Foods to Avoid ยท GLP-1 Side Effects

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.

Important: These are general guidelines. Individual tolerance varies significantly. Some people on GLP-1 can eat most of these foods without issue; others are highly sensitive to all of them. Track your reactions and adjust accordingly.

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 6โ€“8 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 4โ€“8 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 80โ€“100g and use lean cuts only.

The reintroduction approach: Most of these restrictions are most important in the first 4โ€“8 weeks. As your body adapts to GLP-1, you'll likely find you can tolerate more. Reintroduce foods one at a time, in small quantities, and track your response.
What to eat instead

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