Ozempic Plateau: Why Weight Loss Stalls and What to Do

Reviewed by Sydney Duong, RD, GLPeak Clinical Lead · Last updated 2026-06-17

Quick answer: Ozempic plateaus are normal and almost always temporary. They happen because your basal metabolic rate drops as you lose weight — what used to be a deficit becomes maintenance. The four fixes that move the needle: recalculate your calorie target at your current weight, hit your protein floor, add resistance training, and ask your prescriber whether a dose step-up is appropriate.

Why Ozempic plateaus happen

Losing weight lowers the energy cost of being you. A 200-lb body burns more calories at rest than a 175-lb body doing the same activity. That metabolic adaptation is normal and expected — it just means the calorie intake that produced a deficit at the start now equals maintenance.

Ozempic also blunts appetite hard early on, so people often eat well below their target without trying. As the body adapts to the drug, appetite returns slightly and intake creeps up, narrowing the deficit.

Four fixes that actually work

These are the levers prescribers and dietitians reach for first, in order.

When to talk to your provider

A 2-3 week stall is normal. A stall of 6+ weeks despite tracking intake honestly is worth a conversation — your prescriber may step you up (0.5 → 1.0 mg, 1.0 → 2.0 mg) or evaluate whether a different GLP-1 is a better fit.

Frequently asked questions

How long do Ozempic plateaus last?

Most plateaus resolve within 4–8 weeks once you adjust calories, protein, or activity. Plateaus longer than 8 weeks usually mean the input numbers (calories, protein, dose) need to change.

Should I increase my Ozempic dose if I'm plateauing?

Possibly — but only with your prescriber. The decision depends on how long you've been at the current dose, whether you're tolerating it, and how close you are to the 2.0 mg ceiling.

Is Ozempic still working if I've stopped losing weight?

Yes. Plateaus don't mean the drug stopped working — they mean your deficit closed. Ozempic is still suppressing appetite and stabilizing blood sugar even at a weight-stable state.

Will taking a break from Ozempic break the plateau?

No, and it usually makes things worse. Stopping Ozempic typically leads to appetite rebound and weight regain over 6–12 months. Don't pause without your prescriber's guidance.

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Educational only — not medical advice. Consult your prescriber before changing any medication.

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