What is Metformin?
A first-line type 2 diabetes drug. Off-label for weight loss — modest, not a fat melter.
Metformin is a generic, oral, first-line type 2 diabetes drug. It works primarily by reducing glucose production in the liver and improving insulin sensitivity in peripheral tissues. It's been used clinically since the 1950s. Off-label, it's sometimes prescribed for weight loss or PCOS — the weight-loss effect is real but modest, typically 3 to 7 pounds over 6 months.
Quick definition
Metformin (Glucophage, generic) is taken orally, usually 500 to 2,000 mg/day split across one to three doses. Cost is trivial — generic metformin runs about $4 per month.
How it actually works
Metformin's primary mechanism is suppressing hepatic gluconeogenesis — your liver makes less new glucose, so blood sugar runs lower without forcing your pancreas to push more insulin. It also modestly improves insulin sensitivity in muscle and fat cells, partly through activating AMPK (an energy-sensing enzyme).
For weight, the Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP) long-term follow-up (Knowler et al., 2002, NEJM) found metformin produced about 2.1 kg (4.6 lb) more weight loss than placebo over 2.8 years. Modest, real, durable. Much smaller than GLP-1 agonists, but free with generic insurance.
Side effects: GI upset is common in the first few weeks (extended-release formulations help). Vitamin B12 absorption can decline over years of use. Rare but serious: lactic acidosis, especially in people with kidney impairment.
Why it matters for weight loss
If you have prediabetes, type 2 diabetes, or PCOS — and a weight-loss goal alongside — metformin is often a sensible first prescription. The 2 to 3 percent weight loss it produces is much smaller than GLP-1s, but it's covered by insurance, generic-cheap, and well-tolerated. Many primary-care doctors will prescribe it for prediabetes specifically because the DPP showed it cuts progression to full type 2 diabetes by 31 percent over 3 years.
Common misconceptions
The biggest myth: metformin is a weight-loss drug. It isn't, on label. The weight-loss effect is a side benefit of the glucose-lowering mechanism. People without insulin resistance generally see very little weight loss on it.
The second myth: it's interchangeable with GLP-1s. It isn't. Different mechanism, much smaller effect size, much cheaper. The right tool for the right person.
Related terms
- Insulin Sensitivity How responsive your cells are to insulin. High sensitivity = good. Low sensitivity (resistance) = trouble.
- GLP-1 Agonist · Glucagon-Like Peptide-1 Receptor Agonist A drug class that mimics a gut hormone, slowing digestion and dampening appetite.
- Ozempic Semaglutide branded for type 2 diabetes. The drug behind the celebrity weight-loss headlines.
- Phentermine An older appetite-suppressant stimulant. Short-term use only; not a long-term weight-management drug.
- Leptin The 'satiety hormone' released by fat cells. Tells your brain to stop eating. Often blunted in obesity.
Read next on Real Easy Diet
Sources
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[01]
Metformin & weight — NIH PMC NIH PMC
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[02]
Metformin — MedlinePlus NIH MedlinePlus
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[03]
Metformin drug info — Mayo Clinic Mayo Clinic
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