Living on a GLP-1
The medication is the easy part. The everyday questions — what to eat, whether you can drink, how birth control interacts, how to train to keep muscle, what to do on a sick day or a flight — are where outcomes are actually won. Each answer below is reviewed by a clinician.
Written by
glpzoom Editorial Team
Medically reviewed
Against primary clinical sourcesWhat should you eat on a GLP-1 (and what to avoid)?
On a GLP-1, eat protein first (80-100g/day to protect muscle), add fiber and extra water, and eat small slow meals. Avoid high-fat and fried foods, large portions, carbonated drinks, alcohol, and refined sugar, all of which worsen nausea on delayed gastric emptying.
Read full answer →Can I drink alcohol while on Wegovy?
Read full answer →Can I drink coffee on Ozempic or Wegovy?
Yes, coffee is fine on Ozempic and Wegovy — there's no interaction between caffeine and GLP-1 drugs. Drink it with food rather than on an empty stomach if it worsens nausea or reflux, and limit sugary coffee drinks that work against the metabolic benefit.
Read full answer →Does Ozempic or Wegovy affect birth control?
Semaglutide (Ozempic, Wegovy) does not chemically weaken birth control, but vomiting or diarrhea from GI side effects can reduce oral-pill absorption. Tirzepatide (Mounjaro, Zepbound) does affect oral contraceptive absorption — use a backup barrier method for 4 weeks after each dose increase.
Read full answer →How should you exercise on a GLP-1?
On a GLP-1, prioritize resistance training 2-4x/week over cardio to protect the lean muscle that weight loss can erode (20-40% of weight lost can be muscle). Pair it with 80-100g protein daily, stay hydrated, and don't over-train in a steep calorie deficit.
Read full answer →What supplements should you take on a GLP-1?
On a GLP-1, the useful supplements are protein (to hit 80-100g/day when appetite is low), fiber for constipation, a basic multivitamin, and electrolytes for hydration. Skip 'GLP-1 booster' or 'fat-burner' blends — no evidence, and stimulants in them worsen GLP-1 side effects.
Read full answer →Should you skip your GLP-1 dose when you're sick?
Pause your next GLP-1 dose if you're acutely ill with vomiting or diarrhea — the dehydration risk is the main concern. A mild cold without GI symptoms usually needs no change. Never double up a missed dose, and call your provider for persistent vomiting or severe abdominal pain.
Read full answer →How do you travel with a GLP-1 (storage, flights, time zones)?
GLP-1 pens travel fine: keep them in carry-on (never checked — cargo holds freeze and ruin the drug), use an insulated case with a gel pack, and bring the labeled carton for TSA. In-use pens tolerate room temperature for weeks. For time zones, keep your weekly dose day and adjust the clock time freely.
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