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- A short walk after dinner may support healthy cholesterol and heart health.
- Limiting late-night snacks can help support healthy cholesterol levels by reducing saturated fat and added sugar intake.
- Getting enough sleep may support healthier cholesterol levels over time.
If you're trying to lower your cholesterol, don't overlook what happens after dinner. Your evening habits can affect your activity, sleep, and food choices the next day, all of which can influence cholesterol and heart health. While no single habit will lower cholesterol overnight, small changes can support your overall heart health. Here are five healthy after-dinner habits worth considering.
1. Take a Walk After Dinner
Taking a walk after dinner is a simple way to support heart health.
Regular physical activity can help raise HDL ("good") cholesterol, lower triglycerides, support weight management, and improve cardiovascular health.
The good news is you don't have to spend an hour at the gym to see benefits. Even a 10-to-20-minute walk after dinner can help you move more and work toward the recommended 150 minutes of moderate-intensity activity per week.
Walking after dinner may also help support healthy blood sugar levels. This matters because insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes are linked with higher levels of LDL ("bad") cholesterol and triglycerides.
2. Skip Late-Night Snacking
Late-night snacking isn't always a problem, but the foods people tend to reach for at night often aren't the best choice for heart health.
Ice cream, chips, cookies, candy, and other ultra-processed snacks are often high in saturated fat, added sugar, or both. Eating these foods regularly may make it harder to manage cholesterol levels and maintain a healthy weight.
If you find yourself hungry every night after dinner, it may be worth looking at your meals earlier in the day. Protein, fiber, and healthy fats help keep you satisfied and may reduce cravings later in the evening.
If you're truly hungry, choose a snack that provides fiber and/or healthy fats, such as fruit, air-popped popcorn, or a small handful of nuts.
3. Unwind Before Bed
Stress may not affect cholesterol as directly as diet, but it can influence many of the habits that support healthy cholesterol levels.
When you're stressed, you may be more likely to overeat, skip exercise, sleep poorly, or rely on convenience foods. Over time, those habits can take a toll on heart health.
That's why it can be helpful to build a few minutes of stress management into your evening routine.
Some options include:
- Reading a book
- Gentle stretching or yoga
- Journaling
- Meditation
- Deep breathing exercises
- Taking a warm bath
4. Prioritize Sleep
Sleep is easy to overlook when talking about cholesterol, but it plays an important role in overall heart health.
Research suggests that poor sleep is linked to higher levels of LDL cholesterol and triglycerides. Not getting enough sleep can also affect hormones that regulate hunger and appetite, making it harder to stick to healthy eating habits.
Most adults should aim for seven to nine hours of sleep each night. Try going to bed and waking up around the same time each day, limiting screen time before bed, and keeping your bedroom cool, dark, and quiet.
5. Spend a Few Minutes Meal Prepping
A few minutes of planning at night can make healthy eating easier the next day. When life gets busy, it's easy to grab whatever is convenient. Unfortunately, those foods are often higher in saturated fat, sodium, and added sugar than meals prepared at home.
Meal planning doesn't have to mean spending hours in the kitchen. Even something as simple as packing your lunch, washing fruit, prepping overnight oats, or deciding what's for dinner the next day can help.
Planning ahead may also make it easier to include foods that support healthy cholesterol levels, such as fruits, vegetables, beans, whole grains, nuts, seeds, and fatty fish.
Other Ways to Help Lower Cholesterol
Healthy after-dinner habits can help, but they work best when paired with other cholesterol-lowering strategies. These include:
- Eat more soluble fiber from oats, beans, lentils, apples, chia seeds, and flaxseeds
- Choose unsaturated fats from olive oil, nuts, seeds, avocado, and fatty fish
- Limit saturated fat from fatty meats, butter, full-fat dairy, and fried foods
- Exercise regularly, aiming for at least 150 minutes per week
- Avoid smoking and limit alcohol

