardine fast. 

Also, if you take medication, check with your doctor first, as it may impact how some medications are absorbed. 

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Are sardines healthy?

The sardine fast is not something we recommend, but overall, sardines themselves include a good array of nutrients. 

Also, because sardines contain around 20 g of protein per serving, along with 8 g of fat, they are very filling. 

Micronutrients

A 100-g serving of sardines provides approximately: 

  • 382 mg of calcium (around one-third of your recommended daily intake)

  • 2.9 mg of iron (one-third of the daily intake for males and one-fifth for females)

  • 490 mg of phosphorus (around 90% of your recommended daily intake)

  • 8.9 micrograms of vitamin B12 (well above your daily recommended intake)

Sardines are also a good source of: 

Essential omega-3 fatty acids

Importantly, sardines are one of the richest whole-food sources of omega-3 fatty acids. These are essential fatty acids, meaning that we need to take them in through our diet.

Consuming adequate omega-3s is consistently linked to improved cardiovascular risk markers, including triglyceride levels, and can modestly improve inflammation and blood pressure. 

In a 12-month randomized trial, older adults with prediabetes added roughly 2 cans of sardines per week to their diet during a diabetes-prevention program. 

Participants saw improvements in several markers of metabolic health, including insulin resistance, triglycerides, blood pressure, and HDL (good) cholesterol.

Learn more about omega-3s here:

What about mercury levels?

Sardines are generally a low-mercury choice because they are small, short-lived, and sit low on the food chain. 

Sharks, tuna, and other larger fish eat smaller fish, such as sardines. Because their bodies can’t eliminate mercury, it accumulates.

Heavy metal monitoring studies typically find levels below safety limits when sardines are eaten within normal ranges.

For most people, sardines are a genuinely healthy food: high in protein, rich in omega-3s, nutrient-dense, and low in mercury, with clinical trial data supporting their benefits.

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How to add more sardines to your diet

To get health benefits from sardines, you don't need to fast for 3 days. Instead, two servings per week are enough to improve omega-3 levels and cardiometabolic markers. 

Here are some practical ways to build them into your diet:

  • On toast or sourdough. Mash a tin with a little lemon juice, black pepper, and capers, then spread over some toasted wholemeal seeded bread.

  • In a salad. Break apart the sardines and add over leaves, roasted peppers, any other veggies you enjoy, a grain as a base, and a sharp vinaigrette. The saltiness does much of the flavor work.

  • Mashed with avocado. A quick, filling lunch with a double hit of healthy fats. This is especially enjoyable on toast with some crushed red chili flakes on top.

  • In pasta. Sardines with olive oil, garlic, chili, and breadcrumbs are a Southern Italian staple (Pasta con le Sarde).

  • Straight from the tin. With hot sauce or mustard if needed — no harm in enjoying them as is.

Summary

The sardine fast is a stripped-back idea: Eat only sardines for up to 3 days to push the body into ketosis, lower insulin levels, and kickstart fat burning.

Anecdotal evidence suggests it works in the short term — most people report weight loss, reduced cravings, and improved energy once the initial carb-withdrawal phase passes.  

However, there is currently no evidence or research supporting the sardine fast as a healthy intervention for weight loss or anything else. 

Also, eating only one food for 3 days does not constitute a balanced diet, and the absence of fiber, the high sodium load, and the potential for gut disruption are real concerns. 

The far less intense — and more healthy — approach is simply to eat sardines two or three times each week.

FAQs

Here are the answers to some common questions:

Do sardines lower cholesterol?

There is solid evidence that omega-3 fatty acids, such as those in sardines, reduce blood triglyceride levels. 

Sardines’ effect on LDL (bad) cholesterol is more modest and variable across studies. 

Eating fatty fish in place of red or processed meat twice a week is recommended by the American Heart Association as part of a heart-healthy diet.

Are sardines good for GERD?

Generally, yes. Sardines are not a known trigger for reflux and are not acidic. 

The anti-inflammatory properties of omega-3-rich foods may also help calm esophageal inflammation associated with acid reflux. 

That said, sardines packed in rich oil or tomato sauce may cause more irritation than the fish itself, so water-packed or brine-packed varieties are a safer bet for those prone to symptoms.

How many tins should I have per day for a sardine fast?

There is no fixed limit — the approach is to eat sardines when hungry, stop when full. In practice, most people eat two to four tins per day. 

Does the sardine fast actually work for weight loss?

In the short term, almost certainly: Cutting out all carbohydrates for 72 hours will lower water weight and shift the body towards fat burning via ketosis. Also, it’s quite likely that you will be in a calorie deficit.

Whether that translates to sustained fat loss depends entirely on what you eat afterward. The sardine fast is not a long-term weight loss strategy.

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