• Determine Food Intolerances and Allergies with the cerascreen® Food Reaction Test.
search icon
Search
Login

Your cerascreen account

Activate tests, check your results and manage your orders and account data.

Contact
Customer support E-Mail +44 330 822 4289 M-F 08:00-13:00
0
Cart
Cart
Loader
Menu
Contact
  • How it works
  • shop icon Shop
    • Bestsellers
      • Food Intolerance Test & Food Allergy Test
      • Histamine Intolerance Test
      • Mineral Test
      • Vitamin D Test
      • Vitamin B12 Blood Test
    • Selftests
      • Allergy Tests
      • Vitamin Tests
      • Nutrient Tests
      • Hormones
      • DNA Tests
      • All tests
    • Nutrition
      • Nutrition Plan
      • Nutritional Coaching
      • Food Intolerance Test + nutritional coaching
    New
    product image
    Undetected allergies? Find out how your body reacts to 61 allergens
    Learn more
    product image
    How is your vitamin D level? Test it from home!
    Discover product
  • blog icon Blog
b2b icon Become a partner
Start symptom check
  • contact iconContact
    • Customer support
    • E-Mail
    • +44 330 822 4289 M-F 08:00-13:00
Contact
  • How it works
  • shop icon Shop
    • Bestsellers
      • Food Intolerance Test & Food Allergy Test
      • Histamine Intolerance Test
      • Mineral Test
      • Vitamin D Test
      • Vitamin B12 Blood Test
    • Selftests
      • Allergy Tests
      • Vitamin Tests
      • Nutrient Tests
      • Hormones
      • DNA Tests
      • All tests
    • Nutrition
      • Nutrition Plan
      • Nutritional Coaching
      • Food Intolerance Test + nutritional coaching
    New
    product image
    Undetected allergies? Find out how your body reacts to 61 allergens
    Learn more
    product image
    How is your vitamin D level? Test it from home!
    Discover product
  • blog icon Blog
b2b icon Become a partner
Start symptom check
  • contact iconContact
    • Customer support
    • E-Mail
    • +44 330 822 4289 M-F 08:00-13:00
New
product image
Undetected allergies? Find out how your body reacts to 61 allergens
Learn more
product image
How is your vitamin D level? Test it from home!
Discover product
  • Home
  • News
  • The negative calorie myth

We hope you enjoy reading this post

To discover more from our experts about any symptoms you’re experiencing, click here

The negative calorie myth

By: Felix Ufer
Updated on 18.03.2022

This diet concept sounds so good, you really want to believe in it. The idea that there is such a thing as foods with negative calories. At the heart of the concept it is basically assumed that more energy is required to digest some foods than these provide in calories. It therefore follows that: Such foods help to lose weight.
Above all celery and also lemons have been continually added to the weight-watcher’s shopping basket in recent years. However, some have perhaps also heard spinach and cabbage or even grapefruit described as “negative calorie foods”. Celery represents a simple example.
Celery is insubstantial from a nutrition science point of view, predominantly consisting of water, a few nutrients and roughage. A large stick of celery contains a mere 10 kilocalories. Negative calorie advocates claim that the process of chewing and digestion burns more calories than the celery stick contains, negative calories as it were. Sounds like a win-win situation, right? But what actually lies behind the theory?
Unfortunately, this is nothing more than a myth that was put forward as true in the nutrition and dieting world, even though it greatly lacks scientific evidence.

Main problems of the negative calorie myth
1. The theory is far too simple: Our digestive system requires calories, yet the amount of calories that the body needs for digestion is insignificant/tiny in comparison to the amount contained in the food. The body uses only about 10% of the total energy consumption, spread over the day, to digest food and store nutrients. There is no evidence that the energy needed to digest certain foods is greater than the energy they actually contain.
2. The list of foods is ridiculous: Diverse foods were added to the “negative calorie list” which have little in common apart from a high water content and cellulose. Examples: Celery, lemons, cabbage, corn salad, apples, iceberg lettuce, asparagus, strawberries, blueberries, red berries, cauliflower, cucumbers, cress, melons, tomatoes, to name just a few.
3. Varieties of fruit cannot be “negative calorie foods”: Fruit typically contains a great deal of water and indigestible roughage, but also sometimes very high amounts of natural sugar. Of course sugar can also be present in vegetables, but fruit usually contains more. In pure and simple terms, it is complete nonsense to describe fruit as having negative calories. One portion of watermelon typically has 46 kcal, just under 12 grams of carbohydrate, of which 9 grams are nevertheless sugar. Even if watermelon contains only 46 kcal, simple biochemistry and the laws of thermogenesis contradict the negative calorie theory.

Conclusion
Many varieties of fruit and vegetables actually contain only a small amount of calories. However, there is no scientific evidence for the “negative calorie theory”, a fact that reveals how this is merely a myth that has become obstinately entrenched in the world of dieting forums.
However, fresh fruit and vegetables contain high levels of vitamins and minerals as well as antioxidants and secondary plant substances that are indispensable for a healthy body. Moreover, the high water (and roughage) content is very filing. A diet rich in fruit and vegetables is good and helps to maintain or lose weight.

Who we are

We want to help our customers live a healthier life. To do this, we work with scientists and doctors to develop tests that help you understand your symptoms.

Learn more
Free health insights

Subscribe to our newsletter and get information on current health topics, nutrition and trends. We’ll also give you personal product recommendations and keep you up to date on promotions, discounts and prize draws. Oh, and don’t forget: we’ll gift you a £5 discount on your first order after you’ve signed up.

Sign up
Related topics
  1. Important information: Closed laboratories during the Christmas and New Year period
  2. Coronavirus antibodies: how long do Covid antibodies last?
  3. Coronavirus pandemic: what you need to know about Covid-19
  4. Covid-19 vaccine rollout: how effective is the Covid vaccine?
  5. my.cerascreen: Test data temporarily unavailable
Share this article:
Table of contents
Content
cerascreen ®
  • Contact us
  • About cerascreen®
  • Our research
Help + FAQs
  • FAQ + Help Centre
  • Test kit instructions
  • Payment + Shipping
Your benefits
  • image of Secure and encrypted health data Secure and encrypted health data
  • image of Free shipping starting from £90,00 Free shipping starting from £90,00
  • image of 30 Days Refund Policy 30 Days Refund Policy
Payment methods
Visa Mastercard Maestro American Express Union Pay Paypal Bank Transfer
cerascreen App
Follow Cerascreen
  • Legal Notice
  • Conditions of Use & Sale
  • Privacy & Data Protection
© 2025 Cerascreen GmbH
0

Cart

Loader
Loader
Loader
Upsell Data Images

this is just a warning

Empty