The first week on a GLP-1 is mostly about eating smaller and simpler. Your appetite drops fast, food sits longer, and the meals that felt normal last week can suddenly feel like too much. This is a plain-language guide to what tends to go down easily that first week, built around protein and gentle, familiar foods.
Why the first week feels different
GLP-1 medications slow down how quickly your stomach empties, so you feel full sooner and stay full longer. That is the whole point — but it means large or heavy meals can feel uncomfortable. The fix is not to push through it; it is to scale your meals down to match your new appetite.
What tends to go down easily
These are the gentle, protein-forward foods most people reach for in week one:
- Scrambled or soft-boiled eggs
- Greek yogurt
- Cottage cheese
- Grilled or shredded chicken
- White fish
- Oatmeal
- Protein smoothies
- Steamed vegetables
- Broth-based soups
- Tofu
A simple first-week rhythm
Instead of three big meals, many people find it easier to eat smaller amounts more often:
- Morning: Eggs or Greek yogurt with a little fruit.
- Midday: A few ounces of lean protein with a soft, cooked vegetable.
- Afternoon: A protein smoothie or a small handful of something light.
- Evening: A small portion of fish or chicken with something easy to digest.
Foods that tend to feel heavy early on
Greasy, fried, very spicy, or very sweet foods are the ones people most often find sit poorly in the first week. You do not have to ban anything forever — just know that rich, heavy meals are the usual culprits when something feels off.
Aiming for protein
Because you are eating less overall, the food you do eat has more work to do. Leaning on protein at each meal — eggs, yogurt, chicken, fish, tofu, or a protein shake — helps you make those smaller portions count. A common target people aim for is roughly 20 to 25 grams of protein per meal, though everyone is different.