🥦 Nutrition Guide

Eating on GLP-1 Therapy: A Complete Evidence-Based Guide

How to fuel your body, protect muscle mass, and manage side effects through strategic nutrition during GLP-1 treatment.

Medically Reviewed

This guide is reviewed by a Registered Dietitian and reflects current clinical evidence on nutrition during GLP-1 therapy. It is not a substitute for personalized medical advice.

Why Nutrition Matters More Than Ever on GLP-1

GLP-1 medications work by suppressing appetite — often dramatically. While this helps reduce calorie intake, it also creates a significant challenge: it becomes easy to eat too little, and specifically too little protein. This can lead to muscle loss, fatigue, nutritional deficiencies, and a metabolic slowdown that undermines your long-term results.

The goal isn't just to eat less. It's to eat strategically — prioritizing the nutrients that protect muscle, support energy, and ensure that the weight you lose is primarily fat, not lean body mass.

30–40%
of weight lost on GLP-1 can be muscle if protein is insufficient
1.2–1.6g
protein per kg bodyweight recommended daily on GLP-1
800–1200
minimum daily calories for safe, sustainable weight loss

Protein: Your Most Important Priority

Protein is non-negotiable on GLP-1 therapy. When you lose weight rapidly without adequate protein intake, your body breaks down muscle tissue for energy — a process that slows your metabolism and makes maintaining weight loss much harder once you stop medication.

How much protein do you need?

Research supports a target of 1.2 to 1.6 grams of protein per kilogram of body weight per day for people on GLP-1 therapy who are also exercising. At a reduced appetite, reaching this target requires deliberate planning — protein should come first at every meal.

Practical tip

When appetite is very low, protein shakes (whey or plant-based) can be an efficient way to meet targets without requiring large meals. Aim for 25–30g of protein per shake.

Best high-protein foods for GLP-1 patients

Focus on lean, easily digestible protein sources — especially during early treatment when GI side effects are most common:

Managing Nausea Through Food Choices

Nausea is one of the most common side effects during GLP-1 dose escalation, typically peaking in the first 4–8 weeks. What you eat — and how you eat — has a significant impact on severity.

Foods and habits that reduce nausea

When to contact your provider

If nausea is severe, prevents you from eating for more than 24 hours, or is accompanied by vomiting that causes dehydration, contact your prescribing provider. Dose adjustment may be appropriate.

What to Eat When You Have No Appetite

Many GLP-1 patients experience days — especially after injections — when food is deeply unappealing. This is normal, but "not eating" is not a solution. Your body still needs nutrients to function and preserve muscle.

Strategies for low-appetite days

Foods to Prioritize vs. Minimize

✓ Prioritize

  • Lean protein (chicken, fish, eggs, legumes)
  • Non-starchy vegetables (broccoli, spinach, cucumbers)
  • Greek yogurt, cottage cheese
  • Whole grains (oats, quinoa, brown rice)
  • Healthy fats (avocado, olive oil, nuts — in moderation)
  • Broth-based soups (easy to digest, hydrating)
  • Ginger tea (nausea relief)

✗ Minimize

  • Fried and greasy foods
  • High-fat meals (worsen gastric delay)
  • Carbonated drinks (bloating)
  • Alcohol (worsens nausea, adds empty calories)
  • Ultra-processed snack foods
  • Very large portions at once
  • Spicy foods (for sensitive GI tracts)

Hydration & Electrolytes

Reduced food intake means reduced intake of electrolytes — sodium, potassium, and magnesium — which can cause headaches, fatigue, and muscle cramps. This is especially common during early treatment when nausea further reduces eating.

Medical Disclaimer: This nutrition information is provided for general educational purposes and has been reviewed by a Registered Dietitian. Individual needs vary based on health history, current medications, and clinical circumstances. Please consult your healthcare provider or a registered dietitian before making significant changes to your diet, especially if you have diabetes, kidney disease, or other metabolic conditions.