Diet & Nutrition

Low-Residue Eating on GLP-1: When to Use It and What to Eat

April 6, 2026 · 3 min read · By the Sharpy team
TL;DR

A low-residue diet is the GLP-1 nausea-day reset: white rice, white bread, eggs, lean meat, dairy, smooth nut butters, and skinned/cooked vegetables and fruit. Avoid raw vegetables, beans, whole grains, nuts, seeds, and high-fat foods. Use it for 2–7 days during severe nausea or diarrhea, then transition back.

When GLP-1 nausea is at its worst — usually the first week of a dose increase, or after a particularly hard week — a temporary low-residue diet can be the reset that gets you back on track.

What a "low-residue diet" actually is

Low-residue (sometimes called "low-fiber") is a temporary eating pattern that minimizes the undigested material moving through your digestive tract. It is the standard recommendation pre-colonoscopy, after some abdominal surgeries, and during severe IBD flares. It is also useful as a short-term reset during severe GLP-1 GI distress.

The principle: smaller residue → less stomach distension → less nausea → less risk of vomiting or worsening reflux.

What to eat

Proteins:

  • Eggs (any style except fried)
  • Plain chicken or turkey breast (no skin)
  • White fish (cod, tilapia)
  • Tofu (firm, cooked)
  • Greek yogurt (plain)
  • Cottage cheese
  • Smooth peanut butter (limit to 1–2 tbsp)
  • Whey or casein protein powder

Carbs:

  • White rice
  • White bread (sourdough, regular)
  • Plain pasta
  • Crackers (saltines, ritz)
  • Cream of wheat or grits
  • Mashed white potato (no skin)

Dairy:

  • Milk (1% or 2%)
  • Plain yogurt
  • Cottage cheese
  • Mild cheeses (mozzarella, cheddar, ricotta)

Vegetables (cooked, no skin or seeds):

  • Carrots, peeled and well-cooked
  • Zucchini, peeled
  • Spinach, well-cooked
  • Squash, peeled and cooked
  • Green beans, well-cooked

Fruits:

  • Bananas (ripe)
  • Applesauce (no skin)
  • Canned peaches/pears (in juice, not syrup)
  • Cantaloupe, honeydew (no seeds)
  • Strained orange juice

Liquids:

  • Water
  • Broth
  • Herbal tea (chamomile, ginger, peppermint)
  • Electrolyte drinks
  • Smoothies (made with smooth ingredients)

What to avoid (temporarily)

  • Whole grains (whole wheat bread, oats, brown rice, quinoa)
  • Beans, lentils, legumes
  • Raw vegetables (especially leafy)
  • Cruciferous vegetables (broccoli, cauliflower, Brussels sprouts)
  • Onions, garlic in volume
  • Nuts and seeds
  • Fruit with skins or seeds
  • Dried fruit
  • Tough meats (steak, jerky, pork)
  • Fried foods
  • Spicy foods
  • Alcohol
  • Carbonated beverages
  • Coffee (for some patients — not all)

A sample low-residue GLP-1 day

Breakfast: Cream of wheat with banana + 1 scoop protein powder mixed in (cooled) → 28 g protein

Snack: Greek yogurt + 1 tbsp smooth peanut butter → 18 g protein

Lunch: White rice + 4 oz baked chicken breast + ½ cup cooked carrots → 30 g protein

Snack: Cottage cheese + applesauce → 16 g protein

Dinner: Baked cod + mashed potato + cooked zucchini → 32 g protein

Total: 124 g protein, ~1,300 cal. Well-tolerated even on bad-stomach days.

How long to stay on it

Low-residue eating is a short-term tool, not a long-term diet. It deprives you of fiber, which matters for gut health.

  • 2–3 days: Quick reset after a bad nausea episode
  • 5–7 days: During the worst of a dose-increase week
  • Beyond 7 days: You should be transitioning back

How to transition back

After the worst symptoms resolve:

Days 1–2: Add 1 cooked vegetable per day (carrots, zucchini) Days 3–4: Add 1 fruit per day (bananas, melon) Days 5–7: Reintroduce whole grain bread, oats Week 2: Reintroduce small portions of beans, raw greens, broccoli Week 3: Back to normal

If symptoms return as you reintroduce, hold at the previous step for a few more days.

When low-residue is a red flag

Needing low-residue eating for more than 2 weeks at a time suggests:

  • Your GLP-1 dose is too high for you (call your prescriber)
  • You have an underlying GI issue (IBS, gastroparesis worsening, etc.)
  • You should see a GI specialist

Liquid-only days

For acute episodes — uncontrolled vomiting, severe diarrhea — a 24-hour liquid-only approach can let your gut rest:

  • Water
  • Broth (sodium-rich)
  • Electrolyte drinks
  • Plain tea (chamomile, ginger)
  • Diluted juice
  • Protein shake (if tolerated)

If you cannot keep liquids down for 24+ hours, that's an ER trip — you're at dehydration risk.

Bottom line

Low-residue eating is the GLP-1 patient's tactical reset for severe nausea or diarrhea days. White rice, eggs, plain chicken, cooked vegetables without skin, ripe bananas. Use it for a few days, transition back deliberately. If you need it more than 2 weeks at a time, your dose is wrong for you — call your prescriber.