"Fruit at night makes you gain weight." "On an empty stomach is the best time." "After eating, it raises blood sugar too much." If you've ever heard these phrases—and it's very likely you have—you're not alone. Myths about the ideal time to eat fruit have been circulating for decades in family conversations, social media, and even medical consultations. The problem is that, in most cases, they lack any solid scientific basis. Fruit is one of the healthiest foods on the planet, and surrounding it with arbitrary time restrictions can lead people to consume less of it than they should. Let's put each myth in its place.
"Fruit at night makes you gain weight": the most persistent myth

The idea that fruit makes you gain more weight if eaten at night stems from a misunderstanding of how metabolism works. The argument is usually that, at the end of the day, the body burns fewer calories and converts sugars into fat more easily. But this oversimplifies—and distorts—real physiology.
Body weight depends on the total caloric balance throughout the day and week, not on the exact moment you eat a piece of fruit. An 80-kilocalorie apple has exactly the same kilocalories at 8 AM as at 10 PM. What can vary slightly is insulin sensitivity at different times of the day, but this effect is clinically relevant mainly in people with diabetes or insulin resistance, not in the general healthy population.
That said, if eating fruit for dinner helps you replace an ultra-processed dessert or lightly curb your appetite, it's a frankly smart choice.
"It's best absorbed on an empty stomach": truth or myth?

This myth has a popular variant that says fruit should be eaten alone or on an empty stomach so that it "doesn't ferment in the stomach." The idea stems from what's called food hygiene or food combining, a theory developed in the early 20th century that claims combining certain foods causes fermentation and digestive problems.
The reality is that the human stomach is perfectly capable of digesting various types of food at the same time. It produces hydrochloric acid and digestive enzymes that work in parallel, regardless of whether the fruit is accompanied by oats, yogurt, or cheese. Fermentation only occurs in the colon, where intestinal bacteria process fiber that could not be absorbed earlier —and that is a positive thing, not a problem.
Is there any real advantage to eating fruit on an empty stomach? For some people, it can be a practical and light way to start the day. But there is no evidence that its absorption is superior or that the body utilizes it "better" than at any other time.
And after eating? The fear of a glucose spike
Another common myth is that eating fruit right after a main meal dangerously spikes blood sugar. There's some truth to this: any food with carbohydrates raises blood glucose to some extent. But fruit, thanks to its fiber, water, and certain bioactive compounds, tends to cause a more moderate glycemic response than one might expect.
In fact, several studies have observed that consuming whole fruit —not juice, but the complete piece with its fiber— after a meal can even modulate the overall glycemic peak of the intake, by slowing gastric emptying. It's not a problem; in many cases, it can be an advantage.
The tendency to surround natural foods with complicated rules often says more about our food culture than about biology. Whole fruit is one of the most nutrient-dense foods with the lowest risk of adverse effects that exist.

What Really Matters: How Much Fruit Do You Eat?
The question that deserves more attention is not when you eat fruit, but whether you are eating it. The World Health Organization recommends consuming at least 400 grams of fruits and vegetables daily, and most of the population in Spain does not meet this goal. Obsessing over the timing while neglecting the quantity is losing focus on what truly impacts health.
The time of day you eat a piece of fruit is, in terms of general health, a minor variable. What does have a proven effect is regular consumption, a variety of species and colors, and preferring whole fruit over juice. The fiber, antioxidants, vitamins, and minerals provided by fruit act throughout the day, not just within a magical time window.
Conclusion
Myths about fruit timing have one thing in common: they generate guilt or confusion around one of the healthiest and most accessible foods available. Science is quite clear on this: eating fruit —in the morning, at noon, at night, or as a snack between meals— is always better than not eating it. The timing matters much less than consistency. So, the next time you wonder if you can eat a peach before bed, the answer is almost certainly yes.