Can You Take Mounjaro if You Have Gallstones or Gallbladder Problems?

Mounjaro Warnings

20 March 2026

By Dr. Emil Gadimali

gallbladder stones and mounjaro

Short answer: Yes, in many cases you can take Mounjaro (tirzepatide) — but it depends on your individual situation and requires medical supervision.

With the rise of weight loss injections across the UK, a common concern we see at CutKilo is whether Mounjaro is safe if you have gallstones or gallbladder issues. Here’s what you actually need to know.

Does Mounjaro Cause Gallstones?

Mounjaro itself does not directly “cause” gallstones, but it can increase the risk indirectly.

There are two key reasons:

  • Rapid weight loss → changes bile composition, increasing cholesterol saturation

  • Reduced gallbladder movement → bile sits longer, making stone formation more likely

Clinical data shows:

  • Gallbladder-related side effects occur in a small percentage of patients (~0.6%–1%)

  • Risk of gallbladder disease may be modestly increased compared to placebo

Can You Take Mounjaro If You Already Have Gallstones?

This depends on the situation:

1. Asymptomatic gallstones (no symptoms)

  • Often still safe to use Mounjaro

  • Requires monitoring for symptoms

  • Slow, controlled weight loss is important

 Many clinicians will proceed cautiously rather than exclude treatment entirely.

2. Active or symptomatic gallstones

  • Usually not recommended to start Mounjaro

  • Higher risk of complications (pain, inflammation, bile duct blockage)

 These patients typically need further assessment or treatment first.

3. After gallbladder removal (cholecystectomy)

  • Generally safe to use Mounjaro

  • No absolute contraindication

 In fact, many patients tolerate it well post-surgery.


What Symptoms Should You Watch For?

If you are using Mounjaro, be alert for:

  • Right upper abdominal pain (especially after eating)

  • Pain radiating to the back or shoulder

  • Nausea or vomiting

  • Jaundice (yellowing of eyes/skin)

These may indicate gallstones or bile duct obstruction and require urgent review

Why Weight Loss Itself Matters

It’s important to understand:

Gallstones are a known risk of weight loss — not just Mounjaro

This applies to:

  • Dieting

  • Bariatric surgery

  • GLP-1 / GIP medications

Rapid fat loss increases gallstone risk regardless of the method

How to Reduce Your Risk on Mounjaro

At CutKilo, we focus on risk-controlled weight loss, not aggressive drops.

Key strategies:

  • Gradual dose escalation (not rushing up doses)

  • Avoiding very rapid weight loss

  • Staying well hydrated

  • Maintaining dietary fat balance (not extreme restriction)

  • Regular clinical monitoring

Clinical Takeaway

  • Yes, you can often take Mounjaro with gallstones — but case selection is critical

  • Active gallbladder disease = caution or delay

  • Post-gallbladder removal = usually safe

  • The main driver of risk is rapid weight loss, not the drug alone

CutKilo Approach

At CutKilo, we don’t just prescribe Mounjaro.

We:

  • Screen for gallbladder risk

  • Personalise dosing and pace of weight loss

  • Monitor symptoms closely

  • Integrate bloods and metabolic data for safer outcomes

Crunch the numbers with our BMI Calculator

*Enter your height and weight into our BMI calculator to estimate your healthy range and see how much weight you can safely lose.

If you have an Asian, Chinese, Middle Eastern, Black African or African-Caribbean family background you’ll need to use a lower BMI score to measure overweight and obesity:

  • 23 to 27.4 – overweight
  • 27.5 or above – obese

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