GLP-1 Foods to Avoid
GLP-1 medications amplify the effects of certain foods. Foods that cause minor discomfort off medication can trigger significant nausea, bloating, or vomiting on semaglutide or tirzepatide. Here's what to avoid โ and what to eat instead.
Foods that worsen GLP-1 side effects
1. Fried and high-fat foods
Why to avoid: Fat significantly slows gastric emptying โ and GLP-1 already slows gastric emptying. The combination creates severe, prolonged nausea. Fried chicken, chips, pizza, pastry, and anything in heavy cream sauce are the most common triggers.
The mechanism: Fat in the small intestine triggers CCK (cholecystokinin) release, which further slows stomach emptying. On GLP-1, this creates a compounding effect that can keep food in the stomach for 6โ8 hours, causing sustained nausea.
Alternatives: Baked, steamed, or poached preparations of the same proteins. Replace chip-shop fish and chips with baked cod and a small plain potato.
2. Spicy food
Why to avoid: Capsaicin (the active compound in chilli) directly irritates the gastric mucosa and triggers nausea receptors. On GLP-1, where the stomach is already slowed and more sensitive, spicy food can cause immediate vomiting.
Alternatives: Use ginger, lemon, and herbs (basil, coriander, dill) for flavour without heat. Mild spices like cumin, turmeric, and coriander seed are generally well-tolerated.
3. Raw cruciferous vegetables
Why to avoid: Broccoli, cauliflower, cabbage, Brussels sprouts, and kale contain raffinose โ a trisaccharide that the human gut cannot digest. It passes to the large intestine where gut bacteria ferment it, producing significant gas and bloating. On GLP-1, this bloating is amplified because food stays in the gut longer.
Alternatives: The same vegetables, cooked soft. Steaming or boiling broccoli until tender reduces fermentable compounds significantly. Spinach and courgette are gentler alternatives.
4. High-sugar foods and drinks
Why to avoid: Rapid blood sugar spikes from sugary food cause the body to release large amounts of insulin. On GLP-1 โ which is already modulating blood sugar โ this can create unpredictable blood sugar patterns. Post-sugar crashes also worsen fatigue, which is already a common GLP-1 side effect.
Alternatives: Fresh fruit (slower sugar absorption due to fibre), small amounts of dark chocolate (70%+), or naturally sweetened desserts like plain Greek yogurt with honey.
5. Alcohol
Why to avoid: Alcohol has a diuretic effect that compounds the dehydration risk that already exists with GLP-1-related nausea and vomiting. It also irritates the gastric lining directly. Additionally, GLP-1 medications change alcohol metabolism โ many users report feeling significantly more intoxicated on lower amounts of alcohol.
Note: Some users report GLP-1 medication has dramatically reduced their desire for alcohol โ this is a reported but not fully understood secondary effect that's being studied.
6. Carbonated drinks
Why to avoid: Carbonation adds gas to an already-slowed digestive system. Fizzy water, sparkling wine, beer, and soft drinks all contribute to bloating and belching, which is significantly worse on GLP-1.
Alternatives: Still water with lemon or cucumber, herbal teas (ginger, peppermint, chamomile), diluted fruit juice.
7. High-FODMAP foods (especially early in treatment)
Why to avoid: FODMAPs (fermentable oligosaccharides, disaccharides, monosaccharides, and polyols) are short-chain carbohydrates that ferment in the gut. They're well-studied triggers for IBS-like symptoms. On GLP-1, even people who previously tolerated high-FODMAP foods may develop sensitivity because of the altered gut motility.
High-FODMAP foods to be cautious with: Onions, garlic, leeks, apples, pears, stone fruit, legumes (lentils, chickpeas, kidney beans in large amounts), wheat in large quantities.
Strategy: You don't need to eliminate these forever โ just reduce quantities, especially in the first 4โ8 weeks, then reintroduce slowly to find your tolerance threshold.
8. Tough red meat
Why to avoid: Red meat takes significantly longer to digest than white meat or fish. On GLP-1, which already slows digestion, a large steak or burger can cause sustained nausea for hours. The fat content of most red meat compounds this effect.
Alternatives: Very lean cuts (sirloin, fillet) in smaller portions, or switch to chicken, fish, or tofu as primary proteins. If you do eat red meat, keep the portion to 80โ100g and use lean cuts only.
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