Restarting a GLP-1 After a Break: How to Avoid a Rough Restart
Breaks in GLP-1 treatment happen — a supply gap, an insurance lapse, a cost stretch, a pregnancy, a planned pause. The mistake that makes restarts miserable is assuming you can jump straight back in at the dose you left off. Often you can’t, and here’s why.
Why a break resets more than your appetite
GLP-1s have a long half-life (about 7 days for semaglutide), so a short delay of a day or two barely registers — that’s the everyday missed-dose situation, with catch-up windows built into each label.
A longer break is different. After roughly two or more missed weeks, the medication has largely cleared your system, and two things reset:
- Appetite comes back. Hunger and food noise return, usually within weeks — often the first thing people notice.
- GI tolerance resets. This is the one people underestimate. The tolerance you built through titration fades. Restarting at your old high dose can reproduce the worst nausea of your early weeks — or worse. Your stomach has, in effect, forgotten.
The safe way to restart
Because of that tolerance reset, restarting after a meaningful gap is a prescriber decision, not a fridge decision. Depending on how long the break was, your prescriber may:
- Have you resume at your previous dose (for shorter gaps where tolerance likely held), or
- Re-titrate from a lower dose, climbing back up — the standard move after longer breaks. The major labels explicitly raise restarting the escalation schedule after multiple missed doses.
The re-titration can feel frustrating (“I already earned this dose!”), but it’s the difference between a manageable restart and a week of vomiting.
How to make it smoother
- Time it well. Restart when you can afford a few potentially rough days — not the night before a big event or trip.
- Reinstate the food habits first. Small, low-fat meals; eat slowly; hydrate. The nausea playbook matters most in the restart window.
- Have anti-nausea options ready if your previous start was hard — ask your prescriber in advance.
- Expect the appetite swing. Weight may have drifted up during the gap; that’s physiology, not failure, and it typically responds again once you’re back on and re-titrated.
Why the gap itself is worth recording
When you restart, your prescriber’s first questions are how long was the break and what dose were you on before. A dose log answers both instantly — and a documented gap also explains an appetite rebound or weight bounce that would otherwise look mysterious. “There was a three-week supply gap in April” is exactly the context that turns a confusing chart into a clear one. If your history is recorded (Glu keeps dose gaps visible on the timeline), nobody has to reconstruct it from memory.
The bottom line
A short miss is a catch-up window; a long break is a restart. Treat anything past a couple of weeks as a fresh titration conversation, reinstate the food-and-hydration habits before you inject, and time it for a few days you can afford to feel off. Done that way, a break is a detour, not a derailment.
Sources: Wegovy prescribing information (missed dose and re-initiation); Zepbound prescribing information (Eli Lilly); FDA drug shortage database.
Keep reading
Track your doses, symptoms, and progress in one place
Glu keeps your shot schedule, side-effect notes, meals, and weight trends together — so appointments start with data instead of memory.