Protein on GLP-1s: Why It Matters and How Much
If there's one piece of nutrition advice that comes up in every GLP-1 conversation, it's this: prioritize protein. Not because it's a fad, but because of what GLP-1 medications do to your appetite — and what can happen to your muscle if you don't pay attention.
Why protein suddenly matters more
GLP-1 medications work by turning down appetite and quieting food noise, so you naturally eat less. That's exactly how they help with weight — but rapid weight loss of any kind can take muscle along with fat, not just fat alone. Muscle is what keeps you strong, supports your metabolism, and helps you keep the weight off long term. Getting enough protein while you're in a calorie deficit is one of the main ways to hold onto muscle while the fat comes off.
How much protein?
You'll often hear a target in the neighborhood of 100 grams a day, and many people on GLP-1s aim there or a bit higher. But the honest answer is that the right number is individual — it depends on your body size, activity, age, and health, and it's best set with your prescriber or a registered dietitian rather than a blog. Treat "around 100g" as a common starting reference point, not a prescription.
The real challenge: hitting it on a smaller appetite
Here's the twist. The medication that makes protein important is the same one that makes it hard — when you're barely hungry, eating enough protein takes intention. A few practical moves:
- Lead with protein. Eat the protein on your plate first, while your limited appetite is at its strongest. If you fill up, you fill up on what matters.
- Front-load your day. A protein-forward breakfast (eggs, Greek yogurt, cottage cheese, a shake) banks protein early, before appetite fades further.
- Make it easy and dense. Higher-protein, lower-volume options — shakes, Greek yogurt, lean meats, tofu, protein-fortified foods — get more protein into fewer bites.
- Spread it out. Smaller protein hits across the day are easier to stomach than one big protein-heavy meal when your appetite is small.
Don't forget water
Hydration tends to slip on a GLP-1 too, partly because thirst cues can get quieter along with hunger. Keeping water up through the day supports how you feel and can help with common side effects like constipation. One caveat if you're on Rybelsus: your first 30-minute empty-stomach window is water-limited by design — hydrate after it, not during it.
Track it, don't guess it
Protein is one of those things almost everyone overestimates. "I had chicken, I'm fine" often lands well short of a real target once you actually count. You don't need to track forever — but keeping an eye on protein (and water) for a while, especially early on, builds an accurate sense of what hitting your goal actually looks like on a plate. After that it becomes intuition.
Protein and water, built in
Alongside dose streaks and weight trends, GLPill has simple daily protein and water targets so you can protect your muscle without a separate app. Built for GLP-1 pills. Coming to the App Store.
Join the waitlistThis article is general educational information, not medical or dietary advice. Protein and hydration targets should be personalized with your prescriber or a registered dietitian, who know your health history and any conditions (for example, kidney issues) that affect protein needs. Always follow the instructions that come with your medication.