GLP-1 Side Effects UK — What to Expect and How to Manage Them

GLP-1 medications — including Mounjaro (tirzepatide), Wegovy (semaglutide), and Ozempic (semaglutide) — are the most effective weight loss medications available in the UK. They are also medications with a distinct side effect profile that most users encounter to some degree. Understanding what is normal, what requires attention, and what interventions actually help makes a meaningful difference to your experience on treatment.

Quick answer: The most common GLP-1 side effects in the UK are nausea (affects ~40–45% at dose increases), constipation (~12–17%), fatigue, injection site reactions, and hair loss (4–7%, classified as ‘common’ by MHRA for Mounjaro). Most are dose-dependent and improve after the first 2–4 weeks at each dose level. Serious side effects — severe abdominal pain, persistent vomiting, vision changes — require immediate medical attention.
Note: Food supplements should not replace a balanced diet. Always consult your GP or pharmacist before taking supplements if you are on prescribed medication, pregnant, or have a medical condition. Nothing in this post constitutes medical advice.

Side effects by frequency — what the clinical trials show

Side effect Frequency in trials Usually improves? Requires GP?
Nausea 40–45% at dose increases ✅ Within 2–4 weeks at each dose Only if severe/persistent vomiting
Constipation 12–17% ✅ With dietary interventions If >7 days without response to interventions
Diarrhoea 8–12% (less common than constipation) ✅ Usually brief and self-resolving If persistent >3–4 days
Fatigue Common, often under-reported ✅ Typically improves after 4–6 weeks If severe and persistent
Hair loss (telogen effluvium) 4.9–7.1% (MHRA common classification) ✅ Usually resolves 6–18 months post-peak If excessive or does not resolve
Injection site reactions 3–8% (redness, swelling, bruising) ✅ Usually mild and brief If severe inflammation or infection signs
Decreased appetite >90% — this is the intended effect Partially — adjusts over time Only if appetite suppression is dangerously severe
Headaches Common ✅ Often electrolyte-related If severe or persistent
Pancreatitis (serious) Very rare (<1%) ⚠️ Yes — severe upper abdominal pain = emergency

Nausea — the most common and manageable side effect

Why it happens

GLP-1 receptors are present in the area postrema — the brain’s nausea-signalling centre. When GLP-1 receptors are activated (either by the body’s natural GLP-1 or by medication), they can trigger nausea. This is compounded by slowed gastric emptying, which means food sits in the stomach longer and creates a fuller, heavier feeling.

When it is worst

  • Within 24–72 hours of each new dose injection
  • Within the first 2–4 weeks at each new dose level
  • After eating too fast, too much, or high-fat/spicy food
  • After drinking carbonated drinks or alcohol

What actually helps

Intervention Evidence How to use
Eating slowly (20+ min per meal) ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Most important Time meals; put fork down between bites
Small portions, frequently ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 4–5 small meals vs 3 normal-sized ones
Avoiding carbonated drinks ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Switch to still water exclusively
Ginger (tea or supplements) ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Well-evidenced antiemetic Ginger tea before and after meals
Peppermint tea ⭐⭐⭐ Good for general nausea Sip slowly between meals
Cold or room temperature food ⭐⭐⭐ Many users find hot food worsens nausea Choose cold protein options on bad days
Injection timing ⭐⭐⭐ Some users find evening injection produces less daytime nausea Discuss with prescriber if consistently bad
Antiemetic medication (ondansetron, metoclopramide) ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Effective but requires prescription Ask prescriber if nausea is severely affecting daily life

Constipation — second most common, very manageable

Why it happens

GLP-1 receptors throughout the GI tract slow peristalsis — the wave of muscular contractions that moves food and waste through the digestive system. This is compounded by reduced food volume (less digestive bulk), reduced fluid intake, and reduced physical activity in early treatment.

What actually helps

  • Fluid: 2–2.5 litres per day — the most important intervention
  • Fibre: aim for 25–30g per day; Daily Fuel provides 5–6g per serving
  • Walking: even 15–20 minutes post-meal directly stimulates gut motility
  • Psyllium husk: 1 tsp in a large glass of water before bed — gentle, effective bulk-forming laxative
  • Probiotics: 15-strain probiotics (L&L Pre+Pro 15) support microbiome health and gut motility
  • Osmotic laxatives (Movicol/macrogol): if dietary interventions are insufficient — available OTC, safe for regular use

Hair loss — the most distressing side effect

Hair loss on GLP-1 medication is classified as telogen effluvium — a temporary condition where physiological stress (rapid weight loss) causes a proportion of hair follicles to simultaneously enter the resting/shedding phase. The medication does not directly damage follicles. The weight loss triggers the condition.

Timeline: typically begins 2–4 months after significant weight loss starts, peaks at 3–6 months, and resolves over 6–18 months once weight stabilises.

What helps: adequate protein (the single most important intervention), vitamin D3, iron, zinc, biotin — all covered by Daily Fuel at 100% NRV. See the full guide: Hair Loss on Mounjaro UK.

Fatigue — common and often nutritional

Fatigue on GLP-1 medication has four primary causes, each with a specific intervention:

Cause Intervention
Electrolyte depletion (most common) Daily electrolyte supplement + increased fluid intake
Micronutrient deficiency (B12, iron, D3) Daily Fuel covers all three at 100% NRV
Poor sleep quality (from magnesium deficiency) Triple Magnesium in the evening
Actual medication fatigue Typically improves after 4–6 weeks; discuss with prescriber if severe

Injection site reactions

Mild redness, bruising, or swelling at the injection site is common and usually resolves within 24–48 hours. Reduce reactions by:

  • Rotating injection sites (alternating between abdomen, thigh, upper arm)
  • Allowing the injection to reach room temperature before injecting (do not inject cold from the fridge)
  • Injecting slowly and smoothly
  • Pinching the skin before injecting rather than pressing flat

When to contact your prescriber or GP immediately

Most GLP-1 side effects are manageable and temporary. However, contact your prescriber or GP immediately if you experience:

  • Severe or persistent abdominal pain (particularly upper-middle abdomen radiating to the back) — possible pancreatitis
  • Persistent vomiting that prevents keeping any food or fluid down for more than 24 hours
  • Signs of severe dehydration — very dark urine, inability to produce urine, rapid heartbeat
  • Visual disturbances — blurred vision, vision changes
  • Severe mood changes or thoughts of self-harm
  • Signs of allergic reaction — rash, swelling, breathing difficulty

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Frequently Asked Questions

Does nausea on Mounjaro go away?

Yes — for most people, nausea improves significantly after 2–4 weeks at each dose level. The worst period is typically the 72 hours after each weekly injection at a new dose level. Managing food choices, eating slowly, and avoiding carbonated drinks dramatically reduces severity.

Is hair loss from GLP-1 permanent?

No — in the vast majority of cases, GLP-1-related hair loss is telogen effluvium, a temporary shedding caused by the physiological stress of rapid weight loss. Hair follicles are not damaged. Most people see full regrowth within 6–18 months of weight stabilisation.

Can I take anti-sickness medication on Mounjaro?

Yes — antiemetics like ondansetron, domperidone, or metoclopramide can be used for severe GLP-1 nausea. These require a prescription. Ask your prescriber if nausea is significantly affecting your daily life — they can prescribe an antiemetic to be used on the worst days.

Why am I so tired on Mounjaro?

Fatigue on GLP-1 is almost always electrolyte depletion, micronutrient deficiency, or poor sleep quality — not the medication itself. Try electrolyte supplementation first (fastest fix, works within 24–48 hours if depletion is the cause). If fatigue persists after addressing electrolytes and nutrition, discuss with your prescriber.

How long do side effects last on Mounjaro?

Most side effects are worst in the first 2–4 weeks at each dose level. As the dose increases through the titration schedule, temporary worsening of side effects is expected. The majority of people find side effects settle significantly after reaching their maximum dose and staying on it consistently.

Related: Hair Loss on Mounjaro UK | Managing Constipation on GLP-1 | What to Drink on Mounjaro UK


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