Does Milk break a fast?
Breaks a fast
Milk breaks a fast. It provides meaningful calories or triggers an insulin response that ends the fasted metabolic state.
Calories
~61 kcal per 100 ml (whole milk); ~42 kcal per 100 ml (skimmed)
Why — the calorie and insulin logic
Milk contains lactose (a sugar), fat, and protein — all three macronutrients. Even a small splash (30 ml) delivers roughly 15–20 kcal plus a measurable insulin response from lactose and the dairy protein leucine, which activates mTOR signalling. This definitively ends a fast.
Does it depend on your fasting goal?
Milk breaks a fast for every common fasting goal: weight loss (adds significant calories), metabolic health (triggers insulin), and autophagy (mTOR activation from leucine strongly suppresses autophagy). Adding milk to coffee or tea during a fasting window ends the fast.
Frequently asked questions
- Does a splash of milk in coffee break a fast?
- Yes. Even a small amount of milk adds lactose and protein that trigger an insulin response and provide meaningful calories, ending the fast.