If you’ve been diagnosed with fatty liver, you’ve probably asked:
“What am I actually supposed to eat?”
And then you went online… and got overwhelmed.
Low-carb. Mediterranean. High-protein. No sugar. No fat. Detox.
It’s a lot.
So instead of giving you another complicated “diet,” let’s simplify this into something you can actually follow day-to-day.
First: There’s No One Perfect Diet
Fatty liver (MASLD) improves when you:
- Reduce excess calories (especially from sugar and processed foods)
- Improve insulin resistance
- Maintain or build muscle
There are multiple ways to do that.
But most successful approaches have a few things in common—and that’s what we’re going to focus on.
The Simple Structure That Works
Instead of obsessing over every food choice, start with this structure:
🍽️ Build Your Meals Around Protein + Fiber
At most meals, aim for:
- A protein source
- A fiber source (vegetables, fruit, whole grains)
This helps:
- Keep you full
- Stabilize blood sugar
- Reduce overeating
⏱️ What About Intermittent Fasting or Time-Restricted Eating?
You may have heard about intermittent fasting—and yes, it can be helpful.
But it doesn’t have to be extreme.
A simple, realistic approach:
- Eat within a 10–12 hour window (for example, 8am–6pm or 9am–7pm)
- Avoid late-night eating when possible
Why this helps:
- Gives your body time to regulate insulin
- May reduce overall calorie intake without strict dieting
- Fits naturally into most people’s routines
👉 This is optional—but for many people, it’s an easy way to add structure without overthinking food.
A Realistic Day of Eating (Example)
Here’s what this might look like in real life:
🥣 Breakfast (8–9am)
- Greek yogurt + berries + a handful of nuts
or - Eggs + whole grain toast + avocado
🥗 Lunch (12–1pm)
- Grilled chicken salad with olive oil-based dressing
or - Turkey wrap with veggies + side of fruit
☕ Afternoon (optional snack)
- Apple + peanut butter
- Cottage cheese
- Protein shake
🍽️ Dinner (5:30–7pm)
- Salmon or chicken
- Roasted vegetables
- Small portion of rice, potatoes, or quinoa
👉 Notice:
- Balanced meals
- Protein throughout the day
- Eating window naturally wraps up in the evening
What to Reduce (Not Eliminate)
You don’t need to cut everything out—but these are worth dialing back:
- Sugary drinks (soda, sweet tea, juice)
- Frequent desserts
- Ultra-processed snacks
- Liquid calories from coffee drinks/alcohol
👉 This is where a lot of hidden excess calories come from.
What About Carbs and Fat?
You don’t need to fear either.
- Carbs: Choose more whole-food sources (fruit, grains, legumes)
- Fat: Focus on healthier fats (olive oil, nuts, fish)
The bigger issue is usually quality and quantity, not one specific nutrient.
Coffee, Alcohol, and Real Life
- Coffee: Generally beneficial for liver health (yes, really)
- Alcohol: Best limited or avoided, depending on your situation
The Goal Isn’t Perfection—It’s Consistency
This is where most people get stuck.
They try to overhaul everything overnight… and burn out.
Instead:
- Build 2–3 meals you can repeat
- Keep it simple
- Stay consistent
That’s what leads to real improvement in liver health.
How This Fits Into the Bigger Picture
Food is just one piece.
Fatty liver improves best when you combine:
- Nutrition
- Movement (even just walking)
- Sustainable weight loss
The Bottom Line
You don’t need a complicated diet to improve fatty liver.
Start with:
- Protein + fiber at meals
- A consistent eating window (if it works for you)
- Simple, repeatable foods
- Less sugar and processed foods
That’s enough to move you in the right direction.
Coming Next
If you want this broken down into a simple, printable plan you can follow without thinking, I’m putting together a “Fatty Liver Starter Guide.”
Because knowing what to eat is helpful—but having a plan you can stick to is what actually works.