Sulfur Burps on Mounjaro / Tirzepatide — What Worked, What Didn't (community guide)

MetabolicMindset

Well-known member
Quick context: this is a community-aggregated guide. I'm a member, not a clinician. The "what worked / didn't" sections pull from posts across our forum, not just my experience. If you're in a flare right now, jump straight to How do I stop sulfur burps fast? below. Community summary, last reviewed 2026-06-13. If you're vomiting blood, passing black tarry stools, or have severe stomach pain that won't quit — stop reading this and call 911 or your prescriber. Sulfur burps don't cause those.

When should I call a doctor about Mounjaro sulfur burps?​


Same-day call or ER if you have any of the following, not just sulfur burps alone. A normal sulfur-burp episode is uncomfortable but not dangerous. The list below is what to rule out before reaching for an OTC remedy — these signals mean stop self-treating.

  • Severe upper-abdominal pain radiating to the back, especially with nausea or vomiting — possible pancreatitis, a known GLP-1 risk.
  • Right-upper-quadrant pain with jaundice (yellow skin or eyes) or pale stools — possible gallbladder disease, elevated risk in GLP-1 users.
  • Persistent vomiting with signs of dehydration (dark urine, dizziness on standing, no urine for 8+ hours) — risk of acute kidney injury.
  • Sudden vision changes or vision loss in one eye — reported NAION cases in semaglutide users; get seen same-day.
  • Fruity breath, rapid breathing, confusion if you're on insulin or a sulfonylurea alongside a GLP-1 — possible DKA.
  • Severe or worsening depression, or any suicidal thoughts — call your prescriber or 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline.
  • History of gastroparesis — sulfur burps on top of that may escalate fast; loop in your prescriber early.

Phone-script that works: "I'm on [drug name and dose]. Since [timeframe] I've had [symptom]. Is this the expected side effect or could it be something worse?" That one sentence gets you past the front desk.

How do I stop sulfur burps on Mounjaro fast?​


The fix most of our members reach for first is two Pepto-Bismol chewables (525 mg bismuth subsalicylate) at the first burp. Most members who tried it reported relief within 2-4 hours. If Pepto is off-limits or didn't work, the most-mentioned fallback is simethicone (Gas-X). Cutting eggs, red meat, garlic/onion, and cruciferous vegetables for 3-5 days is the highest-yield non-drug move our members report. Most flares respond to the Pepto + skip-list combination within a day or two.

What does Pepto-Bismol do for tirzepatide sulfur burps?​


Bismuth subsalicylate binds hydrogen sulfide in the gut, neutralizing the gas before it can burp back up. Per the FDA OTC drug facts label, the adult/child-12+ dose is 525 mg every 30-60 minutes, or 1050 mg every hour, as needed. Do not exceed 4200 mg (8 doses) in 24 hours and do not use for more than 2 days without talking to a doctor. Chewables are typically 262 mg each (so 2 chewables = 525 mg). Liquid is typically 262 mg per 15 mL. Check the label on your bottle. A black tongue and black stools are expected with bismuth and are not blood — they clear within days after you stop. No direct interaction with the GLP-1 itself — tirzepatide and semaglutide are injected peptides, not orally absorbed, so Pepto in your gut doesn't affect the drug.

Do not take Pepto-Bismol if you:
  • Are allergic to aspirin or other salicylates.
  • Take aspirin or an anticoagulant (warfarin, apixaban, rivaroxaban, etc.) — additive bleeding risk.
  • Have kidney disease or are on dialysis.
  • Are pregnant (especially third trimester) or breastfeeding.
  • Are giving it to a child or teen with a viral illness — Reye syndrome risk.
  • Have gout or are on uric-acid-lowering therapy.
  • Are on tetracyclines or fluoroquinolones — separate doses by at least 2 hours.

What works for sulfur burps if Pepto-Bismol doesn't help?​


Simethicone (Gas-X, Mylicon) is the most-mentioned fallback — typical adult dose 125 mg after meals and at bedtime, not to exceed 500 mg in 24 hours. It's an OTC anti-foaming agent, not absorbed into the bloodstream, considered safe in pregnancy, with essentially no drug interactions. Simethicone targets the mechanical gas component — the bloating and trapped-bubble feeling — more than the smell itself, but many members said it blunted the overall episode. If both Pepto and simethicone fall short, the next community-tested moves are a strict 3-5 day food-trigger elimination (next section) and activated charcoal (separated by 2+ hours from any other oral meds, because it binds them indiscriminately).

What foods cause sulfur burps on GLP-1s?​


The highest-impact triggers are eggs, red meat, cruciferous vegetables (broccoli, cabbage, cauliflower, Brussels sprouts, kale), and alliums (garlic, onion, leek, shallot). Sulfur burps smell like rotten eggs because the gas is hydrogen sulfide (H2S), formed when gut bacteria break down sulfur-containing amino acids (cysteine, methionine) and sulfate compounds in food. The higher the sulfur load and the longer food sits in your stomach, the more H2S you make. GLP-1s slow gastric emptying — that's the mechanism — so sulfur-rich food sits longer and ferments more.

The full trigger list our members most often flag:
  • Eggs — very high in cysteine and methionine. Single most-mentioned trigger.
  • Red meat, especially beef and pork — dense in sulfur amino acids. Chicken and fish are milder.
  • Cruciferous: broccoli, cabbage, Brussels sprouts, cauliflower, kale, bok choy — naturally high in sulfur compounds (glucosinolates).
  • Alliums: garlic, onion, leek, shallot — high in sulfur compounds that give them their smell.
  • Beans and lentils — high protein and fermentable fibers that feed sulfate-reducing bacteria.
  • Dairy and whey protein — whey is rich in cysteine; lactose fermentation adds gas volume.
  • Dried fruit and wine — often preserved with sulfites.

Easier swaps for the flare: white rice, oats, plain toast, banana, skinless chicken breast, white fish, plain potato, zucchini, carrots, cucumber. Boring on purpose. Reintroduce the skip-list foods one at a time after symptoms calm. This isn't dietary advice — our community reported these foods worsened symptoms, and the biochemistry (sulfur amino acids → H2S) is consistent with that.

How long do Mounjaro sulfur burps last?​


Most members report the worst window is weeks 3-4, with fading through weeks 5-8 and resolution by week 12 on a stable dose. Within each week, symptoms peak 48-96 hours after injection and quiet down before the next dose. If you inject Sunday morning, expect symptoms worst Tuesday through Wednesday, easing by Friday (day 5-7), and quietest in the 24 hours before your next dose. Plan meetings, long drives, and date nights accordingly.

The week-by-week curve on a starting Mounjaro 2.5 mg dose:
  • Week 1-2: mild burping, mostly the 48-96 hour post-injection window.
  • Week 3-4: often the peak. Many members say this is when they first Google "sulfur burps."
  • Week 5-8: fading for most, especially if dose has been stable.
  • By week 12: majority of members who posted about it said it had resolved or become rare.
  • Every dose escalation resets the clock by 1-2 weeks. Mounjaro's titration goes 2.5 → 5 → 7.5 → 10 → 12.5 → 15 mg, typically 4 weeks per step. Expect a flare for the first 7-14 days of each new dose, then re-adaptation.

If you're 12+ weeks in, on a stable dose, and sulfur burps are still a daily event — that's not the typical curve. Time to talk to your prescriber.

What did the community try beyond Pepto and Gas-X?​


Of the posts I reviewed discussing sulfur burps on Mounjaro, Ozempic, Wegovy, and Zepbound, Pepto-Bismol was the most-mentioned relief approach by a wide margin. The majority of members who tried it reported meaningful relief, usually within a few hours. A meaningful fraction — roughly one in four members who posted about Pepto — said it did nothing for them. Here's what that group most often tried next:

  • Simethicone (Gas-X) — most common fallback. Several said it helped the bloating more than the smell.
  • Activated charcoal — mentioned less often, with the loudest cautions: it binds other medications (birth control, thyroid, antidepressants) and should be separated by at least 2 hours from anything else taken by mouth.
  • Peppermint oil capsules (enteric-coated, IBS-dose) — smaller group, modest reports of relief on the bloating side.
  • Dose pause or reduction after a conversation with the prescriber — reported by members who couldn't get past it with OTC approaches.
  • Strict 3-5 day elimination of the skip-list above — frequently reported as the single highest-yield non-drug intervention.

Probiotics came up, but reports were mixed. Some said a daily probiotic helped over weeks; others said it made things worse for the first few days.

What if nothing here works — when do I escalate?​


If you've tried Pepto at label doses for 2 days, simethicone, and the skip-list, and you're still burping sulfur multiple times a day — bring it to your prescriber. That's not a normal curve and the OTC ladder has more steps on the prescription side. Specifically ask about:

  • Lipase — to rule out pancreatitis, especially if any abdominal pain.
  • CBC and basic metabolic panel — to check for dehydration, kidney function, and electrolytes if you've been vomiting.
  • LFTs (liver function tests) — to check for gallbladder/liver involvement if you have RUQ pain.
  • Whether to pause titration. Staying on your current dose an extra 4 weeks before moving up is a legitimate, commonly used option.
  • Whether to step down one dose level temporarily and re-climb slowly.

Phone-script for pausing titration: "The GI side effects on [current dose] haven't settled yet. Can we stay at this dose for another month before moving up, instead of escalating on the usual schedule?" Most prescribers say yes when asked directly.

Why do GLP-1s cause sulfur burps?​


Tirzepatide and semaglutide slow gastric emptying, which gives gut bacteria more time to ferment sulfur-rich food into hydrogen sulfide (H2S) — the rotten-egg gas. It's made in your gut by two overlapping processes: sulfate-reducing bacteria that live in the colon and proximal small bowel, and fermentation of sulfur-containing amino acids (cysteine and methionine) from protein-rich food.

GLP-1 receptor agonists — tirzepatide (Mounjaro, Zepbound), semaglutide (Ozempic, Wegovy, Rybelsus), liraglutide (Saxenda) — slow gastric emptying as part of how they blunt appetite and flatten post-meal glucose. But it also means food sits longer in the stomach and upper small bowel, giving bacteria more time to generate H2S from sulfur-rich food. Because H2S is lighter than the stomach's contents and gastric emptying is delayed, the gas burps upward instead of passing downward — which is why sulfur burps, not sulfur flatulence, is the signature GLP-1 complaint. Effect is dose-dependent, which is why every titration step can flare symptoms for 1-2 weeks.

What medications interact with the sulfur-burp OTC remedies?​


Pepto-Bismol (bismuth subsalicylate) — do not combine with:
  • Aspirin or other salicylates — additive salicylate load.
  • Anticoagulants: warfarin, apixaban, rivaroxaban, dabigatran, edoxaban — bleeding risk.
  • Other NSAIDs (ibuprofen, naproxen) at chronic doses — GI bleeding risk.
  • Methotrexate — salicylates raise methotrexate levels.
  • Probenecid or other uric-acid therapy — salicylates blunt effect and raise urate.
  • Tetracyclines (doxycycline, minocycline) and fluoroquinolones (ciprofloxacin, levofloxacin) — bismuth binds them. Separate doses by at least 2 hours.

Activated charcoal binds almost any oral medication it meets in the gut, including birth control pills, thyroid replacement (levothyroxine), antidepressants, and anti-seizure drugs. If you use it, take it at least 2 hours before or 2 hours after any other oral medication. Doesn't affect injected GLP-1s.

Simethicone — no clinically significant drug interactions. Not absorbed.

Probiotics — generally low-interaction, but if you're immunocompromised or have a central line, talk to your prescriber before starting a live-culture product.

Mounjaro sulfur burps FAQ​


How long do Mounjaro sulfur burps last?
Most members report the worst window is weeks 3-4, with fading through weeks 5-8 and resolution by week 12 on a stable dose. Within each week, symptoms peak 48-96 hours after your injection and quiet down before the next dose. Every dose escalation typically triggers a fresh 1-2 week flare.

Does Pepto-Bismol interact with Mounjaro?
No direct interaction. Mounjaro (tirzepatide) is an injected peptide and isn't absorbed orally, so Pepto in your stomach doesn't affect the drug. The cautions around Pepto are about your kidneys, bleeding risk, salicylate allergy, pregnancy, and separation from tetracyclines and fluoroquinolones — not about the GLP-1 itself.

Can sulfur burps mean Mounjaro isn't working?
No. Sulfur burps are a side effect of slowed gastric emptying, which is part of how the drug works. They're a sign the drug is active, not a sign it has failed. Weight and appetite response is how you judge whether it's working — not GI side effects.

What if I'm also vomiting with sulfur burps?
If you're vomiting more than a few times, can't keep fluids down, are getting dizzy, or haven't urinated in 8+ hours, call your prescriber the same day. Persistent vomiting on a GLP-1 can cause dehydration and acute kidney injury. If there's severe abdominal pain with it, go to the ER — pancreatitis has to be ruled out.

Is there anything I can eat that helps?
Plain, low-sulfur, low-fat foods during a flare: white rice, oats, plain toast, banana, skinless chicken breast, white fish, potato, zucchini, carrots. Small portions, slow pace. Ginger tea and peppermint tea were frequently mentioned by members as settling, though evidence is mostly anecdotal for the sulfur-burp use case specifically.

Should I reduce my Mounjaro dose for sulfur burps?
That's a conversation with your prescriber, not a DIY move. Common options they consider: holding at your current dose for an extra month before escalating, or stepping down one level and re-climbing more slowly. Both are standard. Ask directly — most prescribers will accommodate.

Do sulfur burps happen on Zepbound, Ozempic, or Wegovy too?
Yes. Zepbound is the same molecule as Mounjaro (tirzepatide), so the pattern is identical. Ozempic and Wegovy (both semaglutide) cause sulfur burps too — usually milder per community reports, but the same mechanism and the same OTC playbook applies. Liraglutide (Saxenda) does as well at lower frequency.

Related threads in our community​


If you're in a flare right now, these have the deepest discussion:


If you've found something that worked — or didn't — post below. The next person Googling this at 2am will find your reply.




Community summary, last reviewed 2026-06-13. This is community-aggregated information, not medical advice. See our Medical Disclaimer and Editorial Policy for how we put these together. Sources include the FDA prescribing information for tirzepatide and semaglutide; FDA OTC drug facts label for bismuth subsalicylate; Sodhi et al. JAMA 2023;330(18):1795-1797 (PubMed); ACG IBS clinical guideline; CDC Reye syndrome page; FDA drug safety communications for GLP-1 RAs.
 
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Solid writeup. The dose-escalation timing is real — went 7.5 to 10 last month and got hit with sulfur burps for a solid 10 days before they faded. Question for the group: anyone notice eggs are way worse than other protein? I can eat chicken fine but two eggs in the morning and I'm burping by lunch.
 
For me Pepto barely did anything. What actually worked was cutting the eggs+coffee combo and switching to oatmeal mornings. Also the simethicone (Gas-X) is underrated for the bloated feeling even when it doesn't kill the smell.
 
The 48-96 hour thing tracks perfectly for me. I inject Friday night and Sunday-Monday is unbearable, by Wednesday I'm fine, then Friday night injection again and the cycle restarts. Knowing this in advance would have saved me so much "is something seriously wrong" panic in the first month.
 
Thank you for putting this together. Wish this existed when I started Mounjaro back in March. Spent the first 6 weeks convinced something was catastrophically wrong with me. Going to bookmark and send to a friend who's about to start Zepbound.
 
I held on 5mg an extra month before bumping to 7.5mg, and I think that's actually what saved me on the GI side. The week-1 nausea cycle hit again at 7.5 but it was milder than my first 5mg ramp. Sulphur burps showed up around day 4 of the new dose and faded by day 10. Tracking everything in a spreadsheet helps me see the pattern across bumps.
 
Adding to the dose-bump pattern: every titration step (2.5 to 5, 5 to 7.5, 7.5 to 10) brought sulphur burps back for 2-3 weeks then they leveled. Hydration and avoiding red meat for 3 days post-shot worked best for me each time. Felt frustrating to ride the wave each bump but knowing it was temporary helped me push through.
 
Adding a food-timing data point: I moved my biggest meal of the day to lunch on shot day instead of dinner, and the evening sulphur burps basically stopped. Took maybe two weeks of the new routine to feel the full shift. Eating lighter at night seems to give the gut more breathing room while the medication is still ramping up after the shot.
 
Hydration hack that worked for me — electrolytes (LMNT or just salt+lemon water) the morning of shot day. Cut my shot-day fatigue noticeably and I think the burps showed up less aggressively too. My theory is that better hydration helps the GI side ride through smoother, but I'm a sample of one. Worth trying if you're already running low on water by mid-afternoon.
 
Pacing the dose bumps helped me a lot. Standard guidance is 4 weeks per step but I added an extra week at each rung (2.5 → 5 → 7.5 → 10) — so 5 weeks per step instead of 4. Sides were noticeably milder per step compared to my first attempt where I bumped at the 4-week mark and got blindsided. Slower titration cost me maybe a month of total time but the journey was much more livable.
 
Long-term aggregate point — 9 months on tirz, weekly sulphur-burp episodes faded by maybe 70% from my week-1 baseline. Still get them during dose bumps and after big fatty meals, but day-to-day they're rare now. The triggers also got more predictable — once I figured out my own pattern (red meat + late dinner + shot day = guaranteed) avoiding it became automatic. Persistence and tracking won out over any one specific fix for me.
 
One thing that quietly worked for me: switched to a stronger probiotic (50 billion CFU) about a month after my burps started ramping up. Took about three weeks before I noticed but the gas/burps profile shifted measurably. Could be coincidence or could be the dose-bump catching up — adding it as a data point since I haven't seen probiotics mentioned much in the thread.
 
Adding to the food-trigger list — for me eggs the night before a shot were the worst burp trigger. Once I cut them out two days around shot day, the sulfur burps dropped from daily to maybe once a month. Took me four months of trial and error to figure that out, hoping this saves someone the time.
 
High-sulfur foods are usually the main trigger - eggs, cruciferous veg, onions. Slowed emptying on these meds makes the fermentation worse. Small portions and staying upright after eating cuts frequency for most people.
 
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