{"id":163951,"date":"2026-03-25T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2026-03-25T00:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/watchman.news\/2026\/03\/new-research-claims-olive-oil-drives-obesity-to-greater-extent-than-other-fats\/"},"modified":"2026-03-25T05:51:19","modified_gmt":"2026-03-25T05:51:19","slug":"new-research-claims-olive-oil-drives-obesity-to-greater-extent-than-other-fats","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/watchman.news\/de\/2026\/03\/new-research-claims-olive-oil-drives-obesity-to-greater-extent-than-other-fats\/","title":{"rendered":"New Research Claims Olive Oil Drives Obesity to Greater Extent Than Other Fats"},"content":{"rendered":"<div class=\"best-of-articles\">\n<div class=\"card-ba\">\n<div class=\"inner-ba\">\n<div class=\"left-ba\">\n<img decoding=\"async\" class=\"medical-heart-icon-ba\" src=\"https:\/\/media.mercola.com\/assets\/images\/mercola\/bestarticles-icon.png\"><\/p>\n<p class=\"heading-ba\">A New Series of Health Insights Is on the\u00a0Way<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"right-ba\">\n<div class=\"tag-ba\">WICHTIG<\/div>\n<div class=\"copy-ba\">\n<p class=\"heading-ba\">A New Series of Health Insights Is on the\u00a0Way<\/p>\n<p class=\"description-ba\">Our team has been working behind the scenes to prepare new research and practical health strategies for our readers. While we finish preparing what\u2019s coming next, we invite you to explore one of the most-read articles from our library below. <a href=\"https:\/\/www.mercola.com\/personalized-newsletter\" target=\"_blank\">See exactly what&#8217;s changing \u2192<\/a>\n<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p>For decades, olive oil has been marketed as the gold standard of healthy fats \u2014 central to the Mediterranean diet and praised for its heart-protective benefits. It&#8217;s become a staple in health-conscious kitchens, drizzled over salads, blended into dressings, and splashed into saut\u00e9 pans without a second thought.<\/p>\n<p>But sometimes what&#8217;s widely accepted isn&#8217;t the whole story. Behind olive oil&#8217;s reputation is a single dominant fat: oleic acid. It&#8217;s a monounsaturated fat you&#8217;ll find not only in olive oil, but also in avocado oil and high-oleic seed oils. And it doesn&#8217;t just pass through your system unnoticed. Your body listens to it \u2014 and responds.<\/p>\n<p>The story you&#8217;re about to read breaks open a new chapter in our understanding of dietary fat. What you pour on your plate goes beyond adding flavor. It sends a signal. And depending on the oil, that signal could be telling your body to store more fat, whether you&#8217;re overeating or not.<\/p>\n<div class=\"video-rwd\">\n<figure class=\"op-interactive aspect-ratio\">\n<\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<h2>Oleic Acid Triggers New Fat Cell Growth<\/h2>\n<p>In a 2025 study published in Cell Reports, researchers tested different types of fats to see which ones led to more body fat \u2014 not just from eating too much, but from the fat itself acting like a trigger.<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref1\">1<\/span><\/sup> They found that one fat in particular \u2014 oleic acid \u2014 stood out. The goal was to figure out if certain fats tell your body to create more fat cells, not just fill up the ones you already have.<\/p>\n<div class=\"indent\">\n<p><strong><span class=\"bullet\">\u2022 <\/span>This study wasn&#8217;t about fat cells getting bigger \u2014 it was about your body making new ones \u2014<\/strong> Most people think gaining fat means your current fat cells just get puffier. But this research looked at something more permanent: your body actually making more fat cells. Once that happens, those new cells don&#8217;t disappear when you lose weight. They stick around and make it easier to gain weight again later.<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class=\"bullet\">\u2022 <\/span>Only oleic acid had this fat-boosting effect in both animals and humans \u2014<\/strong> Mice fed oleic-acid-rich diets showed a sharp increase in precursor fat cells, the ones that turn into mature fat-storing cells. Human fat cells exposed to oleic acid in lab settings did the same thing. Other fats like <a href=\"https:\/\/articles.mercola.com\/sites\/articles\/archive\/2022\/02\/24\/how-coconut-oil-can-benefit-your-health.aspx\" target=\"_blank\">coconut oil<\/a> and stearic acid didn&#8217;t cause this change \u2014 only oleic acid did. Still, we need more replicated science to confirm that oleic acid does, in fact, cause obesity to a greater extent than other fats.<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class=\"bullet\">\u2022 <\/span>Even with the same calories, olive oil caused more fat buildup \u2014<\/strong> In one part of the study, mice were fed the same number of calories but from different types of fat. Those that got oleic-acid-heavy fats like olive oil gained significantly more fat \u2014 not because they ate more, but because their fat cells multiplied faster. That means fat variety, not just quantity, matters a lot.<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class=\"bullet\">\u2022 <\/span>More oleic acid in your blood means more fat cells created \u2014<\/strong> Blood tests showed a direct connection between oleic acid levels in the blood and how many new fat cells were created. The more oleic acid that showed up, the more new fat cells the body made. In other words, this fat acts like a signal telling your body to grow more storage space for fat.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<h2>Oleic Acid Flips Metabolic Switches That Tell Your Body to Store More Fat<\/h2>\n<p>Inside your cells, there&#8217;s a control system that decides whether to build new fat tissue. Oleic acid throws that switch to &#8220;on,&#8221; sending a signal that tells your body it&#8217;s time to grow more fat cells. When that switch isn&#8217;t working, this process doesn&#8217;t happen, showing that oleic acid relies on this internal command to get the fat-storing process moving.<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref2\">2<\/span><\/sup><\/p>\n<div class=\"indent\">\n<p><strong><span class=\"bullet\">\u2022 <\/span>Oleic acid shuts off your natural fat-limiting controls \u2014<\/strong> Your body also has a built-in safety system that&#8217;s supposed to slow down or stop unnecessary fat cell growth. Think of it like a brake pedal that prevents you from creating more fat than you need. Oleic acid disables that brake, allowing fat cell development to go unchecked. The result is a steady stream of new fat cells being created, even when they&#8217;re not needed.<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class=\"bullet\">\u2022 <\/span>Without that brake, fat cells multiply fast \u2014<\/strong> In one part of the study, researchers looked at mice that had this fat-limiting brake permanently turned off. When those mice consumed oleic acid, they experienced an explosion of new fat cell growth, much more than normal mice. This shows that oleic acid doesn&#8217;t just promote fat storage, it also removes your body&#8217;s ability to say &#8220;enough.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class=\"bullet\">\u2022 <\/span>Human studies confirmed what the animal studies showed \u2014<\/strong> Using data from the UK Biobank, one of the largest health databases in the world, researchers found that high levels of monounsaturated fats in the blood, mostly oleic acid, were strongly linked to higher obesity risk. Out of 249 different blood markers tested, oleic acid had the strongest link to being overweight.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<h2>Why Healthy-Sounding Oils Aren&#8217;t Always Helping You<\/h2>\n<p>The study shows that oleic acid plays a bigger role in fat gain than most people realize. But there&#8217;s another layer to this problem \u2014 one that&#8217;s hidden in plain sight. The oils you trust as &#8220;healthy,&#8221; like olive and avocado oils, are sabotaging your metabolism in more ways than one.<\/p>\n<div class=\"indent\">\n<p><strong><span class=\"bullet\">\u2022 <\/span>Let&#8217;s start with what&#8217;s actually in the bottle \u2014<\/strong> Most people assume that if they&#8217;re buying olive oil, they&#8217;re getting the real deal. But research has repeatedly shown that many olive oils on the market are <a href=\"https:\/\/articles.mercola.com\/sites\/articles\/archive\/2022\/06\/17\/fake-olive-oil.aspx\" target=\"_blank\">diluted or adulterated<\/a>, often with cheap, highly refined vegetable oils like soybean or canola. So, unless you know your source, you&#8217;re likely getting a cocktail of inflammatory industrial fats with every pour.<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class=\"bullet\">\u2022 <\/span>Concerns over olive oil aren&#8217;t new \u2014<\/strong> I previously <a href=\"https:\/\/articles.mercola.com\/sites\/articles\/archive\/2025\/07\/27\/monounsaturated-fats.aspx\" target=\"_blank\">interviewed Brad Marshall<\/a>, who&#8217;s done excellent work on reductive stress and has warned about the metabolic problems associated with oleic acid in olive oil, including increased risk of obesity and energy imbalance. That&#8217;s a huge red flag for anyone struggling with metabolic issues, energy dips, or weight that won&#8217;t budge.<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class=\"bullet\">\u2022 <\/span>Too much oleic acid disrupts your mitochondria in similar ways as <a href=\"https:\/\/articles.mercola.com\/sites\/articles\/archive\/2023\/07\/17\/linoleic-acid.aspx\" target=\"_blank\">linoleic acid<\/a> (LA) \u2014<\/strong> While it isn&#8217;t a polyunsaturated fat like LA, oleic acid still embeds itself into your mitochondrial membrane and crowds out cardiolipin, a key fat that your mitochondria need to make energy efficiently.<\/p>\n<p>When cardiolipin is displaced, the electron transport chain becomes unstable, leading to reduced adenosine triphosphate (ATP) production and increased oxidative stress. This same underlying mechanism is detailed in my 2025 <a href=\"https:\/\/www.sciencedirect.com\/science\/article\/pii\/S2667137925000098#abs0001\" target=\"_blank\">Advances in Redox Research review<\/a>, where I explain how both oxidative and reductive stress from fats like LA push mitochondria toward dysfunction and eventual breakdown.<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref3\">3<\/span><\/sup><\/p>\n<p><strong><span class=\"bullet\">\u2022 <\/span>Still holding onto the idea that olive oil is heart-healthy?<\/strong> This is partly true. It contains antioxidant-rich polyphenols that offer some protection. But those benefits don&#8217;t cancel out the downsides when you&#8217;re using olive oil liberally. When you strip away the antioxidants, oleic acid becomes a metabolic disruptor.<\/p>\n<p>If olive oil is in your kitchen, it doesn&#8217;t mean you need to throw it out immediately. But it does mean you should stop treating it like a health food to pour freely. Your cells are listening to the signals you send them \u2014 make sure those signals are helping, not hurting.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<h2>How to Adjust Your Dietary Oils to Boost Your Well-Being<\/h2>\n<p>If you&#8217;ve been relying on olive oil as your go-to &#8220;healthy fat,&#8221; it&#8217;s time to rethink that habit. I used to recommend it too \u2014 until the research became too clear to ignore. Oleic acid has been shown to drive the creation of new fat cells, even without overeating. That means your body could be stockpiling fat just from the type of oil you use, not how much food you eat.<\/p>\n<p>Here&#8217;s how you start undoing that damage by removing the cause, rebalancing your fat intake, and restoring your <a href=\"https:\/\/articles.mercola.com\/sites\/articles\/archive\/2025\/02\/05\/mitochondrial-energy-production.aspx\" target=\"_blank\">mitochondrial energy<\/a>. The goal is to reduce oleic acid buildup and get your metabolism functioning the way it was designed to. If you&#8217;re struggling with stubborn belly fat, feel like your energy has flatlined, or notice fat creeping on even when you&#8217;re eating healthy, here&#8217;s what I recommend:<\/p>\n<div class=\"indent\">\n<p><strong><span class=\"bullet\">1. <\/span>Don&#8217;t replace olive oil with vegetable oils \u2014 ditch both \u2014<\/strong> You might think swapping olive oil for something labeled &#8220;vegetable oil&#8221; is a step in the right direction, but it&#8217;s not. Industrial vegetable oils like soybean, corn, canola, and safflower are worse than olive oil because they&#8217;re packed with LA, a highly inflammatory polyunsaturated fat that damages your mitochondria, drives oxidative stress, and stays in your body for years.<\/p>\n<p>These oils break down into toxic byproducts that interfere with hormone signaling and fat metabolism. So don&#8217;t just replace one problem oil with another \u2014 remove both oleic- and LA-rich oils from your kitchen entirely.<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class=\"bullet\">2. <\/span>Switch to metabolically stable fats like tallow, ghee, or grass fed butter \u2014<\/strong> These traditional fats are lower in both oleic acid and LA and much more stable when heated. Use grass fed butter and ghee for cooking and keep tallow on hand for saut\u00e9ing and roasting. These fats support mitochondrial energy production instead of disrupting it. They&#8217;re also more satisfying, which naturally helps regulate your appetite.<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class=\"bullet\">3. <\/span>Eat meats from animals fed natural diets, not industrial feed \u2014<\/strong> If you&#8217;re eating pork or chicken raised on high-LA feeds (like soy and corn), you&#8217;re still getting large doses of unhealthy fats. I recommend switching to ruminant meats like grass fed beef and lamb. These animals convert the fats in their feed differently and don&#8217;t store excess oleic acid the same way. Instead of chicken and pork, stick with wild game and grass fed beef.<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class=\"bullet\">4. <\/span>Prioritize carbs and collagen \u2014<\/strong> One of the biggest mistakes people make when removing olive oil is replacing it with more fat. That only compounds the problem. What your cells actually need is fuel in the form of easy-to-digest carbs like fruit, root vegetables, and white rice, alongside a steady supply of collagen-rich protein like bone broth or slow-cooked meats. This combo helps rebuild your cell membranes and repair fat-driven metabolic damage.<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class=\"bullet\">5. <\/span>Track your fat intake like you track your carbs or protein \u2014<\/strong> Most people don&#8217;t think twice about the kinds of fats they use day to day, but your body does. Start paying closer attention to how much oleic acid you&#8217;re getting, not just from olive oil but from foods like salad dressings.<\/p>\n<p>Treat it like any other macro: something to monitor and balance. Use a simple food journal or app to log your daily fat sources for two weeks. You&#8217;ll quickly spot patterns \u2014 like how often olive oil or avocado oil sneaks into your meals.<\/p>\n<p>Once you see it, you can start swapping it out with fats that actually support your metabolism. Awareness is the first step to change, and this simple tracking habit helps reconnect you with how your body responds to what&#8217;s on your plate. Fat is not the enemy. But the wrong fat, even in a &#8220;healthy&#8221; form, creates the wrong signals. Reset those signals, and your body will finally respond the way it&#8217;s supposed to.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<h2>FAQs About Olive Oil<\/h2>\n<div class=\"faq\">\n<div>\n<p class=\"faq-responsive\"><strong>Q: <span class=\"questions\">Is olive oil really causing weight gain, even if I eat healthy?<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>A: <\/strong>Yes, according to a 2025 study in Cell Reports, oleic acid \u2014 the main fat in olive oil \u2014 triggers the creation of new fat cells even without overeating.<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref4\">4<\/span><\/sup> This helps explain why some people gain weight despite clean eating and calorie control.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p class=\"faq-responsive\"><strong>Q: <span class=\"questions\">What makes oleic acid different from other fats?<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>A: <\/strong>Oleic acid doesn&#8217;t just store energy. It sends signals to your cells to make more fat-storing cells. Other fats, like stearic acid or coconut oil, didn&#8217;t have the same effect in studies. The issue isn&#8217;t just how much fat you eat, but what type.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p class=\"faq-responsive\"><strong>Q: <span class=\"questions\">Isn&#8217;t olive oil part of the healthy Mediterranean diet?<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>A: <\/strong>It is, but moderation is key. Olive oil does contain protective polyphenols, but in excess, its main fat disrupts mitochondria, promotes fat storage, and interferes with metabolic health.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p class=\"faq-responsive\"><strong>Q: <span class=\"questions\">Should I stop using olive oil completely?<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>A: <\/strong>Not necessarily, but you should stop treating it like a free-pour health food. Many store-bought olive oils are adulterated, and even pure versions are problematic in large amounts. Track how often you&#8217;re using it and consider switching to more stable fats like ghee, tallow, or grass fed butter.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p class=\"faq-responsive\"><strong>Q: <span class=\"questions\">What&#8217;s the best way to fix this if I&#8217;ve been using olive oil for years?<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>A: <\/strong>Start by removing high-oleic oils from your kitchen and replacing them with metabolically supportive fats. Prioritize easy-to-digest carbs and collagen-rich proteins, and monitor your fat intake like you would any other nutrient. Over time, this shift restores mitochondrial function and helps normalize weight and energy levels.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p>&lt;!&#8211;<\/p>\n<h2>Test Your Knowledge with Today&#8217;s Quiz!<\/h2>\n<p>Take today\u2019s quiz to see how much you\u2019ve learned from <a href=\"https:\/\/articles.mercola.com\/sites\/articles\/archive\/2025\/07\/29\/heat-dome-survival-guide-5-cooling-hacks-summer.aspx\" target=\"_blank\">yesterday\u2019s Mercola.com article<\/a>.<\/p>\n<div class=\"quiz-panel\">\n<div class=\"quiz-item\">\n<p class=\"title\"><span>During extreme heat waves, how much water should you drink each day to stay properly hydrated?<\/span><\/p>\n<ul class=\"options\">\n<li class=\"option-item\"><span>One-third of your body weight in ounces<\/span><\/li>\n<li class=\"option-item\"><span>Double your body weight in ounces<\/span><\/li>\n<li class=\"option-item\"><span>Two-thirds of your body weight in ounces<\/span><\/li>\n<li class=\"option-item correct\"><span>Half your body weight in ounces<\/span><br \/>\n<span class=\"explanation\"><\/p>\n<p>To stay hydrated and sweat effectively, you should drink half your body weight in ounces of water daily, especially during heat waves. <a href=\"https:\/\/articles.mercola.com\/sites\/articles\/archive\/2025\/07\/29\/heat-dome-survival-guide-5-cooling-hacks-summer.aspx\" target=\"_blank\">Learn more<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p><\/span><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p>&#8211;&gt;<\/p>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>A New Series of Health Insights Is on the\u00a0Way<\/p>\n<p>WICHTIG<\/p>\n<p>A New Series of Health Insights Is on the\u00a0Way<br \/>\nOur team has been working behind the scenes to prepare new research and practical health strategies for our readers. While we finish preparing what\u2019s coming next, we invite you to explore one of the most-read articles from our library below. See exactly what&#8217;s changing \u2192<\/p>\n<p>For decades, olive oil has been marketed as the gold standard of healthy fats \u2014 central to the Mediterranean diet and praised for its heart-protective benefits. It&#8217;s become a staple in health-conscious kitchens, drizzled over salads, blended into dressings, and splashed into saut\u00e9 pans without a second thought.<\/p>\n<p>But sometimes what&#8217;s widely accepted isn&#8217;t the whole story. Behind olive oil&#8217;s reputation is a single dominant fat: oleic acid. It&#8217;s a monounsaturated fat you&#8217;ll find not only in olive oil, but also in avocado oil and high-oleic seed oils. And it doesn&#8217;t just pass through your system unnoticed. Your body listens to it \u2014 and responds.<\/p>\n<p>The story you&#8217;re about to read breaks open a new chapter in our understanding of dietary fat. What you pour on your plate goes beyond adding flavor. It sends a signal. And depending on the oil, that signal could be telling your body to store more fat, whether you&#8217;re overeating or not.<\/p>\n<p>Oleic Acid Triggers New Fat Cell Growth<\/p>\n<p>In a 2025 study published in Cell Reports, researchers tested different types of fats to see which ones led to more body fat \u2014 not just from eating too much, but from the fat itself acting like a trigger.1 They found that one fat in particular \u2014 oleic acid \u2014 stood out. The goal was to figure out if certain fats tell your body to create more fat cells, not just fill up the ones you already have.<\/p>\n<p>\u2022 This study wasn&#8217;t about fat cells getting bigger \u2014 it was about your body making new ones \u2014 Most people think gaining fat means your current fat cells just get puffier. But this research looked at something more permanent: your body actually making more fat cells. Once that happens, those new cells don&#8217;t disappear when you lose weight. They stick around and make it easier to gain weight again later.<\/p>\n<p>\u2022 Only oleic acid had this fat-boosting effect in both animals and humans \u2014 Mice fed oleic-acid-rich diets showed a sharp increase in precursor fat cells, the ones that turn into mature fat-storing cells. Human fat cells exposed to oleic acid in lab settings did the same thing. Other fats like coconut oil and stearic acid didn&#8217;t cause this change \u2014 only oleic acid did. Still, we need more replicated science to confirm that oleic acid does, in fact, cause obesity to a greater extent than other fats.<\/p>\n<p>\u2022 Even with the same calories, olive oil caused more fat buildup \u2014 In one part of the study, mice were fed the same number of calories but from different types of fat. Those that got oleic-acid-heavy fats like olive oil gained significantly more fat \u2014 not because they ate more, but because their fat cells multiplied faster. That means fat variety, not just quantity, matters a lot.<\/p>\n<p>\u2022 More oleic acid in your blood means more fat cells created \u2014 Blood tests showed a direct connection between oleic acid levels in the blood and how many new fat cells were created. The more oleic acid that showed up, the more new fat cells the body made. In other words, this fat acts like a signal telling your body to grow more storage space for fat.<\/p>\n<p>Oleic Acid Flips Metabolic Switches That Tell Your Body to Store More Fat<\/p>\n<p>Inside your cells, there&#8217;s a control system that decides whether to build new fat tissue. Oleic acid throws that switch to &#8220;on,&#8221; sending a signal that tells your body it&#8217;s time to grow more fat cells. When that switch isn&#8217;t working, this process doesn&#8217;t happen, showing that oleic acid relies on this internal command to get the fat-storing process moving.2<\/p>\n<p>\u2022 Oleic acid shuts off your natural fat-limiting controls \u2014 Your body also has a built-in safety system that&#8217;s supposed to slow down or stop unnecessary fat cell growth. Think of it like a brake pedal that prevents you from creating more fat than you need. Oleic acid disables that brake, allowing fat cell development to go unchecked. The result is a steady stream of new fat cells being created, even when they&#8217;re not needed.<\/p>\n<p>\u2022 Without that brake, fat cells multiply fast \u2014 In one part of the study, researchers looked at mice that had this fat-limiting brake permanently turned off. When those mice consumed oleic acid, they experienced an explosion of new fat cell growth, much more than normal mice. This shows that oleic acid doesn&#8217;t just promote fat storage, it also removes your body&#8217;s ability to say &#8220;enough.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>\u2022 Human studies confirmed what the animal studies showed \u2014 Using data from the UK Biobank, one of the largest health databases in the world, researchers found that high levels of monounsaturated fats in the blood, mostly oleic acid, were strongly linked to higher obesity risk. Out of 249 different blood markers tested, oleic acid had the strongest link to being overweight.<\/p>\n<p>Why Healthy-Sounding Oils Aren&#8217;t Always Helping You<\/p>\n<p>The study shows that oleic acid plays a bigger role in fat gain than most people realize. But there&#8217;s another layer to this problem \u2014 one that&#8217;s hidden in plain sight. The oils you trust as &#8220;healthy,&#8221; like olive and avocado oils, are sabotaging your metabolism in more ways than one.<\/p>\n<p>\u2022 Let&#8217;s start with what&#8217;s actually in the bottle \u2014 Most people assume that if they&#8217;re buying olive oil, they&#8217;re getting the real deal. But research has repeatedly shown that many olive oils on the market are diluted or adulterated, often with cheap, highly refined vegetable oils like soybean or canola. So, unless you know your source, you&#8217;re likely getting a cocktail of inflammatory industrial fats with every pour.<\/p>\n<p>\u2022 Concerns over olive oil aren&#8217;t new \u2014 I previously interviewed Brad Marshall, who&#8217;s done excellent work on reductive stress and has warned about the metabolic problems associated with oleic acid in olive oil, including increased risk of obesity and energy imbalance. That&#8217;s a huge red flag for anyone struggling with metabolic issues, energy dips, or weight that won&#8217;t budge.<\/p>\n<p>\u2022 Too much oleic acid disrupts your mitochondria in similar ways as linoleic acid (LA) \u2014 While it isn&#8217;t a polyunsaturated fat like LA, oleic acid still embeds itself into your mitochondrial membrane and crowds out cardiolipin, a key fat that your mitochondria need to make energy efficiently.<\/p>\n<p>When cardiolipin is displaced, the electron transport chain becomes unstable, leading to reduced adenosine triphosphate (ATP) production and increased oxidative stress. This same underlying mechanism is detailed in my 2025 Advances in Redox Research review, where I explain how both oxidative and reductive stress from fats like LA push mitochondria toward dysfunction and eventual breakdown.3<\/p>\n<p>\u2022 Still holding onto the idea that olive oil is heart-healthy? This is partly true. It contains antioxidant-rich polyphenols that offer some protection. But those benefits don&#8217;t cancel out the downsides when you&#8217;re using olive oil liberally. When you strip away the antioxidants, oleic acid becomes a metabolic disruptor.<\/p>\n<p>If olive oil is in your kitchen, it doesn&#8217;t mean you need to throw it out immediately. But it does mean you should stop treating it like a health food to pour freely. Your cells are listening to the signals you send them \u2014 make sure those signals are helping, not hurting.<\/p>\n<p>How to Adjust Your Dietary Oils to Boost Your Well-Being<\/p>\n<p>If you&#8217;ve been relying on olive oil as your go-to &#8220;healthy fat,&#8221; it&#8217;s time to rethink that habit. I used to recommend it too \u2014 until the research became too clear to ignore. Oleic acid has been shown to drive the creation of new fat cells, even without overeating. That means your body could be stockpiling fat just from the type of oil you use, not how much food you eat.<\/p>\n<p>Here&#8217;s how you start undoing that damage by removing the cause, rebalancing your fat intake, and restoring your mitochondrial energy. The goal is to reduce oleic acid buildup and get your metabolism functioning the way it was designed to. If you&#8217;re struggling with stubborn belly fat, feel like your energy has flatlined, or notice fat creeping on even when you&#8217;re eating healthy, here&#8217;s what I recommend:<\/p>\n<p>1. Don&#8217;t replace olive oil with vegetable oils \u2014 ditch both \u2014 You might think swapping olive oil for something labeled &#8220;vegetable oil&#8221; is a step in the right direction, but it&#8217;s not. Industrial vegetable oils like soybean, corn, canola, and safflower are worse than olive oil because they&#8217;re packed with LA, a highly inflammatory polyunsaturated fat that damages your mitochondria, drives oxidative stress, and stays in your body for years.<\/p>\n<p>These oils break down into toxic byproducts that interfere with hormone signaling and fat metabolism. So don&#8217;t just replace one problem oil with another \u2014 remove both oleic- and LA-rich oils from your kitchen entirely.<\/p>\n<p>2. Switch to metabolically stable fats like tallow, ghee, or grass fed butter \u2014 These traditional fats are lower in both oleic acid and LA and much more stable when heated. Use grass fed butter and ghee for cooking and keep tallow on hand for saut\u00e9ing and roasting. These fats support mitochondrial energy production instead of disrupting it. They&#8217;re also more satisfying, which naturally helps regulate your appetite.<\/p>\n<p>3. Eat meats from animals fed natural diets, not industrial feed \u2014 If you&#8217;re eating pork or chicken raised on high-LA feeds (like soy and corn), you&#8217;re still getting large doses of unhealthy fats. I recommend switching to ruminant meats like grass fed beef and lamb. These animals convert the fats in their feed differently and don&#8217;t store excess oleic acid the same way. Instead of chicken and pork, stick with wild game and grass fed beef.<\/p>\n<p>4. Prioritize carbs and collagen \u2014 One of the biggest mistakes people make when removing olive oil is replacing it with more fat. That only compounds the problem. What your cells actually need is fuel in the form of easy-to-digest carbs like fruit, root vegetables, and white rice, alongside a steady supply of collagen-rich protein like bone broth or slow-cooked meats. This combo helps rebuild your cell membranes and repair fat-driven metabolic damage.<\/p>\n<p>5. Track your fat intake like you track your carbs or protein \u2014 Most people don&#8217;t think twice about the kinds of fats they use day to day, but your body does. Start paying closer attention to how much oleic acid you&#8217;re getting, not just from olive oil but from foods like salad dressings.<\/p>\n<p>Treat it like any other macro: something to monitor and balance. Use a simple food journal or app to log your daily fat sources for two weeks. You&#8217;ll quickly spot patterns \u2014 like how often olive oil or avocado oil sneaks into your meals.<\/p>\n<p>Once you see it, you can start swapping it out with fats that actually support your metabolism. Awareness is the first step to change, and this simple tracking habit helps reconnect you with how your body responds to what&#8217;s on your plate. Fat is not the enemy. But the wrong fat, even in a &#8220;healthy&#8221; form, creates the wrong signals. Reset those signals, and your body will finally respond the way it&#8217;s supposed to.<\/p>\n<p>FAQs About Olive Oil<\/p>\n<p>Q: Is olive oil really causing weight gain, even if I eat healthy?<\/p>\n<p>A: Yes, according to a 2025 study in Cell Reports, oleic acid \u2014 the main fat in olive oil \u2014 triggers the creation of new fat cells even without overeating.4 This helps explain why some people gain weight despite clean eating and calorie control.<\/p>\n<p>Q: What makes oleic acid different from other fats?<\/p>\n<p>A: Oleic acid doesn&#8217;t just store energy. It sends signals to your cells to make more fat-storing cells. Other fats, like stearic acid or coconut oil, didn&#8217;t have the same effect in studies. The issue isn&#8217;t just how much fat you eat, but what type.<\/p>\n<p>Q: Isn&#8217;t olive oil part of the healthy Mediterranean diet?<\/p>\n<p>A: It is, but moderation is key. Olive oil does contain protective polyphenols, but in excess, its main fat disrupts mitochondria, promotes fat storage, and interferes with metabolic health.<\/p>\n<p>Q: Should I stop using olive oil completely?<\/p>\n<p>A: Not necessarily, but you should stop treating it like a free-pour health food. Many store-bought olive oils are adulterated, and even pure versions are problematic in large amounts. Track how often you&#8217;re using it and consider switching to more stable fats like ghee, tallow, or grass fed butter.<\/p>\n<p>Q: What&#8217;s the best way to fix this if I&#8217;ve been using olive oil for years?<\/p>\n<p>A: Start by removing high-oleic oils from your kitchen and replacing them with metabolically supportive fats. Prioritize easy-to-digest carbs and collagen-rich proteins, and monitor your fat intake like you would any other nutrient. Over time, this shift restores mitochondrial function and helps normalize weight and energy levels.<\/p>","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"seo_booster_metabox":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[3562,3892],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-163951","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-baptism-confirmation","category-dr-mercola-daily-news"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.2 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>New Research Claims Olive Oil Drives Obesity to Greater Extent Than Other Fats - Watchman News<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/articles.mercola.com\/sites\/articles\/archive\/2026\/03\/25\/olive-oil-drives-obesity-than-other-fats.aspx\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"de_DE\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"New Research Claims Olive Oil Drives Obesity to Greater Extent Than Other Fats - Watchman News\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"A New Series of Health Insights Is on the\u00a0Way   IMPORTANT  A New Series of Health Insights Is on the\u00a0Way Our team has been working behind the scenes to prepare new research and practical health strategies for our readers. While we finish preparing what\u2019s coming next, we invite you to explore one of the most-read articles from our library below. See exactly what&#039;s changing \u2192         For decades, olive oil has been marketed as the gold standard of healthy fats \u2014 central to the Mediterranean diet and praised for its heart-protective benefits. It&#039;s become a staple in health-conscious kitchens, drizzled over salads, blended into dressings, and splashed into saut\u00e9 pans without a second thought.  But sometimes what&#039;s widely accepted isn&#039;t the whole story. Behind olive oil&#039;s reputation is a single dominant fat: oleic acid. It&#039;s a monounsaturated fat you&#039;ll find not only in olive oil, but also in avocado oil and high-oleic seed oils. And it doesn&#039;t just pass through your system unnoticed. Your body listens to it \u2014 and responds.  The story you&#039;re about to read breaks open a new chapter in our understanding of dietary fat. What you pour on your plate goes beyond adding flavor. It sends a signal. And depending on the oil, that signal could be telling your body to store more fat, whether you&#039;re overeating or not.        Oleic Acid Triggers New Fat Cell Growth  In a 2025 study published in Cell Reports, researchers tested different types of fats to see which ones led to more body fat \u2014 not just from eating too much, but from the fat itself acting like a trigger.1 They found that one fat in particular \u2014 oleic acid \u2014 stood out. The goal was to figure out if certain fats tell your body to create more fat cells, not just fill up the ones you already have.   \u2022 This study wasn&#039;t about fat cells getting bigger \u2014 it was about your body making new ones \u2014 Most people think gaining fat means your current fat cells just get puffier. But this research looked at something more permanent: your body actually making more fat cells. Once that happens, those new cells don&#039;t disappear when you lose weight. They stick around and make it easier to gain weight again later.  \u2022 Only oleic acid had this fat-boosting effect in both animals and humans \u2014 Mice fed oleic-acid-rich diets showed a sharp increase in precursor fat cells, the ones that turn into mature fat-storing cells. Human fat cells exposed to oleic acid in lab settings did the same thing. Other fats like coconut oil and stearic acid didn&#039;t cause this change \u2014 only oleic acid did. Still, we need more replicated science to confirm that oleic acid does, in fact, cause obesity to a greater extent than other fats.  \u2022 Even with the same calories, olive oil caused more fat buildup \u2014 In one part of the study, mice were fed the same number of calories but from different types of fat. Those that got oleic-acid-heavy fats like olive oil gained significantly more fat \u2014 not because they ate more, but because their fat cells multiplied faster. That means fat variety, not just quantity, matters a lot.  \u2022 More oleic acid in your blood means more fat cells created \u2014 Blood tests showed a direct connection between oleic acid levels in the blood and how many new fat cells were created. The more oleic acid that showed up, the more new fat cells the body made. In other words, this fat acts like a signal telling your body to grow more storage space for fat.  Oleic Acid Flips Metabolic Switches That Tell Your Body to Store More Fat  Inside your cells, there&#039;s a control system that decides whether to build new fat tissue. Oleic acid throws that switch to &quot;on,&quot; sending a signal that tells your body it&#039;s time to grow more fat cells. When that switch isn&#039;t working, this process doesn&#039;t happen, showing that oleic acid relies on this internal command to get the fat-storing process moving.2   \u2022 Oleic acid shuts off your natural fat-limiting controls \u2014 Your body also has a built-in safety system that&#039;s supposed to slow down or stop unnecessary fat cell growth. Think of it like a brake pedal that prevents you from creating more fat than you need. Oleic acid disables that brake, allowing fat cell development to go unchecked. The result is a steady stream of new fat cells being created, even when they&#039;re not needed.  \u2022 Without that brake, fat cells multiply fast \u2014 In one part of the study, researchers looked at mice that had this fat-limiting brake permanently turned off. When those mice consumed oleic acid, they experienced an explosion of new fat cell growth, much more than normal mice. This shows that oleic acid doesn&#039;t just promote fat storage, it also removes your body&#039;s ability to say &quot;enough.&quot;  \u2022 Human studies confirmed what the animal studies showed \u2014 Using data from the UK Biobank, one of the largest health databases in the world, researchers found that high levels of monounsaturated fats in the blood, mostly oleic acid, were strongly linked to higher obesity risk. Out of 249 different blood markers tested, oleic acid had the strongest link to being overweight.  Why Healthy-Sounding Oils Aren&#039;t Always Helping You  The study shows that oleic acid plays a bigger role in fat gain than most people realize. But there&#039;s another layer to this problem \u2014 one that&#039;s hidden in plain sight. The oils you trust as &quot;healthy,&quot; like olive and avocado oils, are sabotaging your metabolism in more ways than one.   \u2022 Let&#039;s start with what&#039;s actually in the bottle \u2014 Most people assume that if they&#039;re buying olive oil, they&#039;re getting the real deal. But research has repeatedly shown that many olive oils on the market are diluted or adulterated, often with cheap, highly refined vegetable oils like soybean or canola. So, unless you know your source, you&#039;re likely getting a cocktail of inflammatory industrial fats with every pour.  \u2022 Concerns over olive oil aren&#039;t new \u2014 I previously interviewed Brad Marshall, who&#039;s done excellent work on reductive stress and has warned about the metabolic problems associated with oleic acid in olive oil, including increased risk of obesity and energy imbalance. That&#039;s a huge red flag for anyone struggling with metabolic issues, energy dips, or weight that won&#039;t budge.  \u2022 Too much oleic acid disrupts your mitochondria in similar ways as linoleic acid (LA) \u2014 While it isn&#039;t a polyunsaturated fat like LA, oleic acid still embeds itself into your mitochondrial membrane and crowds out cardiolipin, a key fat that your mitochondria need to make energy efficiently.  When cardiolipin is displaced, the electron transport chain becomes unstable, leading to reduced adenosine triphosphate (ATP) production and increased oxidative stress. This same underlying mechanism is detailed in my 2025 Advances in Redox Research review, where I explain how both oxidative and reductive stress from fats like LA push mitochondria toward dysfunction and eventual breakdown.3  \u2022 Still holding onto the idea that olive oil is heart-healthy? This is partly true. It contains antioxidant-rich polyphenols that offer some protection. But those benefits don&#039;t cancel out the downsides when you&#039;re using olive oil liberally. When you strip away the antioxidants, oleic acid becomes a metabolic disruptor.  If olive oil is in your kitchen, it doesn&#039;t mean you need to throw it out immediately. But it does mean you should stop treating it like a health food to pour freely. Your cells are listening to the signals you send them \u2014 make sure those signals are helping, not hurting.  How to Adjust Your Dietary Oils to Boost Your Well-Being  If you&#039;ve been relying on olive oil as your go-to &quot;healthy fat,&quot; it&#039;s time to rethink that habit. I used to recommend it too \u2014 until the research became too clear to ignore. Oleic acid has been shown to drive the creation of new fat cells, even without overeating. That means your body could be stockpiling fat just from the type of oil you use, not how much food you eat.  Here&#039;s how you start undoing that damage by removing the cause, rebalancing your fat intake, and restoring your mitochondrial energy. The goal is to reduce oleic acid buildup and get your metabolism functioning the way it was designed to. If you&#039;re struggling with stubborn belly fat, feel like your energy has flatlined, or notice fat creeping on even when you&#039;re eating healthy, here&#039;s what I recommend:   1. Don&#039;t replace olive oil with vegetable oils \u2014 ditch both \u2014 You might think swapping olive oil for something labeled &quot;vegetable oil&quot; is a step in the right direction, but it&#039;s not. Industrial vegetable oils like soybean, corn, canola, and safflower are worse than olive oil because they&#039;re packed with LA, a highly inflammatory polyunsaturated fat that damages your mitochondria, drives oxidative stress, and stays in your body for years.  These oils break down into toxic byproducts that interfere with hormone signaling and fat metabolism. So don&#039;t just replace one problem oil with another \u2014 remove both oleic- and LA-rich oils from your kitchen entirely.   2. Switch to metabolically stable fats like tallow, ghee, or grass fed butter \u2014 These traditional fats are lower in both oleic acid and LA and much more stable when heated. Use grass fed butter and ghee for cooking and keep tallow on hand for saut\u00e9ing and roasting. These fats support mitochondrial energy production instead of disrupting it. They&#039;re also more satisfying, which naturally helps regulate your appetite.   3. Eat meats from animals fed natural diets, not industrial feed \u2014 If you&#039;re eating pork or chicken raised on high-LA feeds (like soy and corn), you&#039;re still getting large doses of unhealthy fats. I recommend switching to ruminant meats like grass fed beef and lamb. These animals convert the fats in their feed differently and don&#039;t store excess oleic acid the same way. Instead of chicken and pork, stick with wild game and grass fed beef.   4. Prioritize carbs and collagen \u2014 One of the biggest mistakes people make when removing olive oil is replacing it with more fat. That only compounds the problem. What your cells actually need is fuel in the form of easy-to-digest carbs like fruit, root vegetables, and white rice, alongside a steady supply of collagen-rich protein like bone broth or slow-cooked meats. This combo helps rebuild your cell membranes and repair fat-driven metabolic damage.   5. Track your fat intake like you track your carbs or protein \u2014 Most people don&#039;t think twice about the kinds of fats they use day to day, but your body does. Start paying closer attention to how much oleic acid you&#039;re getting, not just from olive oil but from foods like salad dressings.  Treat it like any other macro: something to monitor and balance. Use a simple food journal or app to log your daily fat sources for two weeks. You&#039;ll quickly spot patterns \u2014 like how often olive oil or avocado oil sneaks into your meals.  Once you see it, you can start swapping it out with fats that actually support your metabolism. Awareness is the first step to change, and this simple tracking habit helps reconnect you with how your body responds to what&#039;s on your plate. Fat is not the enemy. But the wrong fat, even in a &quot;healthy&quot; form, creates the wrong signals. Reset those signals, and your body will finally respond the way it&#039;s supposed to.  FAQs About Olive Oil    Q: Is olive oil really causing weight gain, even if I eat healthy?  A: Yes, according to a 2025 study in Cell Reports, oleic acid \u2014 the main fat in olive oil \u2014 triggers the creation of new fat cells even without overeating.4 This helps explain why some people gain weight despite clean eating and calorie control.   Q: What makes oleic acid different from other fats?  A: Oleic acid doesn&#039;t just store energy. It sends signals to your cells to make more fat-storing cells. Other fats, like stearic acid or coconut oil, didn&#039;t have the same effect in studies. The issue isn&#039;t just how much fat you eat, but what type.   Q: Isn&#039;t olive oil part of the healthy Mediterranean diet?  A: It is, but moderation is key. Olive oil does contain protective polyphenols, but in excess, its main fat disrupts mitochondria, promotes fat storage, and interferes with metabolic health.   Q: Should I stop using olive oil completely?  A: Not necessarily, but you should stop treating it like a free-pour health food. Many store-bought olive oils are adulterated, and even pure versions are problematic in large amounts. Track how often you&#039;re using it and consider switching to more stable fats like ghee, tallow, or grass fed butter.   Q: What&#039;s the best way to fix this if I&#039;ve been using olive oil for years?  A: Start by removing high-oleic oils from your kitchen and replacing them with metabolically supportive fats. Prioritize easy-to-digest carbs and collagen-rich proteins, and monitor your fat intake like you would any other nutrient. Over time, this shift restores mitochondrial function and helps normalize weight and energy levels.\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:url\" content=\"https:\/\/articles.mercola.com\/sites\/articles\/archive\/2026\/03\/25\/olive-oil-drives-obesity-than-other-fats.aspx\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:site_name\" content=\"Watchman News\" \/>\n<meta property=\"article:published_time\" content=\"2026-03-25T00:00:00+00:00\" \/>\n<meta property=\"article:modified_time\" content=\"2026-03-25T05:51:19+00:00\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:image\" content=\"https:\/\/media.mercola.com\/assets\/images\/mercola\/bestarticles-icon.png\" \/>\n<meta name=\"author\" content=\"Admin\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:card\" content=\"summary_large_image\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:label1\" content=\"Verfasst von\" \/>\n\t<meta name=\"twitter:data1\" content=\"Admin\" \/>\n\t<meta name=\"twitter:label2\" content=\"Gesch\u00e4tzte Lesezeit\" \/>\n\t<meta name=\"twitter:data2\" content=\"11\u00a0Minuten\" \/>\n<script type=\"application\/ld+json\" class=\"yoast-schema-graph\">{\"@context\":\"https:\/\/schema.org\",\"@graph\":[{\"@type\":\"Article\",\"@id\":\"https:\/\/articles.mercola.com\/sites\/articles\/archive\/2026\/03\/25\/olive-oil-drives-obesity-than-other-fats.aspx#article\",\"isPartOf\":{\"@id\":\"https:\/\/watchman.news\/2026\/03\/new-research-claims-olive-oil-drives-obesity-to-greater-extent-than-other-fats\/\"},\"author\":{\"name\":\"Admin\",\"@id\":\"https:\/\/watchman.news\/#\/schema\/person\/3f4506c6002f5893ba45478a4540739f\"},\"headline\":\"New Research Claims Olive Oil Drives Obesity to Greater Extent Than Other Fats\",\"datePublished\":\"2026-03-25T00:00:00+00:00\",\"dateModified\":\"2026-03-25T05:51:19+00:00\",\"mainEntityOfPage\":{\"@id\":\"https:\/\/watchman.news\/2026\/03\/new-research-claims-olive-oil-drives-obesity-to-greater-extent-than-other-fats\/\"},\"wordCount\":2307,\"commentCount\":0,\"image\":{\"@id\":\"https:\/\/articles.mercola.com\/sites\/articles\/archive\/2026\/03\/25\/olive-oil-drives-obesity-than-other-fats.aspx#primaryimage\"},\"thumbnailUrl\":\"https:\/\/media.mercola.com\/assets\/images\/mercola\/bestarticles-icon.png\",\"articleSection\":[\"Baptism &amp; 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While we finish preparing what\u2019s coming next, we invite you to explore one of the most-read articles from our library below. See exactly what's changing \u2192         For decades, olive oil has been marketed as the gold standard of healthy fats \u2014 central to the Mediterranean diet and praised for its heart-protective benefits. It's become a staple in health-conscious kitchens, drizzled over salads, blended into dressings, and splashed into saut\u00e9 pans without a second thought.  But sometimes what's widely accepted isn't the whole story. Behind olive oil's reputation is a single dominant fat: oleic acid. It's a monounsaturated fat you'll find not only in olive oil, but also in avocado oil and high-oleic seed oils. And it doesn't just pass through your system unnoticed. Your body listens to it \u2014 and responds.  The story you're about to read breaks open a new chapter in our understanding of dietary fat. What you pour on your plate goes beyond adding flavor. It sends a signal. And depending on the oil, that signal could be telling your body to store more fat, whether you're overeating or not.        Oleic Acid Triggers New Fat Cell Growth  In a 2025 study published in Cell Reports, researchers tested different types of fats to see which ones led to more body fat \u2014 not just from eating too much, but from the fat itself acting like a trigger.1 They found that one fat in particular \u2014 oleic acid \u2014 stood out. The goal was to figure out if certain fats tell your body to create more fat cells, not just fill up the ones you already have.   \u2022 This study wasn't about fat cells getting bigger \u2014 it was about your body making new ones \u2014 Most people think gaining fat means your current fat cells just get puffier. But this research looked at something more permanent: your body actually making more fat cells. Once that happens, those new cells don't disappear when you lose weight. They stick around and make it easier to gain weight again later.  \u2022 Only oleic acid had this fat-boosting effect in both animals and humans \u2014 Mice fed oleic-acid-rich diets showed a sharp increase in precursor fat cells, the ones that turn into mature fat-storing cells. Human fat cells exposed to oleic acid in lab settings did the same thing. Other fats like coconut oil and stearic acid didn't cause this change \u2014 only oleic acid did. Still, we need more replicated science to confirm that oleic acid does, in fact, cause obesity to a greater extent than other fats.  \u2022 Even with the same calories, olive oil caused more fat buildup \u2014 In one part of the study, mice were fed the same number of calories but from different types of fat. Those that got oleic-acid-heavy fats like olive oil gained significantly more fat \u2014 not because they ate more, but because their fat cells multiplied faster. That means fat variety, not just quantity, matters a lot.  \u2022 More oleic acid in your blood means more fat cells created \u2014 Blood tests showed a direct connection between oleic acid levels in the blood and how many new fat cells were created. The more oleic acid that showed up, the more new fat cells the body made. In other words, this fat acts like a signal telling your body to grow more storage space for fat.  Oleic Acid Flips Metabolic Switches That Tell Your Body to Store More Fat  Inside your cells, there's a control system that decides whether to build new fat tissue. Oleic acid throws that switch to \"on,\" sending a signal that tells your body it's time to grow more fat cells. When that switch isn't working, this process doesn't happen, showing that oleic acid relies on this internal command to get the fat-storing process moving.2   \u2022 Oleic acid shuts off your natural fat-limiting controls \u2014 Your body also has a built-in safety system that's supposed to slow down or stop unnecessary fat cell growth. Think of it like a brake pedal that prevents you from creating more fat than you need. Oleic acid disables that brake, allowing fat cell development to go unchecked. The result is a steady stream of new fat cells being created, even when they're not needed.  \u2022 Without that brake, fat cells multiply fast \u2014 In one part of the study, researchers looked at mice that had this fat-limiting brake permanently turned off. When those mice consumed oleic acid, they experienced an explosion of new fat cell growth, much more than normal mice. This shows that oleic acid doesn't just promote fat storage, it also removes your body's ability to say \"enough.\"  \u2022 Human studies confirmed what the animal studies showed \u2014 Using data from the UK Biobank, one of the largest health databases in the world, researchers found that high levels of monounsaturated fats in the blood, mostly oleic acid, were strongly linked to higher obesity risk. Out of 249 different blood markers tested, oleic acid had the strongest link to being overweight.  Why Healthy-Sounding Oils Aren't Always Helping You  The study shows that oleic acid plays a bigger role in fat gain than most people realize. But there's another layer to this problem \u2014 one that's hidden in plain sight. The oils you trust as \"healthy,\" like olive and avocado oils, are sabotaging your metabolism in more ways than one.   \u2022 Let's start with what's actually in the bottle \u2014 Most people assume that if they're buying olive oil, they're getting the real deal. But research has repeatedly shown that many olive oils on the market are diluted or adulterated, often with cheap, highly refined vegetable oils like soybean or canola. So, unless you know your source, you're likely getting a cocktail of inflammatory industrial fats with every pour.  \u2022 Concerns over olive oil aren't new \u2014 I previously interviewed Brad Marshall, who's done excellent work on reductive stress and has warned about the metabolic problems associated with oleic acid in olive oil, including increased risk of obesity and energy imbalance. That's a huge red flag for anyone struggling with metabolic issues, energy dips, or weight that won't budge.  \u2022 Too much oleic acid disrupts your mitochondria in similar ways as linoleic acid (LA) \u2014 While it isn't a polyunsaturated fat like LA, oleic acid still embeds itself into your mitochondrial membrane and crowds out cardiolipin, a key fat that your mitochondria need to make energy efficiently.  When cardiolipin is displaced, the electron transport chain becomes unstable, leading to reduced adenosine triphosphate (ATP) production and increased oxidative stress. This same underlying mechanism is detailed in my 2025 Advances in Redox Research review, where I explain how both oxidative and reductive stress from fats like LA push mitochondria toward dysfunction and eventual breakdown.3  \u2022 Still holding onto the idea that olive oil is heart-healthy? This is partly true. It contains antioxidant-rich polyphenols that offer some protection. But those benefits don't cancel out the downsides when you're using olive oil liberally. When you strip away the antioxidants, oleic acid becomes a metabolic disruptor.  If olive oil is in your kitchen, it doesn't mean you need to throw it out immediately. But it does mean you should stop treating it like a health food to pour freely. Your cells are listening to the signals you send them \u2014 make sure those signals are helping, not hurting.  How to Adjust Your Dietary Oils to Boost Your Well-Being  If you've been relying on olive oil as your go-to \"healthy fat,\" it's time to rethink that habit. I used to recommend it too \u2014 until the research became too clear to ignore. Oleic acid has been shown to drive the creation of new fat cells, even without overeating. That means your body could be stockpiling fat just from the type of oil you use, not how much food you eat.  Here's how you start undoing that damage by removing the cause, rebalancing your fat intake, and restoring your mitochondrial energy. The goal is to reduce oleic acid buildup and get your metabolism functioning the way it was designed to. If you're struggling with stubborn belly fat, feel like your energy has flatlined, or notice fat creeping on even when you're eating healthy, here's what I recommend:   1. Don't replace olive oil with vegetable oils \u2014 ditch both \u2014 You might think swapping olive oil for something labeled \"vegetable oil\" is a step in the right direction, but it's not. Industrial vegetable oils like soybean, corn, canola, and safflower are worse than olive oil because they're packed with LA, a highly inflammatory polyunsaturated fat that damages your mitochondria, drives oxidative stress, and stays in your body for years.  These oils break down into toxic byproducts that interfere with hormone signaling and fat metabolism. So don't just replace one problem oil with another \u2014 remove both oleic- and LA-rich oils from your kitchen entirely.   2. Switch to metabolically stable fats like tallow, ghee, or grass fed butter \u2014 These traditional fats are lower in both oleic acid and LA and much more stable when heated. Use grass fed butter and ghee for cooking and keep tallow on hand for saut\u00e9ing and roasting. These fats support mitochondrial energy production instead of disrupting it. They're also more satisfying, which naturally helps regulate your appetite.   3. Eat meats from animals fed natural diets, not industrial feed \u2014 If you're eating pork or chicken raised on high-LA feeds (like soy and corn), you're still getting large doses of unhealthy fats. I recommend switching to ruminant meats like grass fed beef and lamb. These animals convert the fats in their feed differently and don't store excess oleic acid the same way. Instead of chicken and pork, stick with wild game and grass fed beef.   4. Prioritize carbs and collagen \u2014 One of the biggest mistakes people make when removing olive oil is replacing it with more fat. That only compounds the problem. What your cells actually need is fuel in the form of easy-to-digest carbs like fruit, root vegetables, and white rice, alongside a steady supply of collagen-rich protein like bone broth or slow-cooked meats. This combo helps rebuild your cell membranes and repair fat-driven metabolic damage.   5. Track your fat intake like you track your carbs or protein \u2014 Most people don't think twice about the kinds of fats they use day to day, but your body does. Start paying closer attention to how much oleic acid you're getting, not just from olive oil but from foods like salad dressings.  Treat it like any other macro: something to monitor and balance. Use a simple food journal or app to log your daily fat sources for two weeks. You'll quickly spot patterns \u2014 like how often olive oil or avocado oil sneaks into your meals.  Once you see it, you can start swapping it out with fats that actually support your metabolism. Awareness is the first step to change, and this simple tracking habit helps reconnect you with how your body responds to what's on your plate. Fat is not the enemy. But the wrong fat, even in a \"healthy\" form, creates the wrong signals. Reset those signals, and your body will finally respond the way it's supposed to.  FAQs About Olive Oil    Q: Is olive oil really causing weight gain, even if I eat healthy?  A: Yes, according to a 2025 study in Cell Reports, oleic acid \u2014 the main fat in olive oil \u2014 triggers the creation of new fat cells even without overeating.4 This helps explain why some people gain weight despite clean eating and calorie control.   Q: What makes oleic acid different from other fats?  A: Oleic acid doesn't just store energy. It sends signals to your cells to make more fat-storing cells. Other fats, like stearic acid or coconut oil, didn't have the same effect in studies. The issue isn't just how much fat you eat, but what type.   Q: Isn't olive oil part of the healthy Mediterranean diet?  A: It is, but moderation is key. Olive oil does contain protective polyphenols, but in excess, its main fat disrupts mitochondria, promotes fat storage, and interferes with metabolic health.   Q: Should I stop using olive oil completely?  A: Not necessarily, but you should stop treating it like a free-pour health food. Many store-bought olive oils are adulterated, and even pure versions are problematic in large amounts. Track how often you're using it and consider switching to more stable fats like ghee, tallow, or grass fed butter.   Q: What's the best way to fix this if I've been using olive oil for years?  A: Start by removing high-oleic oils from your kitchen and replacing them with metabolically supportive fats. Prioritize easy-to-digest carbs and collagen-rich proteins, and monitor your fat intake like you would any other nutrient. Over time, this shift restores mitochondrial function and helps normalize weight and energy levels.","og_url":"https:\/\/articles.mercola.com\/sites\/articles\/archive\/2026\/03\/25\/olive-oil-drives-obesity-than-other-fats.aspx","og_site_name":"Watchman News","article_published_time":"2026-03-25T00:00:00+00:00","article_modified_time":"2026-03-25T05:51:19+00:00","og_image":[{"url":"https:\/\/media.mercola.com\/assets\/images\/mercola\/bestarticles-icon.png","type":"","width":"","height":""}],"author":"Admin","twitter_card":"summary_large_image","twitter_misc":{"Verfasst von":"Admin","Gesch\u00e4tzte Lesezeit":"11\u00a0Minuten"},"schema":{"@context":"https:\/\/schema.org","@graph":[{"@type":"Article","@id":"https:\/\/articles.mercola.com\/sites\/articles\/archive\/2026\/03\/25\/olive-oil-drives-obesity-than-other-fats.aspx#article","isPartOf":{"@id":"https:\/\/watchman.news\/2026\/03\/new-research-claims-olive-oil-drives-obesity-to-greater-extent-than-other-fats\/"},"author":{"name":"Admin","@id":"https:\/\/watchman.news\/#\/schema\/person\/3f4506c6002f5893ba45478a4540739f"},"headline":"New Research Claims Olive Oil Drives Obesity to Greater Extent Than Other Fats","datePublished":"2026-03-25T00:00:00+00:00","dateModified":"2026-03-25T05:51:19+00:00","mainEntityOfPage":{"@id":"https:\/\/watchman.news\/2026\/03\/new-research-claims-olive-oil-drives-obesity-to-greater-extent-than-other-fats\/"},"wordCount":2307,"commentCount":0,"image":{"@id":"https:\/\/articles.mercola.com\/sites\/articles\/archive\/2026\/03\/25\/olive-oil-drives-obesity-than-other-fats.aspx#primaryimage"},"thumbnailUrl":"https:\/\/media.mercola.com\/assets\/images\/mercola\/bestarticles-icon.png","articleSection":["Baptism &amp; 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