What is Insulin?
Insulin is the hormone made by the pancreas that allows cells to take up glucose from the blood. Fasting insulin measures how much insulin your body needs to keep blood sugar normal. Elevated fasting insulin often appears years before glucose or HbA1c rise, making it an early marker of insulin resistance.
Why it matters
High fasting insulin signals that your body is working overtime to control blood sugar the earliest stage of metabolic dysfunction long before diabetes is diagnosable by glucose alone.
What it measures
Fasting serum insulin, often combined with fasting glucose to calculate HOMA-IR, an index of insulin resistance.
Reference & optimal ranges
Reference ranges vary by lab, assay, age, and sex. The ranges below reflect commonly published adult intervals and are for education only always interpret results with the range printed on your own lab report and a clinician.
High fasting insulin (hyperinsulinemia) indicates insulin resistance an early, often reversible stage of metabolic disease.
Common symptoms
- Often none
- Weight gain (central)
- Fatigue after meals
- Sugar cravings
- Skin tags or dark neck creases (acanthosis)
Potential causes
- Insulin resistance / prediabetes
- Obesity
- PCOS
- Sedentary lifestyle and high-sugar diet
Low insulin can be normal in metabolically healthy, lean people, or reflect type 1 diabetes when glucose is high.
Common symptoms
- None if healthy; high blood sugar symptoms if type 1 diabetes
Potential causes
- Good insulin sensitivity (healthy)
- Type 1 diabetes (with high glucose)
- Pancreatic insufficiency
How to improve your Insulin
Lifestyle
Reduce abdominal fat
Weight loss is the most effective way to lower elevated fasting insulin.
Nutrition
Cut refined carbs and sugar
Lowering the glucose load reduces the insulin your body must produce.
Exercise
Build muscle and move daily
Muscle is the main site of glucose disposal; resistance and aerobic training improve insulin sensitivity.
Sleep
Prioritize sleep
Even short-term sleep loss measurably increases insulin resistance.
Frequently asked questions
Scientific references
- Insulin in Blood Testing.com
- Insulin in Blood MedlinePlus, U.S. National Library of Medicine
Educational information, not medical advice. This page is for general education and does not replace diagnosis or treatment by a licensed clinician. Do not start, stop, or change any medication, supplement, or treatment based on this content. Reference and optimal ranges vary between laboratories interpret your results with the range on your own report and a qualified professional.
