Master intermittent fasting with BellyZero’s free 4-page Intermittent Fasting Tracker (Printable). The most complete printable IF system available. Log your daily fasting windows, hunger, energy, hydration, sleep, and meals, then review your body measurements and weight progress weekly with a built-in graph.
📥 Download PDF, 🖨️ Print Tracker, and 🔗 Share buttons are available at the bottom of the template on desktop and tablets.
| Day | Start | End | Hours | Done | Hunger (1–5) | Energy (1–5) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mon | ||||||
| Tue | ||||||
| Wed | ||||||
| Thu | ||||||
| Fri | ||||||
| Sat | ||||||
| Sun |

| Day | Water Intake — Circle Each Glass (Target: 8/Day) |
|---|---|
| Mon | |
| Tue | |
| Wed | |
| Thu | |
| Fri | |
| Sat | |
| Sun |
| Day | Sleep | Wake | Hours | Quality (1–5) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mon | ||||
| Tue | ||||
| Wed | ||||
| Thu | ||||
| Fri | ||||
| Sat | ||||
| Sun |
| Day | Meal 1 — Break-Fast Calories consumed |
Meal 2 — Lunch Calories consumed |
Meal 3 — Dinner Calories consumed |
Snacks / Day Calories consumed |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mon | ||||
| Tue | ||||
| Wed | ||||
| Thu | ||||
| Fri | ||||
| Sat | ||||
| Sun |

| Body Part | Current | After 7 Days IF | Goal |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chest (cm / in) | |||
| Arm (cm / in) | |||
| Waist (cm / in) | |||
| Hip (cm / in) | |||
| Thigh (cm / in) | |||
| Calf (cm / in) |
| Wk | Weight | Days Fasted | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | |||
| 2 | |||
| 3 | |||
| 4 |

Most IF trackers only record your fasting window. This one tracks hunger, sleep, hydration, meals, body measurements, mindset, and 30-day progress. Everything that actually drives results, in one free printable PDF.
What Is an Intermittent Fasting Tracker and Why You Need One
Tracking is the difference between guessing and progressing.
Most people who start intermittent fasting do it the same way. They pick a protocol, set an alarm, skip breakfast, eat their meals, and repeat. Two weeks later, nothing has changed. The scale has not moved. Energy is inconsistent and they have no idea why.
The problem is not the fasting. The problem is the absence of data.
An intermittent fasting tracker is a structured system that records your fasting windows, hunger levels, energy patterns, hydration, sleep quality, and meal intake. It turns a vague daily habit into something measurable, adjustable, and improvable.
When you track consistently, you stop guessing. You start seeing patterns. You notice that on nights you sleep fewer than six hours, your hunger rating the next day jumps to a four or five. You realize that skipping water during the fast makes you feel hungry when you are actually just thirsty. You see exactly when your energy dips and why.
The tracker does not do the fasting for you. But it makes sure that every fast you complete actually counts toward something you can measure, review, and improve.
Download Your Free Intermittent Fasting Tracker (Printable PDF)
You can download the BellyZero intermittent fasting tracker printable completely free below. No signup. No email required. Just click, download, and print.
This is not a single-page log. This is a complete four-page fasting system designed to track everything that affects your results, not just the clock. The tracker covers fasting windows, hunger and energy signals, hydration, sleep quality, meal intake with calorie awareness, body measurements, weight progress, mindset work, and a 30-day reward system.
Print it each week, keep it on your desk or fridge, and fill it in daily. The physical act of writing your fasting window, circling your water glasses, and rating your sleep quality builds the habit loop that digital apps often fail to create.
What Makes This Tracker Different
Most trackers track time. This one tracks your transformation.
There are dozens of fasting tracker printables available online. Most of them give you a table with a start time, end time, and a checkbox. That tells you one thing: whether you completed the fast.
But fat loss, energy improvement, and long-term consistency depend on far more than hours fasted. They depend on how well you slept, how much water you drank, what you ate when your window opened, and how your body felt through the day.
Here is everything included across the four pages of this IF tracker PDF:
- Fasting window tracking with start time, end time, and total hours logged daily
- Hunger signals rated on a 1 to 5 scale every single day
- Energy levels rated daily so you can spot patterns over weeks
- Hydration tracking with an 8-glass per day visual system
- Sleep tracking including sleep time, wake time, total hours, and quality rating
- Meal tracking for break-fast, lunch, dinner, and snacks with calorie awareness
- Body measurements for waist, chest, arms, hips, thighs, and calf
- Weight progress graph to plot your four-week trajectory visually
- 30-day reward system at 7, 14, 21, and 30-day milestones
- Mindset section to connect your daily consistency to your deeper reason
Page-by-Page Breakdown of the Tracker
Page 1: Fasting Setup and Daily Log
Page one is where you set up your entire fasting system and log each day of the week. At the top, you select your fasting method from six options and record your personal eating and fasting window. A visual fasting bar shows you how your hours split across a 24-hour timeline.
Below the setup, the daily log table tracks all seven days. For each day you record the fasting start and end time, total hours fasted, completion status, and a hunger and energy rating. These 1 to 5 scales are critical. Over two to three weeks of data, they reveal patterns that change how you fast.
Page 2: Hydration, Sleep, and Meal Tracker
Page two covers the three factors most people ignore while fasting, and that quietly sabotage results.
Hydration. The tracker uses an 8-glass daily system. You circle each glass as you drink it. Dehydration mimics hunger. When your body is under-hydrated it sends the same signal as food deprivation. Many people break their fast early not because they are genuinely hungry, but because they are thirsty.
Sleep. Poor sleep can reduce fat loss even if your fasting is perfect. The sleep tracker records your sleep time, wake time, total hours, and a quality rating. When you sleep fewer than six hours, your body produces more ghrelin and less leptin, directly raising hunger ratings the following day.
Meal Tracker. The meal tracker prevents the most common IF mistake: overeating in the eating window and cancelling the caloric deficit the fast created. Each day records Meal 1 (Break-Fast), Meal 2 (Lunch), Meal 3 (Dinner), and Snacks with calorie awareness.
Page 3: Body Measurements and Progress Graph
The scale can lie. Measurements show real change.
Your weight can stay the same while your waist drops two centimetres. That happens because muscle is denser than fat. If you are doing any resistance training alongside your fast, you may be building lean mass while losing fat simultaneously. The scale will not show that. The measuring tape will.
Page three tracks six body parts across three time points: your current measurements, your measurements after 7 days of IF, and your goal. It also includes a four-week weight summary table and a progress graph where you plot a dot each week and connect the points visually.
Page 4: Mindset, Rewards, and Consistency
Page four is the section that separates people who finish 30 days from those who quit at day ten.
The mindset section asks two questions you write answers to in longhand: why you are practicing intermittent fasting, and how you will handle hard fasting days. These are psychological anchors. On the days you feel like breaking your fast early, having your written answer on the page in front of you changes your decision-making. You shift from reacting to hunger to responding from intention.
Reward discipline, not cravings. The reward table sets milestones at 7, 14, 21, and 30 days. You write your own reward next to each. Sleep in. Buy a book. Book a massage. Tie rewards to non-food experiences and you reinforce the habit without triggering the exact patterns you are trying to break.
How to Use This Intermittent Fasting Tracker
Using the tracker properly takes about five minutes a day. Here is the complete step-by-step process.
- Select your fasting method. Choose from 12:12, 14:10, 16:8, 18:6, OMAD, or Custom on page one. Beginners should start with 12:12 or 14:10 and progress from there.
- Fill in your fasting window. Write your planned start and end time before the week begins so you have a clear target each day.
- Log your daily fast. Each morning or evening, record the actual start and end time of your fast and mark whether you completed it.
- Rate hunger and energy honestly. Use the 1 to 5 scale for both. Be truthful. Low scores reveal where to improve. High scores confirm what is working.
- Track your hydration. Circle each glass of water as you drink it throughout the day. Aim for all 8 circles filled before your eating window closes.
- Log your sleep. Write your sleep and wake time each day and rate quality. Cross-reference this with your next-day hunger rating to spot the pattern.
- Record your meals and calories. Log what you eat and note calories consumed for each meal and snack. Awareness alone significantly reduces overeating.
- Update body measurements. Fill in current measurements and check again after 7 days. The waist column is the most important one to watch.
- Plot your weight progress. Update the graph at the end of each week and connect the dots. A downward trend across weeks matters far more than daily fluctuation.
- Review, reflect, and reward. At 7, 14, 21, and 30 days, check your milestones. Acknowledge your effort. Claim the reward you wrote down on day one.
Benefits of Using a Fasting Tracker
Tracking your intermittent fasting progress creates advantages that fasting without a system never produces.
- Improves consistency. When you physically log each fast, you build a visible streak that you do not want to break. The act of marking a completed fast reinforces the behaviour.
- Accelerates fat loss. Awareness of meals and hydration prevents unconscious overeating, which is the number one reason people fast but do not lose weight.
- Builds body awareness. Rating your hunger and energy daily teaches you how your body responds to fasting over time. You learn your patterns faster than any app can tell you.
- Prevents common mistakes. The checklist and sleep tracker catch habits that silently undermine results before they become months-long plateaus.
- Increases motivation. Seeing measurements drop on paper and dots trending downward on a graph gives you evidence that your effort is working. Evidence beats willpower every time.
- Shows measurable progress. After four weeks, you have a complete data set. You know exactly what worked, what did not, and what to adjust for the next month.
Who Should Use This Tracker
Who Should NOT Do Intermittent Fasting
Intermittent fasting is not suitable for everyone. Please consult your doctor before starting any fasting protocol if any of the following applies to you.
Common Mistakes in Intermittent Fasting
These are the mistakes that quietly stop results. This tracker is designed to help you catch each one early.
- Overeating in the eating window. Fasting creates a caloric opportunity. Eating two large meals and multiple snacks can cancel the entire deficit. The meal tracker on page two prevents this by building daily awareness.
- Poor sleep. One bad night raises hunger hormones significantly the next day. Tracking sleep quality alongside hunger ratings reveals this connection within a week.
- Low hydration. Thirst and hunger share the same signal pathway in your brain. Not drinking enough water during a fast makes you feel hungry when you are not. The hydration tracker removes this confusion.
- Breaking the fast incorrectly. Ending a 16-hour fast with a sugary drink or large processed meal spikes insulin sharply. The meal tracker keeps your break-fast intentional.
- Not tracking progress. Without data you cannot adjust. People who stop tracking are the same people who stop seeing results and eventually stop fasting altogether.
Free BellyZero Tools That Work With This Tracker
The tracker is most powerful when paired with accurate personal data. These four free calculators give you the numbers you need to fill in the tracker with real precision.
What the Research Says About Intermittent Fasting
Intermittent fasting is not a trend. It is one of the most studied dietary approaches of the past two decades. Here is what peer-reviewed research consistently shows, with links to the original studies.
IF Reduces Body Weight and Waist Circumference
A comprehensive 2020 review published in the Annual Review of Nutrition analyzed multiple clinical trials and concluded that intermittent fasting produces significant reductions in body weight, body fat percentage, and waist circumference in overweight and obese adults. The effect was comparable to continuous calorie restriction but with better adherence rates in several trials.
Lowe et al. (2020) — Annual Review of Nutrition ↗
Sleep Deprivation Directly Raises Hunger Hormones
A landmark study published in PLOS Medicine found that sleeping fewer than 8 hours per night was associated with elevated ghrelin (hunger hormone) and reduced leptin (satiety hormone) levels. Participants who slept less reported significantly higher hunger and appetite, particularly for calorie-dense foods. This is why the sleep tracker in this system directly connects to your hunger ratings.
Taheri et al. (2004) — PLOS Medicine ↗
Autophagy Peaks During Extended Fasting Windows
Research by Nobel Prize winner Yoshinori Ohsumi demonstrated that autophagy, the cellular self-cleaning process, activates during fasting states. A 2019 study in Cell Metabolism confirmed that significant autophagy markers are detectable in humans after 18 to 24 hours of fasting, with the sharpest increases occurring between 16 and 18 hours. This is the scientific basis for the 16:8 protocol being the most widely recommended.
Alirezaei et al. / Cell Metabolism (2019) — Autophagy and fasting ↗
Self-Monitoring Significantly Improves Weight Loss Outcomes
A 2019 meta-analysis published in Obesity Reviews reviewed 28 studies and found that participants who used self-monitoring tools (food logs, trackers, journals) lost significantly more weight than those who did not. The effect was strongest in people who tracked consistently rather than sporadically. This is the evidence base for why a physical tracker outperforms relying on memory alone.
Pearson (2019) — Obesity Reviews ↗
Hydration Affects Appetite and Calorie Intake
A controlled study published in Obesity (2010) found that drinking 500ml of water before meals reduced calorie intake by 13% in middle-aged and older adults over a 12-week period, resulting in significantly greater weight loss compared to the control group. During a fast, adequate hydration directly suppresses false hunger signals driven by mild dehydration.
Dennis et al. (2010) — Obesity ↗
IF Reduces Visceral Fat Specifically
A 2016 randomized controlled trial published in JAMA Internal Medicine compared alternate-day fasting to daily calorie restriction. Both groups lost similar amounts of total weight, but the fasting group showed greater reductions in visceral fat specifically. Since visceral fat (the fat around organs) drives the highest metabolic health risk, waist circumference reduction is the most clinically significant metric tracked in this system.
Trepanowski et al. (2017) — JAMA Internal Medicine ↗
Final Thoughts
Intermittent fasting works. The science behind it is solid, the results are real, and the method is sustainable for most healthy adults. But fasting alone is not enough. What separates the people who transform their bodies from those who try and quit is the decision to track.
When you track, you learn. When you learn, you adjust. When you adjust, you improve. That cycle is the entire system.
Download the BellyZero intermittent fasting tracker printable, print it today, and fill in your first entry tonight. You do not need to be perfect. You need to be consistent. And consistency starts with a record.
Four weeks from now, you will have data. You will have measurements. You will have a graph that shows your progress in a line you drew yourself. That line is proof that your effort was real.
Ready to Start Your Fast Today?
The tracker is free to download and print. Use the BellyZero tools to calculate your personal numbers first, then fill in day one tonight.
Calculate Your Numbers First