Loading banners...

Reta, still no effect

damy2604

Recently Joined
Member Since
Dec 3, 2025
Posts
7
Likes Received
4
From
Rome/Italy
I am so confused. This is my second injection. I decided to start with 1 mg per week, divided into two injections of 0.5 mg every 3 days. After the second injection, still nothing. I am hungrier than before. How long does it take to start seeing any effect?
 
I am so confused. This is my second injection. I decided to start with 1 mg per week, divided into two injections of 0.5 mg every 3 days. After the second injection, still nothing. I am hungrier than before. How long does it take to start seeing any effect?

The effect compounds with each dose, and it may take four to five weeks to reach maximum effect at that level.
You can use this to visualize the compounding effect i was talking about https://glp1plotter.com/
 
I would not be too worried, there really is a lot of individual variation in responses to GLP medications. For most people using them it is to help with a lifelong or at least long term problem with weight, so you are talking about taking them for years to forever, a few weeks is not going to make a big difference.
If you have zero effects and zero side effects, then increasing the dose more rapidly is an option, ( assuming you are not elderly or diabetic or have multiple serious medical issues ) but I would stick with the twice a week dosing, so that when or if you overshoot your tolerance to it and suddenly feel nauseous for example , it will not take as long for your blood levels to get back to where they were, than if you were using twice the dose half as often.
The risk of increasing doses more frequently is that it takes 24 to 48 hours for a dose to be absorbed, then a week to drop back to half what it was. This is totally different to nearly any other drug used for anything, is not intuitively obvious and so the same dose can take up to 4 weeks to reach maximum effect as it slowly builds up in your bloodstream. I would highly recommend the https://glp1plotter.com/ website so you can see what different doses and schedules do to blood levels.
Bumping your next dose up to 1mg and leaving it there for a couple of weeks is likely to be fine, , if you have zero effects before that dose, but increasing the dose too often or too much runs a very high risk of suddenly having a whole lot of horrible side effects, which might take a week to subside. Side effects are also very variable but the most common ones are nausea, vomiting , diarrhoea, constipation, and unpleasant skin sensations. Vomiting for a week is not going to be fun, and would definitely need medical treatment or maybe even hospital so you need to be very careful if you try this, or just be patient and wait which is much safer. Generally side effects are easier to tolerate if they build up slowly from a low level rather than hit like a ton of bricks, which is the basic reason for the whole start at a low dose and very slowly build it up dosing regime for GLP medications.
It is possible that your reta is not reta or empty of active drug, but it really is pretty rare for this to happen, but unless your exact batch got tested independently there is no way to be sure. Assuming you bought it from one of the popular sellers advertising on the glp forum, and not via some random tiktok seller, I would guess the odds are less than one in a thousand, and it is far more likely that you are just not that sensitive to low doses of reta. If you are still having zero effects from 4 mg/week or so then I would start getting suspicious.
 
I agree with raising the dose, especially since some trials have 2 mg as a starting dose.

So maybe 1 mg twice a week for now. 2 mg at once actually hit me pretty hard. So I would still spread it out like you have been.
 
Last edited:
From what I've been able to synthesize from what I've read, 1mg/week isn't a therapeutic dose for Reta, just like the 2.5mg/week where we start Tirz isn't therapeutic either. That does not mean the lower doses don't necessarily have an effect, but that they are intended to be a slow introduction to the med; get you used to taking it and really ease into any potential sides.

I -think- I read that Reta is not expected to provoke weight loss until 4mg/week (I could be wrong about that!), so I'd stay the course and keep titrating up slowly.
 
1 mg of reta a week was amazingly effective in producing weight loss, if I am remembering correctly, about 9% over a year or so. None of the others show this degree of weight loss at tiny doses, though I am not sure they were tested for as long at such low doses.
I think the reason for starting at low doses is the individual variation. When I started Ozempic I could not increase the dose above 0.5mg/week without horrible nausea, and ended up hand graphing out blood levels over time with different doses and ended up with about 0.2mg every 2 days, and was still fairly pukey a lot of the time. No glp plotter at the time unfortunately. When I swapped to tirzepatide, I had hardly any side effects at any dose. So I would guess the super low and slow dosing is so that the 5-10% of the population taking it that are the most sensitive to its effects and side effects don't get hit with severe nausea and vomiting or anything else and end up in hospital after the first few doses. The studies done with various other new GLP's that tried rapid dose increases or just start at the high dose tended to have much worse side effect rates, as bad as 60% nausea and 30% vomiting for example.
 
I would not be too worried, there really is a lot of individual variation in responses to GLP medications. For most people using them it is to help with a lifelong or at least long term problem with weight, so you are talking about taking them for years to forever, a few weeks is not going to make a big difference.
If you have zero effects and zero side effects, then increasing the dose more rapidly is an option, ( assuming you are not elderly or diabetic or have multiple serious medical issues ) but I would stick with the twice a week dosing, so that when or if you overshoot your tolerance to it and suddenly feel nauseous for example , it will not take as long for your blood levels to get back to where they were, than if you were using twice the dose half as often.
The risk of increasing doses more frequently is that it takes 24 to 48 hours for a dose to be absorbed, then a week to drop back to half what it was. This is totally different to nearly any other drug used for anything, is not intuitively obvious and so the same dose can take up to 4 weeks to reach maximum effect as it slowly builds up in your bloodstream. I would highly recommend the https://glp1plotter.com/ website so you can see what different doses and schedules do to blood levels.
Bumping your next dose up to 1mg and leaving it there for a couple of weeks is likely to be fine, , if you have zero effects before that dose, but increasing the dose too often or too much runs a very high risk of suddenly having a whole lot of horrible side effects, which might take a week to subside. Side effects are also very variable but the most common ones are nausea, vomiting , diarrhoea, constipation, and unpleasant skin sensations. Vomiting for a week is not going to be fun, and would definitely need medical treatment or maybe even hospital so you need to be very careful if you try this, or just be patient and wait which is much safer. Generally side effects are easier to tolerate if they build up slowly from a low level rather than hit like a ton of bricks, which is the basic reason for the whole start at a low dose and very slowly build it up dosing regime for GLP medications.
It is possible that your reta is not reta or empty of active drug, but it really is pretty rare for this to happen, but unless your exact batch got tested independently there is no way to be sure. Assuming you bought it from one of the popular sellers advertising on the glp forum, and not via some random tiktok seller, I would guess the odds are less than one in a thousand, and it is far more likely that you are just not that sensitive to low doses of reta. If you are still having zero effects from 4 mg/week or so then I would start getting suspicious.
I use Retatrutide ZPHC, whose reliability I am certain of because I checked the serial number on their website. A friend used it in the past as well and it is working for him
 
When I started reta I started at 0.5mg because I was a really sensitive responder to Ozempic. I didn’t feel anything. It wasn’t until 2mg (typical starting dose in trials) when I started feeling its hunger suppression.

Reta is pretty average when it comes to hunger suppression. It doesn’t mean it’s not working at all. After the drug builds up in your system you will find blocking out food noise to be easier. At higher enough doses, you will find hunger suppression.

If you’re wanting that stomach cradling, nauseous, and feeling like you need to go to the bathroom every hour type feel then cagri or liraglutide are probably better bets? But that’s the thing, hopping on GLP’s in an attempt to feel like crap so you can force yourself not to eat is a widely poor and unsustainable approach to weight loss.
 
It's just so individual. Some of the groups in trials start at 2 mg, you can do that.
I didn't have any real appetite suppression until 6 mg, and most at my current 8 mg.
It's not a very good appetite suppressant from what I read/heard.
But give it time, it builds up.
 
Good timing on this thread, thank you. I just started on .5 mg today, and suppose I'm too used to 'drugs', because it doesn't feel like anything and made me suspect it's not working.

I've seen a few comments that Reta isn't great at appetite suppression. If that's true, then why does it seem to be more effective at weight loss?
 
I am so confused. This is my second injection. I decided to start with 1 mg per week, divided into two injections of 0.5 mg every 3 days. After the second injection, still nothing. I am hungrier than before. How long does it take to start seeing any effect?
From what I've read reta doesn't have much appetite suppression until you get to higher doses. If you need immediate hunger control at a low dose I would advise sema. It blocks out food noise so much faster. I'm talking like day 2 of my very first baby dose.
 
Top Bottom