Sleep disruptions may be risk factors for eating disorder symptoms. However, mean estimates of sleep characteristics may not be ideal metrics, considering many individuals have irregular sleep patterns. Although variability in sleep-wake timing is associated with irregular eating patterns among individuals with eating disorders (Linnaranta et al., 2020), studies of sleep intraindividual variability (IIV) and eating pathology are limited. To fill this gap, we evaluated two indices of sleep IIV from weekdays-to-weekends and their relation to eating disorder risk. The sample was drawn from the 2018-2019 Healthy Minds Study (N = 25,879). We conducted two binary logistic regressions predicting screening positive for an eating disorder from IIV indices, adjusting for depression and mean sleep time. Greater IIV