Type 2 diabetes be reversed?
A plain-language guide to prevention, reversal, and the diet changes that genuinely move the needle on blood sugar
A few years ago, a 52-year-old accountant from Pune walked into his doctor’s office expecting a routine check-up. He walked out with a Type 2 diabetes diagnosis, a prescription for Metformin, and a sheet of generic dietary advice that said, essentially, “eat less sugar.” He followed the prescription. He mostly ignored the advice. Two years later, his HbA1c had crept even higher. Then a nutritionist suggested he try a low-carbohydrate, whole-food approach. Six months after that, his blood sugar was back in the normal range — and his doctor took him off medication.
His story is not a miracle. It is increasingly common. And it raises a question that millions of people living with high blood sugar, insulin resistance, or a full Type 2 diabetes diagnosis are quietly asking: can this condition actually be reversed? The answer, backed by a growing body of clinical research, is a cautious but real “yes” — for many people, under the right conditions.
This guide will walk you through what Type 2 diabetes is, how to prevent it if you are at risk, what reversal actually means (and doesn’t mean), and the dietary strategies that are most strongly supported by evidence. No fads. No gimmicks. Just a clear-eyed look at what works.
Understanding Type 2 Diabetes: More Than a Sugar Problem
Type 2 diabetes is often described as a “blood sugar disease,” but that framing misses the deeper mechanism. At its core, it is a condition of insulin resistance — the body’s cells have become progressively less responsive to insulin, the hormone that ushers glucose out of the bloodstream and into cells for energy. The pancreas compensates by pumping out more and more insulin. Eventually, it can’t keep up, and blood glucose stays persistently elevated.
What drives insulin resistance? Excess body fat — particularly visceral fat stored around the liver and abdominal organs — plays a central role. Chronic inflammation, physical inactivity, poor sleep, stress, and certain genetic predispositions also contribute. It is not simply about how much sugar you eat, though ultra-processed, high-carbohydrate diets are a significant accelerant.
The global scale of the problem is sobering. According to the International Diabetes Federation, 537 million adults were living with diabetes worldwide as of 2021, and roughly 90% of those cases are Type 2. Perhaps most striking: experts estimate that up to 50% of cases could be prevented or significantly delayed through lifestyle changes alone. India carries one of the heaviest burdens globally — often called the “diabetes capital of the world” — with over 100 million people affected. Genetics do play a role, but lifestyle is the dominant lever, which means it is also the biggest opportunity.
Type 2 Diabetes Prevention: Catching It Before It Starts
Prevention is where the science is most unambiguous. If you are in the pre-diabetic range — fasting blood glucose between 100–125 mg/dL or HbA1c between 5.7–6.4% — you have a meaningful window to turn things around before full-blown diabetes develops. Even if you have no current blood sugar concerns, the strategies below reduce your risk substantially.
1. Move Your Body — Especially After Meals
Exercise is arguably the most powerful insulin-sensitizing tool available. Muscle contractions allow cells to absorb glucose without insulin, effectively giving the pancreas a rest. Both aerobic exercise (brisk walking, cycling, swimming) and resistance training (weights, bodyweight exercises) independently improve insulin sensitivity. Research consistently shows that even a 10–15 minute walk after meals can significantly blunt post-meal blood sugar spikes. You do not need a gym membership to prevent diabetes — you need consistency.
2. Prioritize Sleep Like It Is a Medication
Poor sleep is an underappreciated driver of insulin resistance. Studies show that even a single night of sleep deprivation can impair insulin sensitivity the following day. Chronic sleep restriction is associated with increased hunger hormones (ghrelin), reduced satiety signals (leptin), and higher cortisol — a hormone that directly raises blood glucose. Aim for 7–9 hours of quality sleep. It is not a luxury; it is metabolic medicine.
3. Reduce Ultra-Processed Foods
This does not mean eating perfectly. It means recognizing that foods engineered for hyper-palatability — refined flour, added sugars, industrial seed oils, artificial flavors — tend to spike blood sugar rapidly, drive overeating, and promote visceral fat accumulation. Crowding them out with whole foods has outsized benefits.
4. Manage Chronic Stress
Cortisol triggers the liver to release glucose into the bloodstream — a helpful survival response in short bursts, but chronically damaging when stress never resolves. Practices like mindfulness, adequate rest, time in nature, and social connection are not soft wellness advice; they are blood sugar management tools.
5. Get Regular Blood Tests
Pre-diabetes causes no symptoms. The only way to catch it is to test for it. A simple fasting glucose or HbA1c test can identify risk years before Type 2 diabetes develops. If you are over 35, carry excess weight, or have a family history of diabetes, ask your doctor about screening regularly.

Can Type 2 Diabetes Be Reversed? What the Research Actually Shows
“Remission of Type 2 diabetes is achievable through substantial, sustained weight loss — and it is more common than most patients or doctors realise.” — The Lancet, DiRECT Trial, 2019
The word “reversal” is powerful, and it deserves precision. The medical community increasingly uses the term “remission” — defined as HbA1c below 6.5% for at least three months without diabetes medication. This is not a cure. The underlying predisposition remains. But functionally, the disease is no longer expressing itself.
The landmark DiRECT Trial from the UK found that nearly half of participants achieved remission after one year on a structured, calorie-restricted diet, with 86% of those who lost 15 kg or more entering remission. The Virta Health clinical study showed similar results with a low-carbohydrate ketogenic approach: after two years, 53% of participants had achieved remission and 54% reduced or eliminated insulin use.
What both approaches have in common is significant: they reduce liver fat and visceral fat, which directly restores insulin sensitivity in the liver and pancreas. The mechanism makes sense. The clinical evidence is mounting. Reversal is not guaranteed for everyone — particularly those who have lived with diabetes for many years or have lost significant beta-cell function — but it is a realistic goal for many, especially those diagnosed relatively recently.
Important note: If you are on diabetes medication — particularly insulin or sulfonylureas — never change your diet dramatically without medical supervision. Significant dietary changes can cause blood sugar to drop dangerously. Work with a doctor or registered dietitian familiar with dietary approaches to diabetes management.
The Best Diet for Type 2 Diabetes: What to Eat (and What to Skip)
There is no single “diabetes diet.” Researchers have found multiple dietary patterns that improve blood sugar control — and the best one is the one you can actually sustain. That said, the evidence does point toward some consistent principles.
The Low-Carbohydrate Approach
Reducing dietary carbohydrates is the most direct way to lower blood glucose — because carbohydrates are the primary macronutrient that raises it. Low-carb diets (typically under 130g carbohydrates per day) and very low-carb or ketogenic diets (under 50g per day) have consistently shown strong results in clinical trials for reducing HbA1c, triglycerides, and medication requirements. Foods to build meals around include eggs, fish, meat, non-starchy vegetables, nuts, seeds, avocado, olive oil, and full-fat dairy.
The Mediterranean Diet
The Mediterranean dietary pattern — rich in vegetables, legumes, whole grains, olive oil, fish, and moderate amounts of wine — has decades of evidence supporting improvements in blood sugar, cardiovascular risk, and inflammatory markers. It is less restrictive than strict low-carb and easier for many people to sustain long-term. A 2020 meta-analysis in BMJ Open Diabetes Research & Care found it significantly reduced HbA1c compared to control diets.
The Low-GI / Low-GL Approach
The Glycaemic Index (GI) ranks foods by how quickly they raise blood sugar. Choosing lower-GI foods — lentils, beans, most vegetables, whole oats, barley, sweet potato — over high-GI options causes slower, gentler rises in blood glucose. This approach is particularly practical for South Asian diets, where swapping white rice for smaller portions of parboiled or basmati rice, or incorporating more dal and sabzi, can make a meaningful difference without wholesale dietary overhaul.
What to favour: oats, barley, millet, leafy greens, karela, methi, eggs, fish, dal, paneer, olive oil, ghee in moderation, nuts, water, unsweetened chai, berries, guava, and jamun.
What to limit: white bread, maida, large portions of white rice, sugary drinks, packaged juices, sweetened lassi, processed meats, refined oils in excess, and high-sugar fruits like mango and banana in large amounts.
Meal Timing Matters Too
Emerging research on intermittent fasting and time-restricted eating (eating within a consistent 8–10 hour window each day) suggests these approaches can improve insulin sensitivity, reduce fasting glucose, and support weight loss independent of caloric restriction. They are not essential, but they are a useful tool for those who find them sustainable.
Lifestyle Habits That Supercharge Your Diabetes Action Plan
Diet and exercise are the twin pillars, but the following habits compound their effects significantly.
Eat protein and fat first at meals. Starting a meal with protein, fat, or vegetables before eating carbohydrates significantly reduces post-meal blood sugar spikes — a strategy supported by research from Weill Cornell Medicine.
Track your numbers at home. A glucometer (blood glucose monitor) allows you to see how specific foods affect your blood sugar — because individual responses vary widely. This personalised data is more actionable than any generalised food list.
Stay hydrated. Dehydration concentrates blood glucose. Drinking adequate water throughout the day helps the kidneys flush out excess glucose and maintains better metabolic function overall.
Build muscle through strength training. Skeletal muscle is the body’s largest glucose sink. More muscle mass means more capacity to absorb blood sugar. Even two sessions of resistance training per week can improve HbA1c meaningfully.
Reduce or eliminate alcohol. Alcohol can cause erratic blood sugar swings — hypoglycaemia when combined with medication, or hyperglycaemia from high-sugar mixers and caloric load. If you drink, do so with food and in small amounts.
Consider beneficial spices and foods. Bitter gourd (karela), fenugreek seeds (methi), cinnamon, and berberine have modest but real evidence for blood sugar reduction. They are adjuncts, not replacements for the above — but worth including in a wholesome South Asian diet.
The Honest Bottom Line
Type 2 diabetes is not a life sentence. For many people — particularly those diagnosed in recent years with motivation to make lifestyle changes — significant improvement or full remission is within reach. The tools are largely unsexy: eat real food, move regularly, sleep well, manage stress, and work closely with a healthcare team.
What is perhaps most hopeful about recent research is that it has moved us away from a purely medication-first model toward one that puts you — your choices, your plate, your daily habits — at the centre of care. That is not a burden. That is agency.
If you are reading this with a diagnosis, or a family member who has one, start with one change. A 15-minute walk after dinner. Swapping white bread for a smaller portion of whole grain. Booking a blood test you have been putting off. Momentum builds. The accountant from Pune started with one thing too.
Found this helpful? Share it with someone who needs it, leave a comment with your own experience, or subscribe to our newsletter for more evidence-based health insights — no fluff, no spam.
Sources & Further Reading
- Lean, M.E.J. et al. (2019). DiRECT Trial, 2-year results. The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology — thelancet.com
- Hallberg, S.J. et al. (2019). Virta Health study. Diabetes Therapy — springer.com
- International Diabetes Federation. (2021). IDF Diabetes Atlas, 10th edition — diabetesatlas.org
- American Diabetes Association. (2023). Standards of Medical Care in Diabetes — diabetesjournals.org
- Shukla, A.P. et al. (2017). Food Order Has a Significant Impact on Postprandial Glucose and Insulin Levels. Diabetes Care, Weill Cornell Medicine.
- Esposito, K. et al. (2020). Mediterranean diet and type 2 diabetes prevention. BMJ Open Diabetes Research & Care.

