Occupation: Clinical dietitian and disability support specialist.
Published on April 18, 2026
When a motivated client hits an early keto stall, there are usually a few clear levers to pull: tighten the original keto basics, run a short carnivore-style reset for simplicity, or blend both approaches with a clear plan and exit strategy.
It helps to name the patterns clearly. A classic keto approach is often framed as about 70â75% of calories from fat, around 20% from protein, and keeping carbs roughly 20â50 g net per day. Carnivore narrows food choices to animal foodsâmeat, fish, eggs, and sometimes dairyâso carbs effectively drop to near zero, making it the most ketogenic version of low-carb.
Both approaches aim to support ketosis, where fat becomes the primary fuel. Many comparisons point to increased satiety as a shared advantage, with carnivore often feeling faster at the start and keto offering more variety for long-term living.
When progress slows, the goal isnât to panicâitâs to read the signal and choose the next best step.
Key Takeaway: Early stalls on keto are often a normal adaptation phase, insulin-resistance friction, or simple âcarb creep,â and each calls for a different next step. Use a structured experimentâdeepen keto basics, try a short carnivore reset, or run a hybrid cycleâthen reintroduce foods deliberately.
Weeks 4â8 are a common âstickyâ stretch. In practice, this often reflects normal adaptationânot a lack of effort.
Both keto and carnivore rely on a fuel shift: when carbs stay low, the body leans more heavily on fat burning, a key feature of ketosis. Even if someone hits âketo macrosâ (often around 70â75% fat with tightly limited carbs), day-to-day energy, appetite, and body composition can take time to settle. Many low-carb discussions describe adaptation time as a multi-week process rather than an overnight switch.
Think of it like changing the main engine on a ship: the direction can shift quickly, but the momentum takes longer to fully turn. Cravings may drop before measurements change, and sleep, stress, and menstrual-cycle timing can all influence what âprogressâ looks like week to week.
For some clients, the picture is also shaped by insulin sensitivity. In people with pronounced insulin resistance, results can show up more slowlyâeven with strong adherenceâbecause skeletal muscle plays such a large role in glucose handling (roughly 70â80% of insulin-stimulated glucose uptake).
So the âstallâ may be a normal settling-in period, or it may be a sign that the plan needs a clearer container. Either way, itâs readable.
Keto and carnivore are close relatives: both reduce carbs, both can steady appetite, and both echo traditional patterns seen across seasons, geographies, and food availability. The difference is mainly strictnessâand what that strictness changes for the person.
Carnivore is simplicity by design. By removing virtually all carbohydrate, it becomes the most ketogenic low-carb approach, and many comparisons describe a faster speed of ketosis simply because there are fewer variables.
Keto keeps carbs low while allowing low-starch vegetables, nuts, seeds, and sometimes berriesâoften described around 70â75% fat with moderate protein. That extra range can bring more fiber and a broader micronutrient palette, while carnivore emphasizes animal-based fats, proteins, and minerals. Overviews commonly highlight carnivore as containing no plant foods, which naturally reduces plant fibers and phytonutrients compared with plant-inclusive keto.
From a traditional-medicine lens, it can be useful to see keto as a plant-inclusive âseasonâ and carnivore as a modern echo of hunting and herding culturesâan ancestral framing many practitioners recognize. Practical summaries also note that ketoâs variety and allowance of longâterm variety can make it easier to sustain than strict carnivore for many people.
Itâs also worth noticing how strong the public narrative can be. Belz and colleagues observed, âNumerous health benefits are attributed to the CD on social mediaâŠâ in their scoping review. In coaching, thatâs a cue to respect lived experience while keeping experiments structured and grounded.
Before switching labels, it helps to identify what kind of stall youâre seeing. Most fall into three buckets: adaptation, insulin-resistance dominance, or âcarb creep.â
Movement can be a quiet breakthrough lever. A homeâbased aerobic routine in women with PCOS was associated with improvements in weight and insulin-resistance-related markersâwithout changing the food approach at all.
Coaching structure matters, too. A review of metabolic-health coaching summarized: âHealth coaching can reduce A1C by an average of 0.62% and improve nutrition behaviors in 88% of reviewed studies.â The reported 0.62% and 88% figures are a useful reminder: accountability and skills often outperform âmore rules.â
Once the stall is named correctly, the next lever tends to be obvious.
A short carnivore phase can be powerful when someone needs radical simplicityâboth physiologically and psychologically.
Many practitioners see appetite calm down when all carbohydrates are removed, partly because the diet becomes less âsnackable.â Commentary on stricter low-carb patterns often points to strong satiety. Belz and colleagues also captured reports of increased satiety and weight-related changes among people who chose carnivore.
Another common experience is steadier energy. Mainstream overviews note carnivore may help stabilize blood sugar because there are no post-meal carbohydrate spikes to manage. For clients who feel pulled around by dips and cravings, that steadiness can feel deeply grounding.
There are trade-offs, and in traditional practice the goal is always to choose the right âseasonâ for the person. One perspective argues essential nutrients can be obtained with a well-planned carnivore approach, but removing plants also removes plant fibers and many phytonutrients during that phase. Analyses describe carnivore as lowering fiber and polyphenols compared with keto.
Thatâs why many practitioners treat carnivore as a time-bound âhard seasonâ with a clear reintroduction planâan approach often reflected in reset guides.
This lever fits best when the client actively wants simplicity, understands the trade-offs, and agrees to a reintroduction plan from day one.
If the stall is really about stress, inconsistent routines, or social friction, strengthening keto usually works better than tightening into carnivore.
The most reliable âresetâ is often a return to basics: whole foods, consistent carb limits, and enough protein. Overviews emphasize a wholeâfood focus alongside steady carbohydrate limits. From there, small and practical tweaksâcommon macro adjustments like adjusting fats for satiety or moderating proteinâcan restart momentum without changing the entire style of eating.
Put simply: the container often matters more than the label. Structured support repeatedly correlates with better day-to-day food choices, including the 88% finding on nutrition behaviors. And because stress can drive cravings, practices like breathwork, gentle movement, and mindfulness can make keto feel dramatically more livable. Mindfulness-based approaches have been associated with reduced stress, which often shows up as steadier eating.
âEffective behavior-change interventions match strategies to a personâs readiness and context rather than relying on information alone.â
This principleâcentral to behaviorâchange modelsâis why many stalls resolve when you deepen the foundations: sleep, nervous-system regulation, and consistent routines.
This path is ideal when the client values food diversity, social ease, and skill-building more than short-term strictness.
Many people thrive with cycles: a short carnivore reset to regain traction, then a careful return to a more diverse keto rhythm.
In practice, this can look like a simple arc: carnivore as a short elimination-style reset, followed by measured reintroductionâan idea echoed in cyclical guides. Which approach âwinsâ often depends on personal preference, lifestyle, and how the body responds.
Social life is real life. Comparisons often note keto supports social sustainability through variety, while carnivore offers simplicity with more restriction. The goal is to build bridges between phases so clients donât feel trapped.
Hereâs a simple hybrid blueprint:
With clear âseasons,â clients get structure without feeling like theyâre starting over every month.
Keto and carnivore can be strong tools, and ethical use starts with clear agreements, informed choice, and respect for culture, history, and lived reality.
Best-practice health-coaching guidance emphasizes collaboration, frequent check-ins, and tailoring to readiness; see best practices. Other coaching commentary highlights selfâefficacyâthe personâs belief in their ability to follow throughâas a key driver of results.
Language matters: stay grounded in support and experiments, not promises.
âThe carnivore diet may lead to short-term weight loss or symptom relief for some people, often due to the removal of ultra-processed foods and simply eating less because the diet is so restrictive.â
This shortâterm framing is a helpful reminder: sometimes the âmagicâ is simply removing ultra-processed foods and reducing decision fatigue. Heart-health commentators also flag that LDL may rise for some individuals, supporting careful monitoring and dialogue with qualified professionals; see the LDL caution.
Practical boundaries to hold:
Held this way, these approaches stay flexibleâtools the person uses, not identities they have to defend.
Early stalls arenât dead ends. Theyâre feedbackâan invitation to refine the plan with structure and kindness. Carnivore can bring speed and appetite calm, keto can bring variety and staying power, and a hybrid cycle can offer a practical middle path.
Comparative summaries often point to carnivore supporting early momentum, while keto shines in personalization and everyday fit. The best choice is the one that matches the clientâs body feedback, goals, social world, and cultural roots.
And when experimentation is guided, results tend to be more consistent. The structured support findings are a strong reminder that skill-building and accountability often beat diet-hopping.
If youâre ready to deepen your skills in this area, the Carnivore Diet Health Coach Certification on Naturalistico is designed to help you work with these approaches ethically and effectively, integrating traditional perspectives with modern evidence and real-world coaching tools.
Apply this stall-reading framework in the Carnivore Diet Health Coach Certification.
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