Types of Eating Disorders
Eating disorders do not have one look, one cause, or one path to recovery
Eating disorders are serious mental and physical health conditions involving persistent disturbances in eating, nourishment, body image, or related behaviors.
They can affect people of every age, gender, race, body size, ability, and background. Someone does not need to meet every diagnostic criterion, lose weight, or appear visibly unwell to deserve care.
This page offers a general overview. Only a qualified clinician can provide an assessment or diagnosis.
Different presentations can share serious risks and distress
These descriptions are educational summaries, not diagnostic checklists. A person may move between diagnoses or experience overlapping symptoms.
Restriction, fear, and difficulty meeting the body’s needs
Anorexia nervosa can involve significant restriction, intense fear of weight gain, and behaviors that interfere with nourishment or weight restoration.
- Restriction or persistent difficulty eating enough
- Fear of weight gain or body changes
- Rigid food or movement rules
- Body image disturbance or difficulty recognizing medical risk
Cycles of binge eating and compensatory behaviors
Bulimia nervosa involves recurrent binge-eating episodes followed by attempts to compensate or prevent feared consequences.
- Loss-of-control eating or binge episodes
- Vomiting, fasting, laxative use, or compulsive exercise
- Shame, secrecy, or distress after eating
- Self-evaluation strongly influenced by weight or shape
Recurrent loss-of-control eating without regular compensation
Binge eating disorder involves recurrent episodes of eating accompanied by a sense of being unable to stop, often followed by distress or shame.
- Eating rapidly or beyond comfortable fullness
- Eating privately because of embarrassment
- Feeling disconnected or out of control
- Significant distress about the pattern
Avoidant or restrictive eating without weight or shape concerns
ARFID may involve limited intake related to sensory sensitivity, fear of aversive consequences, low interest in eating, or a combination of these factors.
- Very limited food variety or volume
- Fear of choking, vomiting, allergy, pain, or illness
- Sensory barriers related to taste, texture, smell, or appearance
- Nutritional deficiency, growth concerns, or significant life interference
Serious symptoms that do not fit one full diagnostic pattern
Other Specified Feeding or Eating Disorder includes clinically significant presentations that cause distress or impairment but do not meet every criterion for another diagnosis.
- Atypical anorexia nervosa
- Lower-frequency bulimia or binge eating
- Purging disorder
- Night eating syndrome and other specified patterns
Pica, rumination disorder, and unspecified presentations
Other feeding and eating disorders may involve repeated eating of non-food substances, repeated regurgitation, or significant symptoms that require assessment but do not yet have enough information for a specific diagnosis.
- Pica
- Rumination disorder
- Unspecified feeding or eating disorder
- Mixed or changing symptom presentations
You do not have to identify the “right” diagnosis before reaching out
An eating disorder-informed provider can help assess symptoms, medical risk, nutrition needs, and the level of support that may be appropriate.
Not every harmful food or body pattern has a formal diagnosis
These experiences can still create distress, impair daily life, and increase eating disorder risk.
Disordered eating
Restrictive, chaotic, compensatory, or guilt-driven patterns that may not meet full diagnostic criteria.
Compulsive exercise
Movement driven by fear, guilt, rigid rules, or an inability to rest despite illness or injury.
Orthorexic patterns
An increasingly rigid preoccupation with eating in a way perceived as pure, clean, correct, or healthy.
Chronic dieting and weight cycling
Repeated restriction and weight-control attempts that may increase food preoccupation, shame, and loss-of-control eating.
Your experience does not need to fit perfectly into a category
Concern, distress, medical symptoms, or a shrinking quality of life are enough reasons to talk with an eating disorder-informed professional.