#152 Skipping Breakfast is Bad for You, or Is It?

Skipping Breakfast is Bad for You, or Is It?

You were always told that skipping breakfast is bad for you.  After all, breakfast is the most important meal of the day, right?

According to the experts, if you skip breakfast you will gain weight, feel horrible, and put yourself at risk for heart disease.  But is that really true?

In this article, I challenge this long held belief that skipping breakfast is bad for you.  Based on the latest scientific findings, I’ll let you decide if skipping breakfast is bad for you or not.

Breakfast for Me

I have always been a breakfast eater.  Even today, as soon as I woke up I ate breakfast.

In my younger years, I ate the standard American breakfast.  Plenty of processed carbs, in the form of breakfast cereal, instant oatmeal, pancakes, and fruit juice.  Somehow, I always found it strange that I was hungry again an hour or two after eating such a large breakfast.

Today, I eat much better and don’t get hungry again until lunchtime.  Every morning I have a big salad without salad dressing, chia and flax seeds mixed with nut butter on Ezekiel Bread, fruit, and a few dark chocolate covered almonds.

I would never dream of skipping breakfast.  For me, I just feel better with breakfast.  I am also much more productive with my morning routine if I eat first.

Just because eating breakfast works for me, does it mean that everyone else should eat breakfast as well?

What is the scientific data for eating breakfast?

Everyone knows that skipping breakfast is bad for you, right?  Eating breakfast is so ingrained in our culture that few would consider it possibly healthy to skip breakfast.  Indeed, many observational studies have shown that eating breakfast protects against weight gain and heart disease.

The problem is that these studies have just been observational studies.  In other words, people who ate breakfast were observed to be leaner and healthier.

These studies don’t prove that eating breakfast made them leaner or healthier.  Perhaps it had nothing to do with eating breakfast at all.  Perhaps the real reason is that breakfast eaters may be more inclined to work out in the morning.  Fortunately, we now have much better studies to answer the question, is skipping breakfast is bad for you?

The Bath Breakfast Study

To challenge the long-held belief that skipping breakfast is bath for you, researchers from Bath England randomized overweight adults to either eating or skipping breakfast. Here are the key findings of their study:

1. Metabolism was not affected by eating or skipping breakfast.

2. Breakfast eaters ate more total calories and had a statistical trend toward weight gain.

3. Measures of heart disease were not affected by eating or skipping breakfast.

4. Breakfast eaters were more physically active in the morning.

5. The longer feeding window of breakfast eaters caused lower insulin spikes.

As you can see, there really were no critical differences between breakfast eaters or skippers.  Indeed, in two other well designed studies, there also was no significant difference in eating or skipping breakfast.

When is eating breakfast critical?

Does the Bath Breakfast Study mean that you should skip breakfast?  Absolutely not.  I certainly will not give up my daily breakfast routine based on the results of this study.

However, it should be noted that the Bath Breakfast Study does not apply to everyone.  This was just a small study of overweight young and middle aged adults.  For children it is a completely different matter.

Studies have consistently shown that breakfast is critical for optimal school performance in children.  This is especially true for impoverished children.  In fact, even children who eat two breakfasts, one at home and then one at school, are less likely to become obese.

When may skipping breakfast be healthy?

If you are a healthy young or middle aged adult, and do not feel hungry in the morning, then forcing yourself to eat breakfast may be the wrong thing to do.  Indeed, depending on what time you last ate the previous day, skipping breakfast may be a form of intermittent fasting.  As I have discussed in a previous article, intermittent fasting may help with weight loss and preventing heart disease.

Another benefit to skipping breakfast is that, for most Americans, breakfast is the unhealthiest meal of the day.  Fruit juice, and at least 99% of all breakfast cereals, bagels, pancakes, waffles, toast, or yogurt, are little more than rapidly absorbed sugar to the body.

Take Home Message

The take home message of this article is that the conventional wisdom that skipping breakfast is bad for you may not be correct.  Based on my research of the scientific data, I could find no compelling reason for adults to eat breakfast as long as you are healthy.

Indeed, my opinion is the same as the researchers in a recent study, breakfast may just be another meal.  For some people, skipping breakfast may be the right thing to do.

As long as you are healthy, try skipping breakfast a few times to see if it helps you with your health goals.  If you are already skipping breakfast, then don’t feel like skipping breakfast is bad for you.  The key message of this article is to find out what works best for you.

As for me, I will continue to eat my same breakfast every morning.  For me, skipping breakfast absolutely doesn’t work at all.  When I skip breakfast I get so hungry and irritable that I am of no use to anyone.  Especially myself.

Are you a breakfast eater or skipper?  Please leave your experiences below.  If you have any questions about what you have read, leave those questions below as well.  I will do my best to answer every question as quickly as possible.

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Disclaimer Policy: This website is intended to give general information and does not provide medical advice. This website does not create a doctor-patient relationship between you and Dr. John Day. If you have a medical problem, immediately contact your healthcare provider. Information on this website is not intended to diagnose or treat any condition. Dr. John Day is not responsible for any losses, damages or claims that may result from your medical decisions.

14 Comments
  1. Thanks for your Emails. I love breakfast it starts off my day.I am misable by mid morning with out breakfast. I start off with a bowl of rolled oats with nuts and fruit added no sugar just low fat milk. Some times an egg also. Breakfast is great.

  2. Hi Dr Day,
    I drink a 8 ounce orange juice every morning because I thought the vitamin C was good for me. But I would be fine skipping the juice and just drinking some water instead, would this be healthier? I’m a patient of dr Crandall and go in afib every four months or so and think sugar might bring it on especially more pvc’s/pac’s so maybe little less sugar wouldn’t hurt 🙂

    • Hi Brandon,

      Thanks for reading! You are definitely on the right track. To get your vitamin C from 8 oz of orange juice will also mean that you take on 23 grams of sugar. There are so many better ways to get vitamin C.

      For example, one orange will get you 93% of the vitamin C you need for the day. Eating an orange is so much healthier than the juice as you also get the fiber and other nutrients of the orange.

      Also, one bell pepper will get you 157% of the vitamin C you need for the day. A cup of broccoli will get you 135%. A cup of strawberries comes in at 113%. These are all great sources of vitamin C.

      Hope this helps!

      John

  3. I do not want food early in the morning. Upon speaking with family members they too don’t want breakfast. I believe some light fruit and coffee serve me well BUT I eat an early lunch at 11am and make my dinner soup or a salad. Eating my biggest meal early rather than late.

  4. I often feel I am having a treat when I start off the day with an egg white and vegetable burrito and a juice. I switch with either a green vegetable and beet juice or C boost mixture of pineapple, ginger and citrus juices. When I skip this breakfast I really do feel tired and grumpy. Thank you for making me think it through. I often run out the door and skip breakfast or grab a donut and coffee. That’s when I really crash.
    Realizing that good nutrition is a must… Is my goal.

  5. I have always been a breakfast eater. I like to vary my breakfast by trying to eat
    a variety of meals. For me, my energy level is much higher in the morning.
    John, I do enjoy reading your weekly newsletter. I always get something beneficial
    and healthy from them. Keep up the great work.

    Thank you
    Fay Douglas

    • Hi Fay,

      Thank you so much for your kind words! I am the same way–my energy levels are also much higher in the morning.

      Best,

      John

  6. Thanks for this information. It is good to understand the studies. I’m interested in the Ezekiel bread you mentioned as I have never heard of it. Do you by it locally or make it? If you buy it, where, and if you make it do you have a recipe that you would share. I’d like to try it but want to have a reference for a good start. I appreciate your weekly updates! I’ve never thought of a salad for breakfast so I will be trying your breakfast for a week and see how that makes me feel compared to my thick cut unsweetened oatmeal and a piece of fruit. Thanks for sharing!

    • Hi Bryce,

      Great question. I have really learned to love Ezekiel bread. I find it very filling.

      My favorite aspect to this bread is that it has no flour. Just real whole grains and legumes. Thus, you don’t get the instant sugar response like you get with typical whole wheat bread.

      Whole Foods, Trader Joes, health conscientious grocery stores, and other health food stores carry Ezekiel bread. You will find it in the frozen section as there are no preservatives. Here is a link to the Ezekiel bread web site to learn more about this bread: http://www.foodforlife.com/about_us/ezekiel-49

      Salads can be great for breakfast. I love starting off my mornings with some fresh veggies.

      Thanks for reading!

      John

  7. A few years ago, I stayed with a woman in Dundee, Scotland, who lived by the maxim: “Eat like a king in the morning, a prince at noon, and a pauper in evening”, meaning, of course, to pack your morning meal with protein. She was a slender, healthy 63 year old who looked 50. Since then, I’ve tried to make my breakfasts less carb heavy and more protein rich. At least it’s helped maintain the lost pounds from a diet!