Registered dietitians say your liver and kidneys already do the detox job, no juice cleanse required.
The wellness aisle is stocked with promises: green juices bottled for Instagram, powders in unmarked capsules, sticky foot pads and pricey detox kits, all pledging to purge the body of toxins. But according to registered dietitians, the organ system already handles that work around the clock, free of charge.
Detox Industry’s Sales Pitch
The liver, kidneys, lungs and skin filter waste and break down chemicals continuously, nutrition experts say. Registered dietitian Andrea Holwegner explained that the body is inherently built to detox itself, and what most people actually need isn’t an aggressive cleanse but a return to sustainable, nourishing habits. Feeling sluggish, bloated or foggy usually traces back to poor sleep, excess alcohol, a diet heavy in ultra-processed foods, chronic stress or dehydration, not a lack of “toxin flushing.”
Why Juice Cleanses Fall Short
Standard juice cleanse programs call for four to six juices a day over three to seven days, with little or no solid food, at a cost that can climb past $300 for what amounts to fiber-free, sugar-heavy liquid. Registered dietitian Johannah Katz noted that while juice cleanses can briefly boost micronutrient intake, they tend to run low in protein, fiber and overall energy, undermining satiety, blood sugar balance and lean muscle. No clinical research shows the drinks remove toxins or enhance the body’s natural detox capacity beyond what a balanced diet already provides.
Holwegner added that any temporary improvement people feel likely comes from cutting processed foods and drinking more fluids overall, not from the juice itself flushing anything out. Replacing meals entirely with juice, she cautioned, can leave people under-fueled and prone to fatigue, dizziness and rebound overeating.
Charcoal and Parasite Cleanses: Buyer Beware
Activated charcoal has one legitimate medical use: treating certain poisonings in an emergency room. Outside that setting, it binds to medications, supplements and fat-soluble vitamins, potentially blocking absorption of something as essential as a blood pressure prescription. For a healthy person, routine use carries no proven upside and real risk, dietitians say.
Parasite cleanses raise similar red flags. Katz said most commercial versions lack clinical support for people without a confirmed infection and often rely on fear-based marketing that can trigger unnecessary dietary restriction or digestive upset. Other warning signs to watch for: promises of toxin removal without naming a single toxin, rapid fat loss detached from behavior change, reliance on laxatives or diuretics, extreme calorie restriction, or messaging that stokes fear over parasites and hidden poisons.
The Real Detox Formula Backed by Science
Dietitians say a genuine reset can start in a single weekend by cutting back on alcohol, cooking a few nourishing meals, stepping away from social media and catching up on sleep. Extending those habits over a full week, Holwegner said, builds real structure through consistent eating times, better hydration, more fiber and less all-or-nothing thinking about food.
A handful of small, sustainable shifts do the heaviest lifting:
- Loading up on fiber and cruciferous vegetables, which bind waste in bile and sweep it out through digestion while triggering the liver to ramp up its own detox enzymes
- Eating a palm-sized portion of protein, roughly three to four ounces, at each meal to fuel amino acids the liver needs for its enzymes and for glutathione, the body’s chief antioxidant
- Sleeping seven to nine hours a night on a consistent schedule, which allows the body to clear waste more efficiently
- Drinking around eight cups of water daily to help the kidneys flush waste
None of it requires a trip to a specialty store, just a grocery run and a bit of consistency. As dietitians put it, if a program is extreme, expensive or built on shame and restriction, it’s unlikely to support health for the long haul.
Source: Daily Mail

