Intuitive Eating: Definition, Benefits, Best Practices

Jenna Hilton
June 4, 2025

As weight gain, obesity, and eating disorders become global medical concerns, the health and beauty industries are coming up with an array of health and weight loss advice. They range from science-based nutritional plans to quick, fad diets.

In the overwhelming mix of diet recommendations, one “program” distinctly stands out – intuitive eating.

This article explains intuitive eating, how to get started with its ten basic principles, and what benefits to expect from this anti-diet approach.

Intuitive eating

What Is Intuitive Eating?

Intuitive eating is an approach to eating that helps us relearn how our ancestors ate by listening to internal hunger and fullness cues rather than external rules or restrictions. It advocates eating when hungry, stopping when full, and having a positive relationship with both food and your body.

Although it sounds like common sense, many people have lost this internal compass due to chronic stress, emotional triggers, and hormonal imbalances. These factors lead to overeating and various psychological struggles related to food and body image.

Intuitive eating is referred to as an anti-diet approach because it instructs people to unlearn what the dieting culture has promoted for decades:

  • Restricted eating
  • Calorie counting
  • Demonizing and eliminating whole food groups (e.g., carbs)
  • Guilt associated with enjoying palatable foods
  • The pursuit of a skinnier body

Nutritionists advocating intuitive eating don’t recommend any specific foods, calorie amount, or periods of eating. Instead, they teach patients to recognize the symptoms of physical hunger, pay attention to how they feel during a meal, take pleasure in food, and foster body positivity, letting go of the idea that they should look a specific way.

Intuitive vs. Mindful Eating

Intuitive and mindful eating have overlapping elements. People often mistakenly think of them as synonymous.

Mindfulness is a philosophy that promotes a heightened awareness of one’s senses and emotions in relationship to the outside world and the present moment. Applied to eating, mindfulness involves focusing on the meal’s taste, texture, smell, and the sensations it evokes, reflecting on how it was sourced and prepared, and appreciating how it nourishes the body.

While intuitive eating can include these aspects, it prioritizes developing a healthy relationship with one’s body and following the natural hunger signals. It focuses more on internal attunement than on the eating experience.   

History of Intuitive Eating

The concept of intuitive eating first appeared in 1995 in the eponymous book written by registered dietitian nutritionists Evelyn Tribole and Elyse Resch. The authors wanted to help patients relearn the natural principles of following hunger and satiety cues and reject dieting principles, which often lead to low self-esteem, health concerns due to weight fluctuations, and psychological and mental problems.

Evelyn Tribole and Elyse Resch based their findings on previous research on emotional eating and weight loss practices, mostly from the 1970s and ‘80s.

10 Principles of Intuitive Eating

Evelyn Tribole and Elyse Resch came up with ten principles of intuitive eating that explain the framework in a straightforward manner.

1. Reject Diet Culture

The diet culture perpetuates the false idea that having a thin body solves various problems in life. It traps people in an obsessive state of constantly thinking about food, trying to lose weight, and feeling guilty for failing. People can adopt intuitive eating habits and a healthier mindset by rejecting the diet culture and restrictive eating.

2. Honor Your Hunger

This principle reminds people to listen to their hunger cues and eat when hungry. Restricting calories and allowing oneself to become excessively hungry often lead to overeating. Giving the body the nutrients it needs when it needs them builds trust with the body.

3. Make Peace with Food

Restricting certain foods can build intense cravings for them, which results in binge eating. With intuitive eating, all foods are allowed. People are better at moderation when they know they can have more of their favorite food the following day.

4. Discover the Satisfaction Factor

People on diets usually associate enjoying food with an inability to eat in moderation. Taking pleasure in food is seen as a threat to weight loss. In contrast, the advocates of intuitive eating emphasize the importance of satisfaction in the eating experience, believing it helps people better recognize satiety signals.

5. Feel Your Fullness

Like mindful eating, intuitive eating is about listening to satiety cues and trusting oneself to put away food when comfortably full. It requires eating slowly and pausing between bites to reflect on how the food tastes and the feeling of fullness.

6. Challenge the Food Police

The food police in one’s mind repeats phrases learned from the diet culture. It sets rules about what and how to eat. It is necessary to silence the food police to allow room for intuitive eating.

7. Cope with Your Emotions with Kindness

Intuitive eating allows people to tap into their emotions gently, without guilt and pressure. It helps them recognize that food can’t solve life’s problems and dispel unpleasant feelings. It may help them feel good for a brief moment, but overeating often leads to digestive and other symptoms, adding more discomfort and pain to existing problems.

8. Respect Your Body

A big part of intuitive eating is learning to respect and love one’s body, regardless of size and shape. It helps people abandon unrealistic expectations and feel good about themselves.

9. Movement – Feel the Difference

Intuitive eating also teaches people intuitive movement. It promotes physical activity that feels good and doesn’t follow an overly structured plan for melting fat and calories. Enjoying a workout is the prerequisite for consistency in exercising and experiencing the health benefits of regular activity.

10. Honor Your Health – Gentle Nutrition

Intuitive eating doesn’t promote weight loss, but it emphasizes the importance of making optimal food choices. Without strictly observing what they eat, people should listen to what their bodies need and crave, and eat in a way that makes them feel light, comfortable, energized, and satisfied.

Benefits of Intuitive Eating

Benefits  of intuitive eating

Since the book came out, numerous studies have analyzed the structure and effectiveness of intuitive eating. Many suggest the following physiological, emotional, and mental benefits of the anti-diet framework:

  • Improved body image
  • Higher self-esteem
  • Improved mood
  • Decreased cortisol production
  • Lower depressive symptoms
  • Healthier eating habits
  • Lower body mass index
  • Improved cholesterol levels
  • Enhanced overall well-being

Challenges of Intuitive Eating

Some researchers recognize a few challenges of intuitive eating. They argue that an approach without specific rules regarding what and when to eat leaves too much room for loss of control and overeating. This especially concerns patients with a food addiction stemming from a neurobiological source, such as in a drug addiction. An addiction to highly palatable, calorie-dense foods may need a more structured plan than intuition because intuitive signals can be overwhelmed by intense cravings.

Another challenge is that the freedom to choose any food may not be suitable for patients with more severe, chronic diseases, such as diabetes.

That said, current evidence suggests improved health markers in people who practice intuitive eating. Patients with chronic diseases should discuss the adequate dietary approach for their condition with their healthcare provider or a registered dietitian.

How to Get Started with Intuitive Eating?

Here are some practical tips on getting started with intuitive eating:

  1. Pay attention to what and how much you eat and how you feel afterward.
  2. Note whether you eat when hungry or for other reasons. If you use food for emotional support, look for other ways to comfort yourself. Talk to friends more, go for a walk when you crave comforting foods, and take up stress-relieving hobbies.
  3. Be more attentive to hunger signals. Eat slowly to register when you are comfortably full.
  4. Be kinder and more accepting of your body.
  5. Study the ten principles of intuitive eating.
  6. Read “Intuitive Eating” for a more thorough explanation of the principles.

Identifying Physical vs. Emotional Hunger Cues

The following lists can help you identify physical and emotional hunger cues.

Physical hunger:

  • Grumbling stomach
  • Irritability
  • Lightheadedness
  • Headache
  • Hunger gradually intensifies
  • No specific food cravings

Emotional hunger:

  • Sudden craving/hunger
  • Craving specific foods (usually palatable, calorie-dense foods)
  • The stomach is quiet
  • The craving is associated with guilt

Conclusion

Intuitive eating is a unique approach to nutrition that focuses on attuning the mind and body, and responding to natural hunger cues instead of emotional cravings. It rejects the diet culture and helps patients embrace their bodies regardless of size. This more accepting, less restraining method often improves physical and mental health.

Jenna Hilton
Jenna Hilton has been a practicing PA since 2009, specializing in Family, Internal Medicine and Medical Aesthetics. She attended Arizona State University where she received her Bachelor's Degree and graduated magna cum laude. She received her Master of Science degree in Physician Assistant Studies from A.T. Still University.

Jenna has been injecting neurotoxin and dermal filler since 2013. She received certification as a Master Injector in 2017 through Empire Medical in Los Angeles, California. She is currently working on a Fellowship Program in Anti-Aging and Regenerative Medicine through the American Academy of Anti-Aging Medicine. Her special interests include use of PLLA, Ablative/Non ablative skin resurfacing, PDO threads, hormone therapy and nutritional therapies to improve cellular regeneration and medically supervised weight loss.

Jenna Hilton believes in a multi-factorial approach, considering internal factors that accelerate aging and disease development. She always enjoys teaching. She co-founded Vibrant EDU courses at Vibrant Skin Bar and regularly performs one-on-one training with fellow injectors. She teaches Aesthetic and Advanced Injectable Courses at National Laser Institute. She has been named Preceptor of the Year and is an Adjunct Faculty Member at Midwestern University. She was born in Iowa, and lives with her husband and three children in Phoenix, AZ.

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