The 30-second summary
- GLP-1 fatigue usually shows up at weeks 4 to 8, when caloric intake has dropped sharply but the body has not yet adjusted.
- The three drivers are almost always: under-eating, low protein, and electrolyte loss.
- The fixes are unglamorous and effective: eat enough, eat protein first, and put a pinch of salt back in your day.
Why fatigue shows up
For most women on a GLP-1, weeks one to three are honeymoon weeks. Appetite is suppressed, the scale moves, energy is fine because the body is still drawing on existing stores.
Weeks four to eight are different. The deficit is now real and sustained. The body is running on less food than it needs, with fewer micronutrients, fewer electrolytes, and, for most women on a GLP-1, too little protein to fuel daily activity.
The fatigue is rarely a single thing. It is usually three things, stacked.
Cause one: not eating enough
The most common single cause of GLP-1 fatigue is not eating enough food, full stop. The drug works by reducing hunger; many women fall to 700–1,000 calories a day without noticing. That works for a few weeks. It does not work for two months.
A reasonable floor for most adult women is 1,200–1,400 calories per day, and that is the floor, not the target. Sustained intake below 1,200 produces fatigue, hair shedding, irritability, and, eventually, a metabolic slowdown that makes the plateau (see our plateau article) harder to break.
If your fatigue showed up at week 5 and you cannot remember the last time you ate a full meal, that is the diagnosis.
Cause two: not enough protein
A meaningful share of the fatigue on a GLP-1 is not about calories. It is about protein.
When protein intake is insufficient and caloric intake is also low, the body starts pulling amino acids from skeletal muscle to make glucose and to power tissue maintenance. The result is muscle loss (covered in our protein article) and a particular kind of fatigue: tired-and-soft. Climbing stairs feels harder than it did. Lifting a grocery bag feels heavier. Recovery from a workout takes a day longer than it used to.
The fix is the same target as for muscle preservation: 1.2–1.6 grams of protein per kilogram of goal body weight per day. For most women, 100–120 grams.
If you can get there in three meals, do. If you can't because the drug has cut your appetite, a protein shake first thing in the morning is a useful insurance.
Cause three: electrolyte loss
When you eat less, you eat less salt. When you eat less salt, you retain less water. When you retain less water, plasma volume drops. Low plasma volume produces dizziness on standing, light-headedness, brain fog, and a flat kind of exhaustion that is often misattributed to the drug.
This is the same mechanism that makes very-low-carbohydrate diets produce "keto flu" in the first two weeks. On a GLP-1, it can persist for months because the caloric restriction is sustained.
The fix is simple and unromantic:
- Sodium. A pinch of salt in your water once or twice a day. About 1–2 grams of added sodium per day above what you would naturally consume. If your blood pressure runs high or you have heart failure, talk to your prescriber before adding salt.
- Potassium. Found in leafy greens, beans, avocados, bananas, yoghurt. Most women fall short of the 3,500 mg daily target.
- Magnesium. 300–400 mg per day from food (nuts, seeds, dark leafy greens) or a supplement. Magnesium glycinate is the most absorbable form and is gentle on a slow GI tract.
Cause four (sometimes): something else
If you have done the food and the protein and the electrolytes for three weeks and still feel exhausted, this is the point at which the differential broadens.
Worth ruling out:
- Anaemia. Iron deficiency is common in women, and a GLP-1 can mask it because you are eating less iron-rich food. A simple full blood count and ferritin level at your next appointment.
- Hypothyroidism. A thyroid panel (TSH, free T4) is cheap, fast, and worth doing if fatigue is severe.
- Vitamin B12 or vitamin D deficiency. Common in women on caloric restriction. Both are easy blood tests.
- Sleep apnoea, especially if your fatigue includes morning headaches or witnessed snoring.
- Depression, see our mood article.
None of these are caused by the GLP-1. All of them are unmasked or worsened by reduced food intake and rapid change.
What a "fix it" week looks like
If you are reading this in week six and exhausted, a working seven-day reset:
- Eat to 1,400 calories per day, every day, for seven days. Track it.
- Protein at every meal, totalling 100 grams a day minimum.
- A pinch of salt with one glass of water in the morning.
- A magnesium supplement with dinner.
- Two 20-minute walks per day, not vigorous.
- Seven and a half hours of sleep, lights out at the same time.
Most women report a meaningful difference within five to seven days. If you do not, that is when you take it to your prescriber with the data in hand.
What this is not
This is not a reason to push through severe fatigue. If you cannot get out of bed, if you are losing time to brain fog, if fatigue has stopped you from working, that is not a "drink more water" problem. That is a "see your doctor this week" problem.
What Steady does with this
Fatigue is one of the 14 GLP-1 symptoms Steady tracks. If you log moderate-to-severe fatigue more than three times in a week, the coach is built to surface the pattern alongside your recent protein intake, caloric intake, and dose. The diagnosis is rarely a surprise once you can see the four lines together.
Sources
- Pesta DH, Samuel VT. A high-protein diet for weight loss. Nutr Metab 2014. PubMed
- Trepanowski JF et al. Effect of alternate-day fasting on weight loss. JAMA Intern Med 2017. JAMA
- Volek JS, Phinney SD. The Art and Science of Low Carbohydrate Living, on electrolyte management during caloric restriction. 2011.
Medical disclaimer: Persistent fatigue deserves a real diagnostic workup, not an internet article. See our full medical disclaimer.