I’m a Dietitian Who’s Tried Nearly Every Meal Delivery Service – These Are the Ones I Would Recommend if You’re on a GLP-1
It’s easy to understand the excitement around these medications. But there are some caveats to understand about who can take them and the reality of what side effects can look like.
“Meal delivery services can be extremely helpful for GLP-1 users, especially early on when appetite is low, and decision fatigue may be high,” says Zimmermann. “They reduce the burden of meal planning and can support consistent protein and nutrient intake.”
Everyday Health tasked a team of food industry experts, health writers, and dietitians with testing meal delivery services. These are some of our favorites that make the most sense for GLP-1 users to explore.
When to Consult a Doctor
Best for Common GLP-1 Challenges
When looking for a meal delivery service to satisfy the requirements of GLP-1 nutrition recommendations, it’s important to consider how these medications work.
“GLP-1 medications reduce appetite and increase feelings of fullness by slowing stomach emptying and acting on appetite-regulating centers in the brain,” Zimmermann says. “Most people feel satisfied with much smaller portions and stay full longer between meals. Because overall food intake drops significantly, the quality of food choices becomes especially important.”
She recommends eating smaller meals that contain 20 to 30 grams (g) of protein and gradually increasing fiber intake, while minimizing greasy or very high-fat foods. Some meal delivery services already cater to these dietary needs with a GLP-1-specific menu, particularly in their prepared-food options.

CookUnity
CookUnity is a regular favorite among testers for its fresh, prepared meals that heat up in minutes. The service also warrants a place on our list for its GLP-1-specific menu.
With a chef-first approach, CookUnity has hundreds of dishes to choose from across its various menus. The menus are easily searchable, so you can find what you need without much effort. The GLP-1 menu features meals that are high in protein and prioritize fiber and healthy fats to promote sustained energy while remaining easy to digest. The menu is also filterable by protein type, intolerances or ingredients you’d like to avoid, and even sodium levels.
You can choose from 4 to 16 meals per week, with the flexibility of ordering as few or as many of those as you like from the GLP-1 menu. This makes it easy to accommodate other eaters.
“I like the idea of different chefs preparing the meals, and the meals look 'different' in that they have a wide variety of flavors and ingredients,” says health and wellness writer Mary Sauer, who tried CookUnity for us. “I also like the convenience of it.” Her family members really liked several of the meals as well, and she thinks CookUnity could come in handy on busy days.
“CookUnity is one of the most balanced and best-tasting options I have tried,” says Zimmermann. “Their meals are high in protein, with many offering at least 25 g per meal and roughly 500 calories. The ingredients are fresh, and meals take about 10 to 15 minutes to heat. By removing the need for meal planning, grocery shopping, and food preparation, these meals lower a major barrier to eating consistently.”

Factor
Factor’s GLP-1 Balance plan is described as “protein-forward, calorie-friendly meals.” So the plan may be helpful for GLP-1 users who are trying to ensure they’re getting enough nutrients.
Factor keeps things super-simple for its customers with fully prepared, never-frozen meals that reheat in the microwave. The meals are really tasty and filling. And you don’t have to think about much beyond choosing from a menu. Purchase as few as 6 or as many as 18 meals per week to feed yourself or your whole household, and you’ll always have the full menu to choose from.
Factor’s meals are “very protein-forward but have a good mix of different types of vegetables and flavors,” says Kristy Del Coro, RDN, LDN, who tested the service.
We caution that some meals may not be appropriate for GLP-1 users due to higher fat content, which isn’t ideal for managing GI side effects. But Factor is worth considering for anyone seeking meal support.

Forkful
While we haven’t tasted Forkful ourselves, we really think it’s worth including for GLP-1 users who want fully prepared, single-serving meals made just for them. GLP-1 meals from Forkful prioritize lean proteins, high-fiber produce, and whole grains. They limit high-fat ingredients and added sugars.
If you’re ordering from the GLP-1 menu, you’ll have a mix of premade entrées to choose from. Forkful’s recipes range from comfort-food flavors like baked pork chops with apples, onion, and bacon to more–globally inspired options like chicken adobo — all of which reheat in just a few minutes.
If you need to expand your horizons past the GLP-1-specific menu, there’s a lot to choose from. Plus, you’ll be able to view the nutrition facts of all meals prior to choosing to ensure that you’re hitting protein, fiber, and fat goals.
Best for Managing Specialized Diets
Following a GLP-1 diet is complex enough. But what if you need to manage other dietary needs or preferences at the same time? Being on a GLP-1 does not exempt someone from needing to manage chronic irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) through dietary measures or from needing to focus on keeping blood sugar in range with type 2 diabetes. People who have preferences like following a vegan diet may also need special consideration, as they can also be on GLP-1 medications; this can make meeting nutrition needs more challenging.
Some meal delivery services may support the GLP-1 diet, but we’ve identified a few that can accommodate it while also prioritizing other nutritional needs.

ModifyHealth
ModifyHealth provides fully prepared, heat-and-eat meals that accommodate typical dietary patterns for gut health conditions. They also offer a GLP-1-specific set of meals that are gluten-free, low-sodium, and made with some organic ingredients. The meals prioritize lean protein and high-fiber foods.
If you need low-FODMAP meals specifically, ModifyHealth has you covered there, too. The company also offers dietitian support alongside all meal plans as an add-on. A dietitian can help you understand your eating plan's complex nutrition requirements.

Sunbasket
Managing type 2 diabetes is one of many reasons that someone might be prescribed a GLP-1. But a diabetes-friendly diet shouldn't go completely out the window while taking the medication.
Sunbasket is our favorite for a meal plan that crafts diabetes-friendly meals. The service stands out for its nutritional values, flavors, diversity of ingredients in meals, and global recipes. It's also noteworthy for the variety of meal kits, prepared foods, and grocery items it makes available.
I’ve tried the service myself on multiple occasions, including for Everyday Health during our meal-delivery testing. I’m consistently impressed with the quality of ingredients, dynamic meal options, and the nutrition criteria for their diet options, specifically for the diabetes friendly meals. This includes a focus on protein, fiber, healthy fats, and keeping sodium in check while prioritizing healthy fats — all of which are compatible with GLP-1 use as well.
“I've tried dozens of meal delivery services, and Sunbasket is by far my favorite,” says Byrne. “As a dietitian, I love that the menus include such a wide variety of foods and that the meals are always balanced. As a former chef, I'm impressed with how creative the recipes are while also still being manageable for an average home cook.”

Daily Harvest
Vegan and vegetarian diets might make it a bit more challenging to meet protein targets when smaller portions are needed. But one desirable option to combat this is a protein-rich, quick-fix meal plan from Daily Harvest.
While the service has pared down its offerings to a simple selection of smoothies and oat bowls, there is an abundant assortment of options with added protein. And the fiber and nutrients are a very helpful bonus.
The service uses vegan pea protein to boost the protein content of its signature smoothies and oat bowls, ensuring this essential nutrient is in ample supply. The GLP-1 Support Box is a great starting point to fill your freezer with ready-to-blend protein smoothies. You can always add some protein oat bowls to your order as well.
Health writer Caitlin Beale, RDN, tried the service and was impressed with the ingredients. Overall, she found that “its focus on whole foods and convenience makes it an excellent option for busy folks.”
Best for Feeding the Whole Household
Trying to feed yourself while on a GLP-1 can become extra-complicated when you also have a household to feed. Nutrition needs always vary from person to person. But many of the central principles of nutrition for GLP-1 safety can be translated into family mealtime, too. These keys include prioritizing lean proteins, fiber, density of micronutrients, and eating until satisfied.
Whether you’re cooking just for two or for a larger bunch, we love these meal delivery services for their ability to make feeding a crowd easier while providing you with the nutrients you need on a GLP-1.

Green Chef
Known for its organic ingredients, Green Chef goes beyond its ingredient focus to build a meal delivery service that’s got a lot to offer GLP-1 users. Weekly menus are built around dietary considerations, including vegan and vegetarian options, high protein, calorie-smart, and even a Mediterranean-style approach. Meals generally lean on whole grains, lean proteins, heart-healthy fats, and a fun sauce here and there.
I tried the service myself and found the portions generous, the recipes easy to follow, and the food tasty and filled with produce. While not every meal will deliver the exact nutrients of a GLP-1 diet, the overall emphasis on protein and fiber is well-suited to serving as a foundation for using this meal kit. Meal kits come ready to be cooked rather than ready to be eaten, though. So be sure you’re game to roll up your sleeves and get in the kitchen to cook these meals from Green Chef.

Marley Spoon
Feeding yourself and your household doesn’t have to mean settling for boring or super-simple meals. Marley Spoon makes exciting meals feel accessible, even if you need to eat for a GLP-1 diet.
For starters, the service offers both cook-it-yourself meal kits and ready-to-eat meals under its Balance line. Without a GLP-1 specific menu, you’ll like have to do a deeper dive on the nutrition of individual meals. But with menu filters for cook time, protein type, cuisine, allergens, and dietary preferences, you’ll have an easy time narrowing it down to your needs.
Choose from meal kits like berbere-spiced chicken thighs and tahini sauce with butternut squash and farro and a citrus kale salad with poached salmon, and prioritize your protein while you keep enticing meals on the table.
“I was honestly shocked at the number of meal options on the weekly menu,” says health writer Lindsay Modglin, a former nurse who tested the kit. “It was almost overwhelming but exciting, because there were so many different dishes. (My kids are picky eaters.) I also like that each meal is labeled with tags like low-calorie, kid-friendly, etc.”
We think any meal service that can have you feeling excited about getting dinner ready is a winner, and Marley Spoon definitely accomplishes that.

Hungryroot
Hungryroot’s meal delivery approach is designed for speed and convenience. That makes it ideal for GLP-1 users who don’t want to fully outsource cooking but need meals ready quickly.
With a combination of better-for-you groceries and meal kits that utilize them, most Hungryroot meals come together in under 20 minutes. Groceries include some of your favorite store brands of snacks, grain products, and dairy. They also include some Hungryroot-brand items that emphasize healthy versions of kitchen classics (like the chickpea cookie dough or cashew-based Parmesan sauce), prepared proteins, and even ready-to-eat meals.
Price points vary based on what you’re purchasing, and this service uses a unique credits system for ordering. The system can take some getting used to, but it enables you to get a bit of everything you want, and you’re not tied to groceries or kits.
Meals are quick, easy, and flavorful. They offer a wide variety of cuisines and ingredients, as well as “an option to sort recipes by those that were in season,” says health writer Ashley Brafman, MPH, RD, who tested the service. This is just one of dozens of search filters that you can use to sort through Hungryroot’s literal thousands of meal options.
Plus, Hungryroot can be dialed up to feed as many as four or down to individual servings for certain prepared meals. So it may suit smaller households.
How Do GLP-1s Change How Much and What You Can Eat?
What Nutrients Should GLP-1 Users Prioritize?
What Should You Look for in a Meal Delivery Service if You’re on a GLP-1?
The main area of importance for using a meal delivery service while on a GLP-1 is nutrient intake. But that’s not the only aspect worth considering. Cost, general interest in the menu, ease of preparation, serving sizes available, and frequency of deliveries can also be important parts of the meal delivery experience.
Opt in for fully prepared meals if you want to keep things as simple as possible. Or choose a kit if you still want to cook and have flexibility in meal preparation. Fresh meals are great if you can eat them in a timely manner, but frozen (or freezer-friendly) meals may make more sense if you need to extend shelf life. Also, it's very important to find out if a meal delivery service can meet any other dietary needs you may have outside of the GLP-1 requirements.
FAQs
Why Trust Everyday Health

Tori Martinet, MS, RD
Author
Tori Martinet is an Intuitive Eating dietitian, food writer, recipe developer, and food photographer based in Southern California. She received a master's degree in nutrition from Columbia University Teachers College and spent nearly a decade as the director of wellness and sustainability for a premier food service contractor based in New York City. In her time there she crafted wellness and sustainability programming for clients like Google, Citigroup, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Harvard Business School, and the U.S. Open Tennis Tournament.
She has been a dietitian for nearly 10 years and currently works in private practice, dedicated to helping people pursue health without restriction and dieting. She also writes freelance food and nutrition content and has been featured in publications like Eating Well, Food & Wine, Shape, The Spruce Eats, U.S. News 360 Reviews, Verywell Health, and many more.

Reyna Franco, RDN
Medical Reviewer
Reyna Franco, RDN, is a New York City–based dietitian-nutritionist, certified specialist in sports dietetics, and certified personal trainer. She is a diplomate of the American College of Lifestyle Medicine and has a master's degree in nutrition and exercise physiology from Columbia University.
In her private practice, she provides medical nutrition therapy for weight management, sports nutrition, diabetes, cardiac disease, renal disease, gastrointestinal disorders, cancer, food allergies, eating disorders, and childhood nutrition. To serve her diverse patients, she demonstrates cultural sensitivity and knowledge of customary food practices. She applies the tenets of lifestyle medicine to reduce the risk of chronic disease and improve health outcomes for her patients.
Franco is also a corporate wellness consultant who conducts wellness counseling and seminars for organizations of every size. She taught sports nutrition to medical students at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, taught life cycle nutrition and nutrition counseling to undergraduate students at LaGuardia Community College, and precepts nutrition students and interns. She created the sports nutrition rotation for the New York Distance Dietetic Internship program.
She is the chair of the American College of Lifestyle Medicine's Registered Dietitian-Nutritionist Member Interest Group. She is also the treasurer and secretary of the New York State Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, having previously served in many other leadership roles for the organization, including as past president, awards committee chair, and grant committee chair, among others. She is active in the local Greater New York Dietetic Association and Long Island Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, too.

Evan Starkman
Fact-Checker
Evan Starkman has worked in health journalism since 2011. He has written and fact-checked content for sites such as WebMD and Mayo Clinic. He earned a master's degree in journalism from the University of Florida.

Katie Tuttle
Editor
Katie Tuttle is an editor and writer specializing in food, nutrition, and product testing. Her work has appeared in EatingWell, Food & Wine, The Spruce Eats, and Real Simple. She has written about meal kits, kitchen tools, fitness, and wellness, and has tested and reviewed a wide range of products, with a particular focus on meal delivery services and their impact on nutrition and convenience.
Beyond food, Katie has covered fitness and wellness topics, drawing from her own experience as a powerlifter and an occasional runner. She’s always interested in how products and services can make healthy living more accessible and practical.
When she’s not researching or writing, Katie is usually surrounded by houseplants or spending time with a foster dog. She firmly believes there’s no such thing as too many books or too much coffee.

Mary Sauer
Tester
Mary Sauer is a freelance health and parenting writer whose work often covers mental health (especially maternal mental health), grief, and caregiving. Her work has been published by the Washington Post, Verywell Mind, Parents, Vice's Tonic, and ARC Poetry Magazine. She's also the managing editor of the upcoming Salt Tooth Press and an MFA student at University of Missouri, Kansas City.
Sauer is a mom of four and lives in Kansas City, Missouri. She enjoys hiking, trying new coffee shops, and shopping at used bookstores. At home, she spends her precious free time reading, rewatching Fleabag, and gardening.

Lindsay Modglin
Tester
Lindsay Modglin is a former nurse and health writer who specializes in covering chronic illness, women's health, oncology, and wellness products that help empower readers to take control of their health and well-being. Her byline has been featured in many digital publications, including Healthline, Verywell Health, Parents, Forbes, Yahoo, AOL, Insider, and more. Her print work has been published in oncology magazines like Cancer Today and Cure.
Prior to becoming a writer, Lindsay started working in healthcare in 2012 as an optician while she was pursuing her nursing license before working as a registered nurse in a clinical healthcare setting. This experience gave her firsthand knowledge of the challenges and complexities that patients face when managing chronic illnesses and navigating the healthcare system.
Today, when Lindsay is not writing, she enjoys camping and traveling across the United States with her husband and three children. She also volunteers as a creative writer for a non-profit organization that supports children with life-threatening illnesses and as a soccer coach for her children's teams.

Caitlin Beale, MS, RDN
Tester
Caitlin Beale, MS, RDN, is a registered dietitian and freelance health writer with experience in clinical nutrition, education, research, and private practice. Caitlin’s special interests include women's health, gut health, autoimmunity, and reproductive health. Committed to the belief that health information should be accessible to all, she is passionate about empowering individuals to make positive changes for their well-being. Caitlin holds advanced training certificates in women's health and integrative and functional nutrition.
Caitlin was born and raised in northern California, where she resides with her family. An avid lover of sunshine and the outdoors, she finds joy in activities such as visiting the beach, exercising, cooking, and indulging in a good read. You can find Caitlin’s writing in a variety of outlets and brands, including Motherly, Nourish, Signos, Greatest, Pure Encapsulations, Abbott, and Clue, among others.

Ashley Brafman, MPH, RD
Tester
Ashley Brafman worked as a registered dietitian who specialized in clinical nutrition, community nutrition, and health education for over seven years before she became a freelance health and nutrition journalist five years ago. Her byline has been featured in Verywell Health, Ro, and Healthline.
Ashley received a bachelor's degree in dietetics with a minor in psychology at Eastern Michigan University and a master's in public health with an emphasis in health education from Grand Valley State University.
In her free time, Ashley enjoys gardening, reading, and hiking.
- Zheng Z et al. Glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor: mechanisms and advances in therapy. Signal Transduction and Targeted Therapy. September 18, 2024.
- Ferhatbegović L et al. The benefits of GLP1 receptors in cardiovascular diseases. Frontiers in Clinical Diabetes and Healthcare. December 8, 2023.
- Sasaki T et al. The effect of GLP-1 receptor agonists on renal outcomes: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation. September 22, 2025.
- Kow CS et al. Efficacy and safety of GLP-1 receptor agonists in the management of obstructive sleep apnea in individuals without diabetes: A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized, placebo-controlled trials. Sleep Medicine. May 2025.
- GLP-1 Medications and Eating Disorders. National Association of Anorexia Nervosa and Associated Disorders. April 3, 2025.
- He L et al. Association of Glucagon-Like Peptide-1 Receptor Agonist Use With Risk of Gallbladder and Biliary Diseases: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis of Randomized Clinical Trials. JAMA Internal Medicine. March 28, 2022.
- Begum F et al. Semaglutide-associated kidney injury. Clinical Kidney Journal. August 13, 2024.
- Cao C et al. GLP-1 receptor agonists and pancreatic safety concerns in type 2 diabetic patients: data from cardiovascular outcome trials. Endocrine. February 26, 2020.
- Gorgojo-Martínez JJ et al. Clinical Recommendations to Manage Gastrointestinal Adverse Events in Patients Treated with Glp-1 Receptor Agonists: A Multidisciplinary Expert Consensus. Journal of Clinical Medicine. December 23, 2022.
- Mozaffarian D et al. Nutritional Priorities to Support GLP-1 Therapy for Obesity: A Joint Advisory From the American College of Lifestyle Medicine, the American Society for Nutrition, the Obesity Medicine Association, and the Obesity Society. American Journal of Lifestyle Medicine. May 30, 2025.
- Mostafa ME et al. Improvement of irritable bowel syndrome with glucagon like peptide-1 receptor agonists: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Frontiers in Endocrinology. March 11, 2025.