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Living Well Study > Blog > Health and Medicine > New Research Questions Long-Held Beliefs About the Harms of “Yo-Yo Dieting”
Health and Medicine

New Research Questions Long-Held Beliefs About the Harms of “Yo-Yo Dieting”

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Weight loss followed by weight regain, commonly referred to as “yo-yo dieting” or weight cycling, has long been viewed as harmful to health, with some experts suggesting it may even be worse than remaining overweight. However, a new analysis published in The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology challenges this widely accepted belief, concluding that there is little convincing evidence that weight cycling itself causes long-term harm in people living with obesity.

In an invited Personal View article, Professors Faidon Magkos from the University of Copenhagen and Norbert Stefan from the German Center for Diabetes Research (DZD), University Hospital Tübingen, and Helmholtz Munich reviewed decades of evidence from human and animal studies examining the effects of repeated weight loss and regain. After evaluating observational studies, randomized clinical trials, and experimental research, the authors concluded that many concerns surrounding weight cycling appear overstated and are not strongly supported by causal scientific evidence.

For years, weight cycling has been associated with a variety of negative health outcomes, including increased fat accumulation, accelerated muscle loss, slower metabolism, and greater risks of diabetes and cardiovascular disease. These concerns have shaped public messaging and clinical discussions about obesity, sometimes leading individuals to believe that repeated attempts to lose weight may ultimately “do more harm than good.” According to the authors, however, much of the evidence supporting these claims has important limitations.

“Many people struggling with weight are discouraged from trying to lose weight because they fear ‘yo-yo dieting’ will damage their metabolism or lead to muscle loss,” says Prof. Magkos. “Our review suggests these fears are largely unsupported. In most cases, the potential benefits of attempting weight loss clearly outweigh the theoretical risks associated with weight cycling.”

The researchers note that many observational studies fail to adequately account for factors such as aging, pre-existing illness, smoking, and the cumulative effects of obesity itself. Once these variables are properly considered, the apparent harmful associations linked to weight cycling often weaken substantially or disappear altogether. “Higher levels of body fat remain the primary driver of metabolic disease risk,” explains Prof. Stefan. “Weight fluctuation alone does not appear to independently worsen long-term health outcomes in a meaningful way.”

Importantly, studies using objective measurements of body composition show little evidence that repeated weight loss and regain lead to disproportionate reductions in lean muscle mass or persistent suppression of metabolic rate. In many cases, individuals who regain lost weight return to a body composition similar to where they started, rather than ending up in a metabolically worse state. The authors also found no robust evidence that weight cycling itself causes the gradual increase in body weight commonly observed over time in people with obesity.

The analysis does acknowledge that weight regain can reverse many of the health improvements achieved during weight loss, including better blood sugar control, lower blood pressure, and improved cholesterol levels. However, the authors stress that losing these benefits is not the same as causing additional harm. “Regaining weight generally brings people back toward their baseline level of risk, not beyond it,” says Magkos. “There is an important distinction between reversing benefits and actively damaging health.”

The findings are particularly relevant as highly effective anti-obesity medications such as GLP-1 receptor agonists and dual incretin therapies become increasingly common. These treatments can produce substantial weight loss, but significant regain often occurs when medication is stopped, creating a pattern similar to weight cycling. The authors argue that this should not automatically be interpreted as harmful. Even temporary periods of reduced weight may provide meaningful improvements in metabolic health, physical functioning, and quality of life. Overall, Magkos and Stefan conclude that people living with overweight or obesity should not be discouraged from pursuing weight loss, even when long-term maintenance remains challenging. “The idea that ‘yo-yo dieting ruins your metabolism’ is not supported by robust evidence,” they state. “Trying — and even failing — to lose weight is not harmful. But giving up altogether may be.”

More information: Faidon Magkos et al, Is weight cycling clinically harmful? The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology. DOI: 10.1016/S2213-8587(26)00037-9

Journal information: The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology Provided by Deutsches Zentrum fuer Diabetesforschung DZD

TAGGED:dietsdiseases and disordersmetabolic disorders
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