There’s no single “GLP-1 diet,” but there is a simple organizing principle: eat protein first, in small frequent amounts. When appetite is limited, the goal is to make the little you eat count toward your daily protein target. Here’s what that looks like across a day.
A sample protein-first day
Approximate protein per meal (swap freely for foods you tolerate):
| Meal | Example | Approx. protein |
|---|---|---|
| Breakfast | Greek yogurt + a scoop of protein powder | ~30 g |
| Snack | A hard-boiled egg or string cheese | ~7 g |
| Lunch | Grilled chicken over greens | ~30 g |
| Snack | Cottage cheese or a small shake | ~15–25 g |
| Dinner | Salmon or tofu + a small side | ~25–30 g |
That’s roughly 110–120 g without a single large plate — built from small servings spread across the day.
How to build your own day
- Protein first, every time. If you fill up after a few bites, make those bites the protein.
- Anchor breakfast. Front-loading protein early takes pressure off the rest of the day.
- Keep easy wins on hand for low-appetite moments — yogurt, eggs, jerky, a ready-to-drink shake.
- Let macros ride along. Carbs and fat from whole foods are fine; you’re just keeping protein the priority.
On a GLP-1, a good day of eating isn’t a big plate — it’s several small, protein-forward bites that add up to your number.
This is general nutrition education, not a personalized meal plan. A registered dietitian can tailor it to your needs and any restrictions.