Skip to content
Steady
Get Steady
ResearchSide effects
Side effectsNutritionWegovy

Constipation on a GLP-1: the fibre, water, magnesium loop that actually works

Slower gastric emptying is how GLP-1s work. It is also why a third of women on the drug develop constipation. Here is the protocol that fixes it without bringing back hunger.

Published May 20, 20265 min read
4 primary sources citedReviewed by Steady editorial team

The 30-second summary

  • Constipation affects roughly 17–24% of women on tirzepatide and 8–13% on semaglutide in the registration trials.
  • The mechanism is built into the drug: slower gastric emptying, slower intestinal transit, less hunger so less food going through the system.
  • The fix is mechanical, not medical: fibre, water, magnesium, and movement, in that order.

Why it happens

Constipation on a GLP-1 is not a coincidence and it is not a sign the drug is wrong for you. It is a predictable consequence of the way the drug works.

Three mechanisms, all real:

  1. Slowed gastric emptying. Food sits in the stomach longer. The signal to the small intestine to receive new contents is delayed. The whole conveyor belt runs slower.
  2. Reduced food volume. You are eating 30–50% less. Less material in equals less material out. Stools become smaller and harder.
  3. Lower fluid intake. GLP-1s blunt thirst signalling almost as effectively as they blunt hunger. Many women dehydrate themselves slowly without realising.

The good news is that none of these is the body breaking. They are all consequences of the drug working, and they all respond well to the same simple set of interventions.

The fix, in order

Step one: fibre

The single most powerful lever is soluble fibre. Not the rough, scrubby kind from bran, the gel-forming kind from oats, psyllium, chia, flax, and legumes.

A working target: 25–30 grams of total fibre per day, with at least 8–10 grams of that being soluble.

Practical sources:

  • Chia seeds: 2 tablespoons in yoghurt or a smoothie give you 10 grams of fibre, mostly soluble
  • Psyllium husk: 1 tablespoon in water = 5 grams of soluble fibre. The most reliable single intervention for many women.
  • Oats: half a cup of rolled oats = 4 grams, half of which is the famous beta-glucan
  • Lentils: half a cup cooked = 8 grams
  • Pears, apples, berries: about 4 grams each

The mistake most women make is adding all of this in one day. The result is gas, bloating, and discomfort that lasts a week. Add 5 grams of new fibre per day, hold for three days, then add another 5. Inside two weeks you are at target without paying for it.

Step two: water

Fibre without water is a brick. The same gel-forming fibre that softens stool when hydrated becomes the opposite when dehydrated.

A working target: 2 to 2.5 litres per day, more if you are exercising or in a warm climate.

A simple trick that works for women whose thirst signal is muted: a 750 ml water bottle on your desk that you refill three times. It is much harder to forget when it is in front of you.

Step three: magnesium

Magnesium has two jobs here. It draws water into the intestine osmotically, softening stool. And it relaxes the smooth muscle of the gut wall, allowing better motility.

The form matters:

  • Magnesium citrate is more aggressive: useful for occasional rescue, but can be too laxative for daily use.
  • Magnesium glycinate is gentler, also helps with sleep, and is the most common recommendation for daily GI support.
  • Magnesium oxide is poorly absorbed and most likely to cause loose stools without much benefit.

A reasonable daily target on a GLP-1 is 200–400 mg of magnesium glycinate, taken with dinner. If you have kidney disease, talk to your prescriber before supplementing.

Step four: movement

Walking activates the muscles that surround the intestine and helps move contents along. A 20-minute walk after a meal is one of the most consistently helpful interventions in any GI literature, GLP-1 or otherwise.

You do not need to walk fast. You need to walk consistently.

When to use something stronger

If the four-part protocol above is not enough after two weeks of consistent application, the next-tier options:

  • Osmotic laxatives: polyethylene glycol (Miralax) is well tolerated for short-term use. Not addictive. Pulls water into the bowel.
  • Stool softeners: docusate (Colace) helps if stool is hard but you are passing it regularly.
  • Stimulant laxatives: senna, bisacodyl. Use occasionally. Daily long-term use can desensitise the gut.

None of these are substitutes for the fibre-water-magnesium-movement loop. They are bridges while the longer-term changes do their work.

When to call your prescriber

Most GLP-1 constipation responds to the protocol within two to three weeks. The signs that this is not standard constipation and needs evaluation:

  • More than four to five days without a bowel movement, especially with abdominal pain
  • Severe abdominal pain, distension, vomiting: these are warning signs for bowel obstruction or ileus, which is rare but reported with high-dose GLP-1s
  • Blood in stool or black, tarry stools
  • Unintentional weight gain or fluid retention alongside severe constipation

These deserve urgent assessment, not another day of psyllium.

What this is not

This is not a reason to stop the GLP-1. For nearly every woman, constipation is manageable with the protocol above. It almost never requires dose reduction. And it usually settles into a steady, manageable pattern after the first 8–12 weeks.

What Steady does with this

If you log constipation as a symptom three or more times in two weeks, the coach is built to walk you through the fibre-water-magnesium-movement protocol, checking what you are already doing, suggesting one change at a time. The progress shows up in your symptom heatmap; you can see the line trending down as the changes take hold.

Sources

  1. FDA Prescribing Information, Wegovy. Section 6, Adverse Reactions. Label
  2. FDA Prescribing Information, Mounjaro. Section 6. Label
  3. Anderson JW et al. Health benefits of dietary fiber. Nutr Rev 2009. PubMed
  4. Suares NC, Ford AC. Systematic review: the effects of fibre in the management of chronic idiopathic constipation. Aliment Pharmacol Ther 2011. PubMed

Medical disclaimer: This protocol is general. Severe or persistent constipation belongs with your prescriber, not the internet. See our full medical disclaimer.

Reviewed by Steady editorial team.
Last updated 2026-05-20.
Keep reading