# GLP-1 Support Supplement Prices — full content > Price-per-serving comparisons for supplements people commonly use alongside GLP-1 medications, refreshed from Amazon within the last 24 hours. This site normalizes current Amazon prices into price per serving across eight supplement categories relevant to people taking GLP-1 medications, and pairs the tables with practical buying guides. It is not medical advice, and price per serving is a cost normalization, not a quality score. A curated map of this site is at [llms.txt](https://www.glp1supportsupplement.com/llms.txt). Live price tables are intentionally not inlined here: Amazon pricing data on this site is refreshed within 24 hours and must not be cached beyond that, so consult the linked category pages for current numbers. As an Amazon Associate, this site earns from qualifying purchases. This site is for general information only and is not medical advice. Talk to your prescriber before starting any supplement. CERTAIN CONTENT THAT APPEARS ON THIS SITE COMES FROM AMAZON. THIS CONTENT IS PROVIDED 'AS IS' AND IS SUBJECT TO CHANGE OR REMOVAL AT ANY TIME. ## Buying guides ### Protein While Taking a GLP-1 Medication: A Practical Buying Guide *Protein — published 2026-07-15 · updated 2026-07-15* [Read on the site](https://www.glp1supportsupplement.com/guides/protein-on-glp1) Protein is the single most discussed nutrition topic among people taking GLP-1 medications, and for a practical reason: when appetite drops, total food intake drops with it, and protein-dense foods are often the first thing left unfinished. At the same time, clinicians commonly emphasize adequate protein during weight loss to help preserve lean mass — which is exactly when hitting a protein target from smaller meals gets hardest. #### Why powders and shakes come up so often Whole foods remain the foundation, but many people find that a scoop of protein powder or a ready-to-drink shake is the most reliable way to close the gap on days when a full meal does not feel realistic. Powders mix into milk, water, smoothies, or yogurt; ready-to-drink shakes trade a higher price per serving for zero preparation — which matters more than usual when the goal is "something small I will actually finish." #### What to compare on the label - **Protein per serving.** Most powders land between 20g and 30g per scoop; ready-to-drink shakes commonly range from 11g to 30g. Two products at the same shelf price can differ meaningfully in what you are actually paying for. - **Type.** Whey isolate tends to be lower in lactose than concentrate; casein digests more slowly; plant blends (pea, soy, rice) suit dairy-free preferences. If richer shakes have felt heavy on your stomach lately, many people report lighter options — clear whey styles, or smaller servings — easier to finish. - **Added sugar and calories.** When eating less overall, some people prefer low-sugar formulas; others deliberately choose higher-calorie shakes. This depends entirely on your goals — a conversation worth having with your care team. - **Serving realism.** A "2-scoop" serving you never finish is not a bargain. Per-serving math only works if you use full servings. #### Current prices per serving The table below shows the lowest current price-per-serving protein listings from our tracked catalog, refreshed from Amazon within the last 24 hours: #### Practical notes Price per serving is our normalization, not a quality score — a $0.60/serving powder with 25g protein and a $0.60/serving shake with 11g are very different purchases. Check the label for protein grams, and treat unusually cheap listings with extra care (our table already filters listings with unparseable serving counts out of rankings). How much protein you personally need on a GLP-1 medication depends on your body, your medication, and your goals. Ask your prescriber or a registered dietitian for your target — then use this page to hit it at the best price. --- ### Managing Nausea on GLP-1 Medications: Products People Commonly Use *Nausea & digestive comfort — published 2026-07-15 · updated 2026-07-15* [Read on the site](https://www.glp1supportsupplement.com/guides/managing-nausea-on-glp1) Queasiness — especially in the first weeks after starting a GLP-1 medication or moving up a dose — is one of the most commonly reported experiences with this class of medication. It usually gets discussed alongside eating-pattern changes: smaller meals, eating slowly, and going easy on rich or greasy food. Some people also keep a few gentle, familiar products on hand. This guide covers what those products are and how to compare their cost; it is not medical advice, and persistent or severe nausea is something to bring to your prescriber promptly. #### The products people commonly reach for - **Ginger** is the most familiar option, available as capsules, chews, teas, and candies. It has a long history of culinary and traditional use for queasy stomachs, and it is the most common first try in GLP-1 communities. Capsule doses vary widely — check labels rather than assuming equivalence between brands. - **Vitamin B6 (pyridoxine)** appears in many "morning comfort" formulations. It is inexpensive and widely available; as with any vitamin, more is not better, so stay within label directions unless your clinician says otherwise. - **Digestive enzymes** come up for people whose discomfort clusters around heavier meals. Blends vary enormously in composition, which makes label reading (and per-serving price comparison) especially worthwhile in this category. #### Comparing cost per serving Serving formats differ — capsules, chews, teas — so the per-serving column below is the honest way to compare. Current lowest prices per serving from our tracked catalog: #### Practical notes - Formats matter for a queasy stomach: some people find swallowing capsules unpleasant during rough patches and prefer chews or teas, which often cost more per serving. Paying extra for a format you will actually use is reasonable. - Multi-ingredient "nausea blend" products often cost several times more per serving than single-ingredient ginger or B6. The table makes that trade-off visible. - If nausea is affecting how much you can eat or drink for more than a day or two, or you are losing weight faster than intended, contact your prescriber — dose timing and titration schedule are their territory, and no supplement is a substitute for that conversation. --- ### Electrolytes and Hydration on GLP-1 Medications: A Buying Guide *Electrolytes & hydration — published 2026-07-15 · updated 2026-07-15* [Read on the site](https://www.glp1supportsupplement.com/guides/electrolytes-and-hydration-on-glp1) Hydration comes up constantly in GLP-1 communities, and the reason is mechanical more than mysterious: a meaningful share of daily fluid normally arrives with food, and when meals shrink, that share shrinks with it. Thirst cues can be blunted when appetite is blunted. Many people find that a flavored electrolyte drink makes it easier to keep sipping through the day — which is the entire practical case for this product category. #### What is actually in these products Electrolyte products are mostly combinations of sodium, potassium, magnesium, and sometimes calcium, in wildly different ratios: - **High-sodium formulas** (roughly 500–1000mg per serving) are built for heavy sweating and very low-carb diets. - **Balanced daily formulas** carry moderate sodium with more potassium and magnesium. - **Low- and zero-sugar options** dominate this category, typically sweetened with stevia or monk fruit; traditional sports drinks add meaningful sugar and calories. Which profile fits you is not something a price table can answer. If you manage blood pressure, kidney conditions, or take medications where sodium or potassium matter, run this purchase past your care team first. #### Current prices per serving Powders and packets usually beat tablets and ready-to-drink bottles on cost. Current lowest prices per serving from our tracked catalog: #### Practical notes - **Tubs versus packets:** tubs of loose powder are almost always cheaper per serving; single-serving packets cost more but travel well and remove measuring. Both appear in the table — the packaging trade-off is yours. - **Check serving counts.** A "90-serving" tub at half-scoop servings and a "30-packet" box are hard to compare by sticker price; that is exactly what the per-serving column normalizes. - Plain water still counts. These products exist to make fluids easier and more appealing, not to replace them — and if you are struggling to keep fluids down at all, that is a call to your prescriber, not a shopping problem. --- ### Fiber and Regularity on GLP-1 Medications: A Buying Guide *Fiber & regularity — published 2026-07-15 · updated 2026-07-15* [Read on the site](https://www.glp1supportsupplement.com/guides/fiber-and-regularity-on-glp1) Constipation is one of the most commonly reported and least discussed-in-polite-company effects of GLP-1 medications. The contributing math is straightforward: digestion slows, meals shrink, and with them the fiber and fluid that normally keep things moving. Alongside the basics — fluids, movement, and fiber-rich foods where appetite allows — many people add a fiber supplement. Here is how the common options differ and what they cost. #### The common options - **Psyllium husk** is the classic soluble fiber, available as loose powder, capsules, and gummies. Loose powder is consistently the cheapest per serving; capsules can require several per dose to match one powder serving, which quietly multiplies their real cost. - **Methylcellulose** is a synthetic soluble fiber that some people find produces less gas and bloating than psyllium — a consideration when a GLP-1 medication already has your stomach opinionated. - **Magnesium-based products** (commonly magnesium citrate or oxide) work differently — they draw water into the bowel rather than adding bulk — and are popular in GLP-1 communities for that reason. Dose sensitivity varies a lot between people; start conservatively and read labels. #### Current prices per serving Current lowest prices per serving from our tracked catalog: #### Practical notes - **Fluids are not optional** with bulk-forming fibers like psyllium — they need water to do their job, which intersects awkwardly with reduced fluid intake on GLP-1 medications. The hydration habit and the fiber habit work as a pair (our [electrolytes guide](/guides/electrolytes-and-hydration-on-glp1) covers the other half). - **Gummies are convenient and expensive.** Per-serving prices for fiber gummies often run several times the cost of loose psyllium powder, and their fiber content per serving is usually lower. The table makes the premium visible. - **Escalate when appropriate.** Occasional sluggishness is common; going many days without relief, significant pain, or bloating that keeps you from eating are reasons to contact your prescriber rather than to keep shopping. Constipation management on these medications is a routine conversation for prescribers — have it. ## Category overviews ### Nausea & digestive comfort [Live price-per-serving table](https://www.glp1supportsupplement.com/c/nausea) Queasiness is one of the most commonly reported experiences when starting or increasing a GLP-1 medication, especially in the first weeks after a dose change. Many people look to gentle, familiar options — ginger in capsules, chews, or teas, vitamin B6, and digestive enzymes — alongside the eating-pattern adjustments their care team suggests. This table compares those products by price per serving, using current Amazon prices. Serving counts are parsed from listings, so double-check labels before buying, and talk with your prescriber before adding anything new — especially if your nausea is severe or persistent. --- ### Electrolytes & hydration [Live price-per-serving table](https://www.glp1supportsupplement.com/c/electrolytes) When appetite drops, many people simply eat and drink less than they used to — and much of daily fluid intake normally comes from food. That is why hydration support comes up so often in GLP-1 communities, and why low- and zero-sugar electrolyte powders, packets, and tablets are among the most commonly purchased companion products. The table below ranks current Amazon listings by price per serving. Formulas vary widely in sodium, potassium, and magnesium content, so compare labels against your own needs, and check with your care team if you have blood-pressure, kidney, or medication considerations. --- ### Fiber & regularity [Live price-per-serving table](https://www.glp1supportsupplement.com/c/fiber) Slower digestion and smaller meals mean less dietary fiber, and constipation is one of the most commonly discussed side effects in GLP-1 communities. Psyllium husk, methylcellulose, and magnesium-based products are the options people reach for most, in powders, capsules, and gummies. Prices below are ranked per serving from current Amazon listings. Fiber products work best with adequate fluids, and dosing needs differ by person — start low, read labels carefully, and involve your prescriber if constipation persists. --- ### Protein [Live price-per-serving table](https://www.glp1supportsupplement.com/c/protein) Protein is the number-one nutrition topic for people on GLP-1 medications: appetite drops, portions shrink, and protein-dense foods are often the first thing left on the plate. Powders and ready-to-drink shakes are the most common way people close the gap, and clinicians commonly emphasize protein to help preserve lean mass during weight loss. This table ranks current Amazon listings by price per serving. Protein per serving varies (typically 20–30g for powders), so check labels for protein content, added sugar, and serving size — and ask your care team what daily protein target fits you. --- ### Creatine [Live price-per-serving table](https://www.glp1supportsupplement.com/c/creatine) Creatine monohydrate is one of the most studied sports-nutrition supplements, and it comes up frequently for people trying to maintain strength and lean mass while losing weight on a GLP-1 medication, usually alongside resistance training. Below are current Amazon listings ranked by price per serving across powders, capsules, and gummies. Plain creatine monohydrate powder is typically the least expensive form per serving; flavored and gummy formats trade cost for convenience. As always, run new supplements past your care team. --- ### Multivitamins [Live price-per-serving table](https://www.glp1supportsupplement.com/c/multivitamins) Eating substantially less makes it harder to cover micronutrient needs from food alone, which is why multivitamins are a common companion purchase for people on GLP-1 medications — particularly once meals get small. The table ranks current Amazon listings by price per serving. Formulas differ by audience (general, women, men, 50+), and "per serving" may mean one tablet or several, so check the label. If you have lab work or specific deficiencies, your clinician can point you to what actually matters for you. --- ### Hair, skin & collagen [Live price-per-serving table](https://www.glp1supportsupplement.com/c/hair-skin) Temporary hair shedding during rapid weight loss is a commonly reported and much-discussed experience in GLP-1 communities. Biotin, collagen peptides, and hair-skin-nails formulas are the products people most often try during this phase. Current Amazon listings are ranked below by price per serving. Collagen is usually a powder measured in scoops; biotin is typically a small capsule — so per-serving prices span a wide range. If shedding is significant, it is worth raising with your clinician, since protein intake and overall nutrition often matter here too. --- ### GLP-1 branded support [Live price-per-serving table](https://www.glp1supportsupplement.com/c/glp1-support) A fast-growing shelf of supplements is marketed specifically at people taking (or curious about) GLP-1 medications — berberine and various "support" blends are the most visible. These are dietary supplements, not medications, and marketing in this corner can be aggressive; we filter out listings that use prescription drug names as claims. The table ranks what remains by price per serving from current Amazon listings. Read ingredient panels closely — blends differ enormously — and involve your prescriber before combining any supplement with your medication.