⚠️This fact has been debunked
CDC data shows only 17.1% of adults were on a special diet on a given day (2015-2018). The 54% figure from 2024 IFIC survey refers to following a diet pattern 'in the past year,' not simultaneously. The claim likely conflates different statistics or misinterprets annual dieting attempts (45 million Americans per year) as simultaneous dieters.
About half of all Americans are on a diet on any given day.
Are Half of Americans Really Dieting Right Now?
You've probably heard it before: "Half of all Americans are on a diet on any given day." It's repeated in wellness blogs, cited in health articles, and used to sell everything from meal plans to gym memberships. There's just one problem—it's not true.
According to the CDC's National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, only 17.1% of American adults were on a special diet on a given day during 2015-2018. That's less than one in five people, nowhere near half. So where did this inflated statistic come from?
The Numbers Game
The confusion stems from mixing up different types of statistics. One commonly cited figure is that 45 million Americans go on a diet each year, according to Boston Medical Center. But "each year" is very different from "on any given day." Think of it this way: millions of people might visit the beach each summer, but that doesn't mean millions are at the beach right now.
A 2024 survey found that 54% of American adults followed some type of eating pattern in the past year. Again, this measures whether someone tried a diet at any point over 12 months, not whether half the country is actively dieting simultaneously. The distinction matters.
What Americans Are Actually Doing
While most Americans aren't on formal diets, they are thinking about food choices. Recent data shows:
- About 59% of Americans describe their diet as "somewhat healthy"
- Only 20% consider their eating habits "very" or "extremely" healthy
- High-protein eating is the most popular pattern among those who do follow specific diets
- Younger generations are more likely to diet—66% of Gen Z versus 42% of Boomers
Why the Myth Persists
The inflated "half of Americans" statistic is compelling because it feels plausible. With obesity rates high and diet culture pervasive, it seems reasonable that tons of people would be dieting. The wellness industry certainly benefits from this perception—after all, Americans spend $33 billion annually on weight loss products.
But the reality is more nuanced. Most Americans express interest in eating healthier and many try diets periodically, but sustained, simultaneous dieting is far less common than the popular narrative suggests. The actual figure of 17% is still significant—that's about 43 million adults—but it's a far cry from half the nation.