Medically reviewed by Chandre Tina May, Registered Nurse & Menopause Society Certified Practitioner (MSCP). See our editorial policy.
You’ve eaten a full meal, but forty minutes later you’re standing in front of the kitchen cupboard hunting for something sweet. You’re not bored. You’re not weak. You’re not “just bad with food.” You have PCOS — and your body’s insulin signalling is working against you in a way most people never explain clearly. This article is about PCOS insulin resistance: what it is, why it hijacks your appetite, and what evidence-based steps can genuinely make a difference.
What’s actually happening: the communication breakdown
Think of insulin as a messenger that knocks on your cells’ doors with a very simple message: “There’s glucose in the bloodstream — let it in.” In a body without insulin resistance, the cells hear that knock and open right up. Energy gets used efficiently, blood sugar steadies, and the hunger signal quiets down.
With PCOS-related insulin resistance, the cells have essentially gone hard of hearing. The messenger keeps knocking, louder and louder, so your pancreas sends out more and more insulin to compensate. Blood sugar still swings erratically, your brain registers an energy shortage even when there isn’t one — and it responds the only way it knows how: by sending an urgent craving for the fastest fuel available. Sugar.
This isn’t a character flaw. It’s a broken communication loop in your own biology. According to Verity, the UK’s PCOS charity, up to 70–80% of women with PCOS have some degree of insulin resistance — making it one of the most common, and most overlooked, drivers of PCOS symptoms.
Why PCOS insulin resistance is different
Insulin resistance isn’t unique to PCOS, but in PCOS it has a particular twist. High insulin levels don’t just cause blood sugar chaos — they also signal the ovaries to produce more androgens (male-type hormones like testosterone). That excess androgen is responsible for many of the symptoms that feel so relentless: irregular periods, acne, excess hair growth, and difficulty managing weight.
In other words, the same mechanism driving your sugar cravings is also worsening your other PCOS symptoms. They’re not separate problems. They share a root.
What the cravings actually feel like
It’s worth naming this, because doctors often don’t ask. PCOS-related sugar cravings tend to follow a pattern:
- Post-meal crashes: You feel fine, then suddenly foggy and desperate for something sweet about an hour after eating — especially after high-carbohydrate meals.
- Mid-afternoon slumps: A sharp dip in energy that feels almost physical, not just tired.
- All-or-nothing eating: One biscuit leads to six, not because you’re greedy, but because a reactive blood sugar dip creates a biochemical urgency that overrides “just have one.”
- Morning hunger that feels frantic: Even after a full night’s sleep, waking up already craving carbohydrates.
If any of that sounds familiar, it’s the communication breakdown playing out in real time. And for many women with PCOS, this cycle has been silently undermining their relationship with food for years before anyone connects it to their diagnosis. You might find it helpful to read more about how PCOS affects your metabolism and weight — the two issues are closely linked.
How insulin resistance is identified
There’s no single definitive test, which is part of why it slips through the cracks. A GP or specialist might look at a combination of:
- Fasting glucose and insulin levels — to calculate an estimate of insulin resistance (sometimes called HOMA-IR).
- HbA1c — a longer-term measure of blood sugar control.
- Fasting lipid profile — because insulin resistance often travels with raised triglycerides and low HDL cholesterol.
- Clinical picture — symptoms, weight distribution (particularly around the abdomen), skin changes like acanthosis nigricans (dark, velvety patches at the neck or armpits).
If your cycles are irregular, your cravings are relentless, and you’ve never had your insulin levels looked at specifically — it’s worth asking. You deserve a full picture, not just a prescription for “eat less sugar.”
What actually helps
The good news is that insulin resistance is one of the more responsive aspects of PCOS — lifestyle changes can shift it meaningfully, and there are medical options when lifestyle alone isn’t enough.
Lifestyle approaches
- Protein and fibre at every meal: Both slow the absorption of glucose and blunt the insulin spike that triggers the craving cycle. Prioritising these at breakfast in particular can make a real difference to afternoon cravings.
- Lower glycaemic index (GI) carbohydrates: Swapping refined carbs for wholegrains, legumes, and vegetables doesn’t mean eliminating carbs — it means choosing ones that release glucose more steadily. NICE guidelines for type 2 diabetes management (which shares the insulin-resistance mechanism) support this approach.
- Movement — especially after meals: Even a 10–15 minute walk after eating can meaningfully reduce post-meal blood sugar spikes, according to research summarised by the NHS. Resistance training two to three times a week also helps cells become more insulin-sensitive over time.
- Sleep: Poor sleep directly worsens insulin sensitivity. This is not peripheral — one bad night can measurably impair your glucose regulation the next day.
Non-hormonal medical options
- Inositol (specifically myo-inositol and D-chiro-inositol): A supplement with a growing evidence base in PCOS. It appears to improve insulin signalling at the cell level. The evidence is promising but still emerging — discuss it with your doctor before starting.
- Metformin: A prescription medication that improves insulin sensitivity. It’s widely used in PCOS and has a strong track record. A clinician decides whether it’s appropriate for you and what dose is right.
Hormonal options
Some women with PCOS are prescribed the combined oral contraceptive pill to manage symptoms — but it’s worth knowing it doesn’t address insulin resistance directly, and for some women it can worsen it. This is a conversation worth having openly with your doctor. You can also learn more about how PCOS hormonal treatments compare so you can go into that conversation prepared. Understanding the broader hormonal picture of PCOS can also help you ask better questions.
When to see a doctor
Please don’t wait until things feel unbearable. See your GP or a specialist if:
- Your sugar cravings are significantly affecting your daily life or relationship with food.
- You’ve noticed dark patches of skin on your neck, armpits, or groin.
- You have a family history of type 2 diabetes and haven’t been screened recently.
- You’ve been told you have PCOS but never had your insulin or glucose levels tested.
- You’re struggling with your weight and it feels completely disconnected from what you eat.
Women with PCOS have a higher lifetime risk of developing type 2 diabetes — The Menopause Society and ACOG both highlight this. Early attention to insulin resistance is protective, not alarmist.
Frequently asked questions
Is sugar craving a symptom of PCOS?
Yes — though it’s rarely listed on the standard symptom checklist. PCOS insulin resistance disrupts blood sugar regulation, which causes the brain to send urgent cravings for fast-release glucose. It’s a physiological response, not a lack of willpower.
Can you have PCOS without being overweight?
Absolutely. Insulin resistance occurs in women of all body sizes with PCOS — including those with a “normal” BMI. Lean women with PCOS can still have significant insulin resistance and benefit from addressing it. Body weight alone is not a reliable indicator.
Does cutting out sugar cure PCOS insulin resistance?
Not on its own, and “cutting out” isn’t usually the most helpful framing. Reducing refined carbohydrates and eating in a way that stabilises blood sugar helps significantly — but it works best alongside regular movement, good sleep, and medical support where needed.
How long does it take to improve insulin sensitivity with lifestyle changes?
Research suggests measurable improvements in insulin sensitivity can appear within a few weeks of consistent dietary and exercise changes. Significant shifts typically take two to three months. Progress is real, but it takes time — and it’s worth tracking how you feel, not just lab numbers.
Is metformin safe for PCOS?
Metformin has been used in PCOS management for many years and has a well-established safety profile for most women. It’s a prescription medication, so a clinician will assess whether it’s right for you, consider any contraindications, and advise on monitoring. It’s not a decision to make alone, but it’s absolutely worth discussing.
This article is for general information and is not medical advice. It was reviewed by a certified healthcare professional in line with our editorial policy, and we update our content as the science evolves — but every woman’s body is different, so please speak to a qualified healthcare professional about your own symptoms.