Take levothyroxine (Thyronorm, Eltroxin, Thyrox) on an empty stomach, 30-60 minutes before breakfast, with a full glass of plain water. Calcium supplements, iron tablets, and even coffee can block its absorption — keep calcium and iron at least 4 hours apart, and wait at least 30 minutes before chai or coffee. Consistent daily timing matters more than the exact time of day; your doctor adjusts your dose based on stable absorption patterns. If your routine changes from day to day, your TSH levels will fluctuate unpredictably. Here is what you need to know to get the most from your thyroid medicine.

This guide explains the science behind thyroid medicine timing in simple terms, so you can get the most out of your treatment.

What Does Thyroid Medicine Do?

Your thyroid gland (a butterfly-shaped gland in your neck) produces hormones called T3 and T4 that control your metabolism — how fast your body uses energy, how your heart beats, how you regulate temperature, and much more. In hypothyroidism, your thyroid doesn't produce enough of these hormones.

Levothyroxine is a synthetic (man-made) form of T4. When you take it, your body converts it to T3 as needed. It essentially replaces what your thyroid isn't making enough of.

Why an Empty Stomach?

Levothyroxine is a sensitive medicine. Your body only absorbs about 60-80% of the dose you take even under ideal conditions. Food, beverages, and other medicines can reduce this absorption further, sometimes significantly.

When you take levothyroxine on an empty stomach with plain water, the medicine is absorbed in the upper part of your small intestine without interference. When food is present, the medicine gets mixed with the food and its absorption becomes unpredictable.

The golden rule: Take your thyroid medicine first thing in the morning on an empty stomach with a full glass of plain water. Wait at least 30 minutes (ideally 60 minutes) before eating breakfast or drinking tea/coffee.

What Interferes With Thyroid Medicine Absorption?

Calcium Supplements and Calcium-Rich Foods

Calcium binds to levothyroxine in your gut, forming a complex that your body cannot absorb. This is one of the most significant interactions. If you take calcium supplements (or antacids that contain calcium), keep them at least 4 hours apart from your thyroid medicine.

This also applies to having a glass of milk or a bowl of curd immediately after your thyroid tablet — wait at least 30-60 minutes.

Iron Supplements

Iron, like calcium, binds to levothyroxine and reduces absorption. Many women in India take iron supplements for anaemia. Keep iron supplements at least 4 hours apart from thyroid medicine.

Coffee and Tea

Coffee can reduce the absorption of levothyroxine. If you're someone who needs chai or coffee first thing in the morning, you have two options:

Other Common Interferences

Consistency Is Key

Your doctor adjusts your levothyroxine dose based on your TSH (Thyroid Stimulating Hormone) blood test results. If your absorption changes from day to day — because you sometimes take it with food, sometimes without, sometimes with coffee, sometimes with water — your TSH levels will fluctuate unpredictably. This makes it hard for your doctor to find the right dose.

It doesn't matter as much exactly when you take it, as long as you take it the same way every day. Consistency is more important than perfection.

A Practical Morning Routine

Here's a routine that works well for most people:

  1. Wake up — Keep your thyroid tablet and a glass of water on your bedside table
  2. Take the tablet immediately with a full glass of plain water while still in bed or right after getting up
  3. Go about your morning — brush your teeth, freshen up, get dressed
  4. After 30-60 minutes — have your tea, coffee, and breakfast

Most people find that the gap between waking up and breakfast naturally falls into the 30-60 minute range once they build this habit.

What If You Miss a Dose?

Levothyroxine has a long half-life (about 7 days), which means it stays in your body for a long time. Missing one dose is not an emergency. If you realize you missed your morning dose:

TSH Monitoring: How Often?

Your doctor will monitor your progress through TSH blood tests. Here's a general schedule (your doctor may adjust this):

For the TSH blood test: Get your blood drawn in the morning before taking your thyroid tablet that day. Take your tablet after the blood draw. This gives the most accurate reading.

Don't Stop or Change Your Dose on Your Own

Hypothyroidism is usually a lifelong condition. Many patients feel better after a few months and think they can stop the medicine. Stopping levothyroxine without medical advice will cause your symptoms to return — fatigue, weight gain, hair loss, feeling cold, and more. Always consult your doctor before changing your dose.

Sources

  1. American Thyroid Association — Guidelines for the Treatment of Hypothyroidism — thyroid.org
  2. Thyroid Federation of India — thyroidfoundationofindia.org
  3. FDA Levothyroxine Drug Label — accessdata.fda.gov
  4. Bolk N, et al. "Effects of evening vs morning levothyroxine intake." Archives of Internal Medicine, 2010.