Suppression, satiation, and satiety: what's the difference?
If you're on a GLP-1 medication, you've probably noticed your relationship with food has changed — meals feel different, hunger shows up less often, and "enough" arrives sooner than it used to. These effects come from three related but distinct mechanisms: appetite suppression, satiation, and satiety. Understanding the difference can help you recognize what's normal, what's worth mentioning to your provider, and how to eat well while on treatment.
Appetite suppression
Appetite suppression is a reduction in the drive to eat in the first place. GLP-1 receptor agonists act on areas of the brain (including the hypothalamus and brainstem) that regulate hunger signaling, slowing gastric emptying and dampening the reward and hunger cues that normally prompt you to seek out food.
What it feels like: Lower interest in food overall, fewer intrusive thoughts about eating, less "grazing" between meals, and sometimes having to remind yourself to eat rather than waiting to feel hungry.
Satiation
Satiation is the feeling of fullness that builds during a meal and signals you to stop eating. GLP-1 medications slow the rate at which food empties from the stomach, so the stomach stays fuller for longer after smaller amounts of food — meaning fullness cues arrive earlier in a meal.
What it feels like: Feeling full after a few bites, needing to eat more slowly, plates that used to be a normal portion now feeling like too much. Eating too quickly or too much despite this cue is a common cause of nausea or discomfort on GLP-1s.
Satiety
Satiety is the sense of fullness that persists between meals — the reason you don't feel hungry again for hours after eating. GLP-1 medications extend this window by keeping hunger hormones (like ghrelin) suppressed and slowing digestion, so the feeling of fullness carries over well past the meal itself.
What it feels like: Going longer stretches without thinking about food, skipping snacks without noticing, and sometimes needing a reminder or schedule to make sure you're still eating enough across the day.
Why the distinction matters
These three effects work together to reduce overall food intake, but they show up at different points in the eating process:
| Mechanism | When it acts | What it affects |
|---|---|---|
| Suppression | Before eating | Desire/drive to eat |
| Satiation | During a meal | When you stop eating |
| Satiety | After a meal | How long until you're hungry again |
Recognizing which one you're experiencing can help you troubleshoot. For example, if you're consistently uncomfortable during meals, that points to satiation and may mean eating more slowly or choosing smaller, more frequent portions. If you're going long stretches without eating at all, that's satiety-driven and worth watching so you don't under-eat protein, fiber, or key nutrients.
When to talk to your provider
Reach out to your care team if:
- You're going a full day or more with little to no appetite or intake
- You're losing weight faster than expected or feel weak/fatigued
- Fullness during meals is accompanied by persistent nausea, vomiting, or pain
- You're finding it hard to eat enough protein or stay hydrated
These appetite changes are the intended mechanism behind GLP-1 medications' effect on weight, but the goal is sustainable, adequate nutrition — not simply eating as little as possible.