Finding a weigh-in rhythm that works for you is one of the small decisions that can have a surprisingly big impact on your GLP-1 experience — both your mindset and your ability to read real progress.
Why frequency matters:
The most practical approach for most people:
Don't let the scale be your only metric:
Weight loss rates vary significantly person to person — comparing your pace to anyone else's is rarely useful. If your progress seems stalled for several weeks, **talk to your provider** about whether a dose adjustment makes sense.
Different ways people phrase this question. Each expands to the same answer.
Finding a weigh-in rhythm that works for you is one of the small decisions that can have a surprisingly big impact on your GLP-1 experience — both your mindset and your ability to read real progress.
Why frequency matters:
The most practical approach for most people:
Don't let the scale be your only metric:
Weight loss rates vary significantly person to person — comparing your pace to anyone else's is rarely useful. If your progress seems stalled for several weeks, **talk to your provider** about whether a dose adjustment makes sense.
Finding a weigh-in rhythm that works for you is one of the small decisions that can have a surprisingly big impact on your GLP-1 experience — both your mindset and your ability to read real progress.
Why frequency matters:
The most practical approach for most people:
Don't let the scale be your only metric:
Weight loss rates vary significantly person to person — comparing your pace to anyone else's is rarely useful. If your progress seems stalled for several weeks, **talk to your provider** about whether a dose adjustment makes sense.
Finding a weigh-in rhythm that works for you is one of the small decisions that can have a surprisingly big impact on your GLP-1 experience — both your mindset and your ability to read real progress.
Why frequency matters:
The most practical approach for most people:
Don't let the scale be your only metric:
Weight loss rates vary significantly person to person — comparing your pace to anyone else's is rarely useful. If your progress seems stalled for several weeks, **talk to your provider** about whether a dose adjustment makes sense.