GLP-1 Side Effects: What to Expect, What to Watch For
The complete guide to side effects on Ozempic, Wegovy, Mounjaro, and Zepbound. What is normal, what needs monitoring, and what requires immediate emergency care.
GLP-1 medications are among the most studied drugs in recent medical history. Their side effect profile is well-documented — but not always well-explained. Most side effects are mild, predictable, and manageable with the right approach. A small number are serious and require prompt medical attention. Knowing the difference is the most important thing any GLP-1 user can do.
Most GLP-1 side effects are dose-dependent and time-limited. They are most intense during the first 4–8 weeks and after each dose increase, then improve as the body adapts. The single most effective strategy for reducing side effects is slower dose titration — staying at each dose level longer than the minimum recommended period.
Three Categories of GLP-1 Side Effects
Understanding which category a side effect falls into determines the appropriate response. The 16 guides below are organised by severity so you always know what you are dealing with.
Gut and Digestive Effects
Nausea, constipation, vomiting, diarrhoea, bloating, and acid reflux affect the majority of GLP-1 users at some point. These are the most predictable side effects and are almost always manageable with food choices, hydration, and dose titration speed.
Gastrointestinal Complications
Gastroparesis, bowel obstruction, and pancreatitis are rare but serious GI complications. Persistent, worsening, or severe abdominal symptoms warrant medical evaluation rather than waiting for improvement.
Emerging Safety Signals
NAION vision loss was confirmed by the EMA in June 2025. Bone density reduction has been confirmed by multiple studies. The full picture of what is confirmed, preliminary, and ruled out is in the guides below.
Quick Reference: Normal vs Monitor vs Urgent
| Symptom | Status | What to do |
|---|---|---|
| Nausea in first 4–8 weeks | Normal | Adjust food choices, slow titration, ginger tea |
| Constipation | Normal | Increase fibre gradually, hydrate, magnesium if needed |
| Hair thinning at 3–6 months | Normal | Usually telogen effluvium — protect protein intake |
| Facial volume loss | Normal | Result of overall fat loss — not medication-specific damage |
| Fatigue | Monitor | Check protein and calorie intake — often nutritional |
| Persistent nausea beyond 8 weeks | Monitor | Discuss dose reduction with prescriber |
| Dizziness when standing | Monitor | Check hydration and blood pressure — can be medication effect |
| IBS symptom changes | Monitor | Track IBS subtype response — may improve or worsen |
| Sudden vision change in one eye | Urgent | Emergency eye clinic same day — possible NAION |
| Severe persistent abdominal pain | Urgent | A&E immediately — possible pancreatitis or obstruction |
| Unable to keep fluids down | Urgent | Same-day medical attention — severe dehydration risk |
The majority of GLP-1 side effects are manageable with three levers: what you eat, how fast you titrate, and how well you hydrate. Slow your dose increases, eat smaller meals more frequently, avoid high-fat meals, and protect your protein intake.
All GLP-1 Side Effect Guides
Common Gastrointestinal Side Effects (5 guides)
Ozempic Nausea: Here Is Why — And How to Actually Fix It
CommonGLP-1 Constipation: Why It Happens and How to Fix It
CommonOzempic and Diarrhea: Why It Happens, How Long It Lasts, How to Stop It
CommonOzempic and Heartburn: Why GLP-1 Causes Acid Reflux and How to Stop It
CommonSulfur Burps on Ozempic and Mounjaro: Why They Happen and How to Stop Them
Common Systemic Side Effects (6 guides)
Why Am I So Tired on GLP-1? Causes of Fatigue and How to Fix It
CommonWhy Do I Feel Weak on Ozempic? 6 Causes & Fixes
CommonDizziness on Ozempic: Is It Dangerous? (10-Second Test)
CommonOzempic Hair Loss: Why It Happens, How Long It Lasts, and What Actually Helps
CommonOzempic Headaches: You’re Probably Missing This One Cause
CommonOzempic Teeth: What Is Actually Happening to Your Oral Health
Body Composition Changes (3 guides)
Does Ozempic Make You Look Older? Ozempic Face Explained
AestheticOzempic Butt: Why It Happens, How to Prevent It, and How to Fix It
AestheticOzempic Vulva: The Side Effect Nobody Warned You About and What Actually Helps
Serious & Complex (2 guides)
Confirmed Safety Signals 2025 (2 guides)
Does Ozempic Cause Bone Loss? What the Research Actually Shows
2025 ConfirmedOzempic and Vision Loss: What the NAION Research Shows
Research Roundup (1 guide)
Free GLP-1 Tools
All free, no sign-up required. Built specifically for GLP-1 users.
GLP-1 Protein Calculator
Your exact daily protein target based on weight, medication, and goal.
Calorie Calculator
Adjusts for metabolic adaptation — not a standard TDEE calculator.
GLP-1 Progress Tracker
Track weight, protein intake, and symptoms week by week.
GLP-1 Meal Planner
Free 7-day meal plan built around GLP-1 protein targets.
General Protein Calculator
Standard protein calculator by body weight and activity level.
Other GLP-1 Hubs
GLP-1 Optimization (Main Hub)
The complete nutrition system. 102+ articles across 4 pillars.
Getting Started with GLP-1
What to eat from day one — protein targets, meal structure, and the five rules.
GLP-1 Weight Loss Problems
Why weight loss stalls, slows, or stops — and the evidence-based fixes.
GLP-1 Muscle & Protein
Protecting lean mass during GLP-1 weight loss — protein targets and strategies.
Frequently Asked Questions
The most common side effects are nausea, constipation, vomiting, diarrhoea, fatigue, and bloating. These are most intense during the first 4–8 weeks and typically improve significantly by week 8. They are almost always manageable with the right food choices, hydration, and dose titration speed.
Severe persistent abdominal pain radiating to the back (possible pancreatitis), sudden painless vision loss in one eye (possible NAION), inability to pass gas or stool with severe bloating (bowel obstruction), or inability to keep fluids down (severe dehydration). Go to A&E or call emergency services immediately.
Hair thinning on GLP-1 is usually telogen effluvium from rapid weight loss, not a direct medication effect. It is largely preventable with adequate protein intake. Hair loss peaks at 3–6 months and usually resolves 6–12 months after nutrition is corrected.
Ozempic face is facial volume loss from rapid overall fat loss — not medication-specific damage. It happens because facial fat decreases before muscle returns. Facial volume can be restored with facial filler or fat grafting procedures.
Yes. NAION (non-arteritic anterior ischaemic optic neuropathy) was confirmed by the EMA in June 2025 as a very rare side effect — affecting up to 1 in 10,000 people. Sudden painless vision loss in one eye requires emergency eye care same day.
Yes. Multiple 2024–2025 studies confirm bone density reduction on GLP-1 medications — 30% increased osteoporosis risk. Protective strategy covers resistance training, adequate calcium and vitamin D, and DEXA monitoring for higher-risk patients.
Eat smaller meals more frequently, avoid high-fat and greasy foods, stay hydrated, slow your dose titration, and use the protein calculator to ensure adequate protein. Ginger tea and taking antiemetics as prescribed by your GP also help. Most nausea improves significantly by week 8.