Foundayo drug interactions: the complete guide
Alcohol, metformin, thyroid, blood pressure and more
Quick read · 6 min
Foundayo (orforglipron) has a similar interaction profile to the injectable GLP-1 drugs with one important advantage: because it is a small-molecule pill with no food or water timing restrictions, it has fewer absorption conflicts with other medications. The core interactions still apply — alcohol, blood pressure drugs, and diabetes medication need attention — but Foundayo does not have the stomach-timing issues that affect oral Wegovy.
- •Fewer absorption conflicts than oral Wegovy — no food or water timing rules
- •Alcohol: not banned but tolerance often drops
- •Metformin: safe combination
- •Thyroid medication: take consistently, monitor TSH at 6–8 weeks
- •Blood pressure drugs: dose may need lowering as you lose weight
- •Insulin / sulfonylureas: hypoglycaemia risk — lower the dose
- •Oral contraceptives: no current warning in labelling
Based on clinical trials · No rankings · Every claim linked to source
Quick reference
Scan this table first. Details for each row are below.
Alcohol
The most-asked question about GLP-1 drugs. Short answer: not banned, but your relationship with alcohol will probably change.
Alcohol
Use cautionNot a hard contraindication, but expect changes in tolerance, absorption, and nausea sensitivity.
Alcohol is not a hard contraindication, but several things change on GLP-1 drugs. First, many people report feeling drunk faster and with less — likely because delayed gastric emptying slows alcohol absorption into a narrow window, and because reduced food intake means less buffer. Second, alcohol and GLP-1 drugs can both drop blood sugar, raising the risk of hypoglycaemia in people also taking insulin or sulfonylureas. Third, alcohol is a well-known nausea trigger, and you are already on a drug that causes nausea — the combination can be rough. Finally, alcohol is dense in calories with zero satiety signal, so it is one of the easier ways to undo the drug's benefit.
Metformin
The most common diabetes drug. Safe to combine with Orforglipron.
Metformin
Generally okayWidely combined with GLP-1 drugs in type 2 diabetes. No timing rules, no known pharmacological interaction.
Metformin and GLP-1 drugs are a common and generally safe combination — most people with type 2 diabetes take both at once. No timing adjustment is needed. The main thing to watch is overlap in gastrointestinal side effects. Metformin causes loose stools and cramping in some people; GLP-1 drugs cause nausea and sometimes constipation. If you are starting both around the same time, side effects can be harder to tell apart. If you are already established on metformin and add a GLP-1 drug, your metformin GI side effects may actually improve as your food volume drops.
Thyroid medication (levothyroxine)
GLP-1 drugs can affect how thyroid medication is absorbed — here is how to handle it.
Levothyroxine / Synthroid
Timing mattersNot dangerous, but absorption can shift. Take consistently and get TSH rechecked at 6–8 weeks.
GLP-1 drugs slow gastric emptying, which can affect how and when thyroid medication (levothyroxine, Synthroid) is absorbed. Levothyroxine is meant to be taken on an empty stomach, 30–60 minutes before food, to get consistent absorption. If your stomach is emptying more slowly because of your GLP-1, your thyroid medication may sit there longer and absorb unpredictably. For most people this is manageable, but if your TSH levels drift after starting a GLP-1, your endocrinologist may need to adjust the dose or the timing. Take levothyroxine at the same time every day, on an empty stomach, and get your TSH rechecked 6–8 weeks after starting a GLP-1.
Blood pressure medication
The risk is not that it stops working — it is that your dose becomes too strong as you lose weight.
BP drugs (ACEi, ARB, beta blocker, thiazide)
Use cautionAs weight drops, BP drops. Many people need a dose reduction during treatment.
Blood pressure drugs and GLP-1 medication often work in the same direction — both can lower blood pressure. Weight loss alone drops systolic BP by around 5–10 mmHg, and the drugs independently reduce it further. The risk is hypotension: lightheadedness, dizziness when standing up, or fainting. This is more common in people who were already on maximum BP doses or who are dehydrated from GI side effects. Symptoms to watch for: dizziness when standing, fatigue, blurred vision. If your home BP readings start running low (under 110 systolic consistently), talk to your prescriber — they may reduce your BP medication. Do not stop BP medication on your own.
NSAIDs (ibuprofen, naproxen, aspirin)
Not a direct interaction, but the combination is harder on your stomach.
NSAIDs (ibuprofen, naproxen)
Use cautionAdditive GI stress — the combination raises ulcer and bleeding risk.
NSAIDs (ibuprofen, naproxen, aspirin at pain doses) are not a direct drug interaction, but the concern is additive GI stress. GLP-1 drugs can slow stomach emptying and occasionally cause gastroparesis-like symptoms. NSAIDs can irritate the stomach lining and, at high doses, cause ulcers. The combination raises the risk of upper GI discomfort, nausea, and bleeding. If you need occasional pain relief, paracetamol/acetaminophen is generally safer. If you need regular NSAID use for arthritis or chronic pain, talk to your prescriber about alternatives or gastroprotection (e.g. a PPI like omeprazole).
Caffeine
No pharmacological interaction — but it can make early-week nausea worse.
Coffee / tea / caffeine pills
Generally okayNo direct interaction. If early-week nausea is bad, cutting back temporarily can help.
Caffeine is not a pharmacological interaction with GLP-1 drugs. There is no rule about avoiding coffee. That said, several practical things: caffeine on a near-empty stomach can worsen nausea, especially in the first few weeks; some people find their tolerance to caffeine drops as they eat less; and caffeine is a diuretic, which can add to dehydration risk if you are already undereating. If you drink large amounts of coffee and notice more nausea or a racing heart, cutting back by a cup or two is worth trying.
Insulin and sulfonylureas
Based on clinical trials · No rankings · Every claim linked to source
Last reviewed: March 2026