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What to eat on GLP-1:
the complete food guide

Mealful Kitchen Team·May 20, 2026·8 min read
⚠️ For educational & entertainment purposes only. This is not medical or nutritional advice. Protein targets and food choices vary by individual — always consult your doctor or a registered dietitian. Mealful Kitchen is not liable for actions taken based on this content.

When you're on a GLP-1, you eat less — sometimes a lot less. That makes every single bite count. The goal isn't just eating less; it's making what you do eat as nutritious as possible. Here's exactly how to do that.

The one rule that matters most

If you remember nothing else from this guide, remember this: protein and fiber are the name of the game. Every dietitian who works with GLP-1 patients says some version of the same thing — when your appetite is suppressed and you can only eat 50% of what you used to, every bite needs to earn its place on the plate.

Protein protects your muscle while you lose fat. Fiber keeps you full longer, steadies your blood sugar, and fights the constipation that GLP-1s are famous for. Build every meal around those two, add water, and you've got the foundation.

Foods to prioritize vs. foods to limit

✅ Prioritize

  • Lean protein — chicken, fish, turkey, eggs
  • Greek yogurt & cottage cheese
  • Tofu, beans & lentils
  • Leafy greens & non-starchy veggies
  • Berries, apples & other fiber-rich fruit
  • Whole grains in small portions
  • Healthy fats — avocado, olive oil, nuts
  • Bone broth & protein smoothies

⚠️ Limit

  • Fried & greasy foods
  • Fatty, heavy cuts of meat
  • Sugary desserts, soda & juice
  • Refined carbs — white bread, white rice
  • Large, cheesy meals (pizza, burgers)
  • Processed packaged snacks
  • Alcohol
  • Very spicy dishes (if nausea-prone)

The "limit" list isn't about willpower — it's about chemistry. Greasy and heavy foods sit in your already-slow stomach and crank up nausea. Sugar spikes and crashes your blood sugar, which makes appetite harder to manage. Big cheesy portions overwhelm a stomach that's emptying at half speed.

How much protein do you actually need?

This is the number one question, so here's the clear answer. The common floor is at least 60 grams per day, but most experts recommend more: roughly 0.55 grams of protein per pound of body weight (or about 1.2g per kilogram).

~82g
Daily protein target for a 150-pound person (0.55g × 150)

The catch: with a suppressed appetite, hitting 80–100g of protein a day is genuinely hard. Three strategies make it doable:

1. Eat protein first

At every meal, eat your protein source before the vegetables and carbs. If your appetite fades after a few bites, you want those bites to be protein.

2. Spread it across the day

Aim for 25–35g per meal across three or more meals and snacks, rather than trying to cram it all into one sitting your stomach can't handle.

3. Lean on liquid protein on hard days

When solid food feels impossible — especially the first weeks or after a dose increase — a high-protein smoothie with Greek yogurt, nut butter, and frozen fruit gets you there without triggering symptoms. Bone broth adds about 10g per cup.

Why it's non-negotiable: Research shows up to 40% of the weight lost on GLP-1s can come from muscle, not fat. Protein is the single biggest lever you control to keep that number down.

The best GLP-1-friendly snacks

Snacks aren't cheating on a GLP-1 — they're a strategy. Small protein-rich snacks bridge the gap between meals you can't finish and help you hit your daily protein without huge portions. A good GLP-1 snack is high in protein, low in sugar, low in net carbs, easy to digest, and portion-controlled.

🥚 Hard-boiled eggs 🫙 Greek yogurt 🧀 Cottage cheese 🥤 Protein shake 🌿 Edamame 🥩 Meat sticks / jerky 🥜 Protein bites 🫐 Berries + nuts

Interestingly, the GLP-1 boom has made high-protein meat snacks one of the fastest-growing food categories in the country — meat sticks alone are now a $5.5 billion market, driven largely by the hunt for portion-controlled protein.

Don't forget fiber & water

Constipation is one of the most common GLP-1 side effects, and fiber is your best defense. Most adults should aim for 25–38 grams of fiber per day — but increase it gradually, because adding too much too fast causes bloating and gas. Fiber also adds substance to smaller meals, helping you feel satisfied on less.

And water matters more than people realize. Because GLP-1s quiet your appetite, they often quiet your thirst cues too. Dehydration worsens nausea, fatigue, and constipation all at once. Keep a bottle with you and sip throughout the day.

What to eat when you have no appetite at all

Some days — especially injection days or right after a dose bump — eating feels like a chore. Don't skip food entirely; that's how people end up malnourished or dehydrated. Instead, go gentle and nutrient-dense:

Stick with bland, easy foods like toast, rice, bananas, and broth-based soups. Reach for liquid nutrition — protein smoothies and shakes are far easier to get down than a full plate. Choose cold or room-temperature foods, which have less aroma and trigger less nausea. And keep grab-and-go protein in the fridge so eating is effortless when willpower and appetite are both low.

This is exactly what our recipes are built for: every recipe shows protein per serving, and you can filter to gentle, gentle, simple, and high-protein options in one tap — including smoothies and soups for the hardest days.

Turn this into dinner tonight

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