As the temperature drops, you find yourself reaching for more food, craving something warm, hearty, and deeply satisfying. It’s easy to assume it’s just comfort eating or a lack of discipline — but in reality, your body is doing exactly what it’s designed to do.
Winter hunger isn’t a flaw. It’s communication.
Here’s what your body is really asking for — and how to respond in a way that supports your energy, hormones, and overall wellbeing.
Your body is burning more energy to stay warm
When it’s cold, your body works harder to maintain its core temperature. This process, known as thermogenesis, requires energy — which means your body may naturally increase your appetite.
This isn’t dramatic for everyone, especially if you spend most of your time indoors, but even subtle exposure to colder temperatures can make you feel hungrier than usual. Your body is asking for fuel — not restriction.
Instead of fighting your hunger, focus on nutrient-dense meals that actually satisfy you:
- Whole grains like oats, brown rice, and quinoa
- Healthy fats like olive oil, nuts, and seeds
- Protein-rich foods to keep you full longer
You crave comfort because your mood shifts
Less sunlight in winter can affect your levels of serotonin, a neurotransmitter that helps regulate mood and appetite. Lower serotonin levels are often linked to increased cravings for carbohydrates — particularly warm, comforting ones.
This is why toast, pasta, soups, and baked goods suddenly feel essential. Listen to your body because it is asking for emotional balance and steady energy.
Rather than cutting carbs, choose ones that support your mood:
- Root vegetables like sweet potatoes and carrots
- Wholegrain breads and pastas
- Warming dishes like stews and soups
Pair them with protein and fat to avoid blood sugar crashes.
ALSO SEE: (Will add once my food post goes live for the week)
Your body wants warmth, not just calories
In colder weather, your cravings aren’t only about what you eat — but how it makes you feel. Cold salads and smoothies become less appealing because your body is seeking warmth and comfort. You body wants grounding nourishment.
Lean into soups, broths, and slow-cooked meals, herbal teas and warm drinks and roasted vegetables instead of raw.
This is less about indulgence and more about regulation — helping your nervous system feel safe and supported.
Your hunger hormones may shift
Changes in sleep patterns during winter (longer nights, darker mornings) can affect hunger hormones like ghrelin (which increases appetite) and leptin (which signals fullness).
If your sleep is disrupted — even slightly — you may feel hungrier the next day, especially for quick energy foods. So your body us needing rest.
You can support your hunger cues by prioritising consistent sleep, eating regular, balanced meals and avoiding long gaps that lead to overeating later.
You might be moving less — But needing more nourishment
Winter often brings a slower pace. You might walk less, stay indoors more, or swap high-energy workouts for gentler movement. Ironically, this doesn’t always mean you need less food.
In fact, your body may need more support, especially if your immune system is working harder or you’re dealing with seasonal fatigue. Sustained nourishment, not deprivation is what your body is craving.
Focus on iron-rich foods (like leafy greens and legumes), vitamin C to support immunity and enough calories to maintain energy and prevent burnout.
It’s also about biology — Not just behaviour
Historically, humans ate more in colder months to store energy and survive food scarcity. While modern life has changed, your body still carries echoes of that rhythm.
So if you feel hungrier in winter, it’s not “losing control.” It’s your biology doing what it’s always done. In these moments, it’s important to trust your body.
How to respond without overthinking it
Instead of trying to suppress your appetite, try this approach:
- Eat more — but eat better: prioritise whole, satisfying foods
- Add, don’t restrict: include protein, fibre, and fats to meals
- Warm your meals: shift from cold to cooked where possible
- Listen to your hunger cues: they’re more reliable than diet rules
- Slow down: winter is naturally a more reflective, restful season
Your increased hunger in colder weather isn’t a problem to fix — it’s a signal to understand. It’s your body asking for warmth, nourishment, balance, and care.
And when you respond to that with intention — not restriction — you create a relationship with food that feels supportive, not stressful.
Because sometimes, the healthiest thing you can do is simply eat the extra bowl of soup.
ALSO SEE:
Why your sleep routine might changes in autumn/winter — and how to fix It
Featured Image: Pexels
