Medically reviewed by Chandre Tina May, Registered Nurse & Menopause Society Certified Practitioner (MSCP). See our editorial policy.
You were told about the irregular periods. Maybe the unwanted hair, the acne, the frustrating difficulty losing weight. But if no one ever sat you down and explained that PCOS and diabetes are deeply connected — that having PCOS puts you at a significantly elevated risk of developing type 2 diabetes — you were not given the full picture. That missing conversation is exactly why you’re here, and it matters.
This post is going to explain why that link exists, what it actually feels like in your body, and — most importantly — what you can genuinely do about it. Not “eat less, move more” platitudes. Real, evidence-based options that make a difference.
What’s Actually Happening: The Security System Gone Haywire
Think of insulin as your body’s security system — its job is to let glucose (sugar from food) safely into your cells so it can be used as energy. In a well-functioning system, the alarm goes off, the door opens, glucose enters, and everything resets.
In most women with PCOS, that security system is miscalibrated. The alarm sounds — insulin is released — but the locks on the cell doors are stiff and unresponsive. This is insulin resistance. The glucose can’t get in efficiently, so it lingers in the bloodstream. Your body’s response? Send more insulin. The security system keeps blaring louder and louder trying to force the locks open.
Those chronically high insulin levels are a core driver of PCOS itself — they stimulate the ovaries to overproduce androgens (male hormones), which disrupts ovulation and causes many of the symptoms you know so well. And over time, if the system stays overwhelmed, the pancreas — the part that produces insulin — can eventually struggle to keep up. Blood sugar rises. Type 2 diabetes follows.
According to Verity, the UK’s PCOS charity, women with PCOS are at significantly higher risk of developing type 2 diabetes and impaired glucose tolerance compared to women without the condition. This isn’t a small or theoretical risk — it’s one of the most well-established metabolic consequences of PCOS.
Why PCOS Raises Your Diabetes Risk So Significantly
The connection between PCOS and type 2 diabetes isn’t just correlation — it runs through the same underlying mechanism: insulin resistance. Research consistently shows that the majority of women with PCOS have some degree of it, regardless of weight.
This is a point worth staying with: you do not have to be overweight to have insulin resistance with PCOS. Lean women with PCOS can have the same degree of metabolic disruption as heavier women. Weight can amplify insulin resistance, but it isn’t the cause. This distinction matters because many women are told their metabolic health is fine simply because they aren’t heavy — and that’s not always true.
Other factors that compound the risk include:
- Chronic low-grade inflammation, which is common in PCOS and further impairs insulin signalling
- Sleep disruption, including higher rates of sleep apnoea in women with PCOS, which worsens insulin sensitivity overnight
- Elevated androgens, which themselves appear to negatively affect how cells respond to insulin
Understanding how insulin resistance drives PCOS symptoms can help you see why managing metabolic health is so central to managing PCOS overall — they’re not separate problems.
What Does This Feel Like? Recognising the Signs
Insulin resistance and early blood sugar dysregulation often have no dramatic symptoms — which is part of what makes this risk so easy to miss. But there are signs worth knowing:
- Energy crashes after meals, especially carbohydrate-heavy ones
- Intense sugar or carb cravings, particularly in the afternoon
- Difficulty losing weight despite genuine effort
- Skin changes — particularly acanthosis nigricans, a darkening of skin in folds like the neck or armpits
- Persistent fatigue that sleep doesn’t fix
None of these confirm insulin resistance on their own, but if several resonate with you, they’re worth raising with your doctor. Many women with PCOS recognise these patterns immediately — and feel a wave of relief finally having an explanation.
It’s also worth knowing that PCOS-related fatigue is often tied directly to this blood sugar instability rather than just “being tired” — something that tends to get dismissed without this context.
What Actually Helps: Evidence-Based Options
The good news — and there genuinely is good news — is that insulin resistance is one of the most responsive aspects of PCOS to lifestyle change. You are not powerless here. The security system can be recalibrated.
Lifestyle approaches with strong evidence
- Resistance and strength training is particularly effective at improving insulin sensitivity — muscle tissue uses glucose efficiently, so building it helps reset the locks on those cell doors. Even two sessions a week makes a measurable difference.
- A lower-glycaemic diet — one that reduces sharp blood sugar spikes — consistently shows benefits for insulin resistance in PCOS. This doesn’t mean cutting carbs entirely; it means choosing wholegrain, fibre-rich, less processed versions. Protein and fat at each meal help slow glucose absorption.
- Consistent moderate exercise — including walking after meals, which research shows can blunt post-meal blood sugar rises meaningfully.
- Sleep quality — prioritising seven to nine hours and addressing any sleep disturbances genuinely improves metabolic markers.
Non-hormonal medical options
- Metformin is a medication commonly prescribed for PCOS to improve insulin sensitivity. It is not a diabetes drug used off-label — it is now a recognised treatment for PCOS and is recommended in many clinical guidelines. Your doctor decides whether it’s appropriate for you.
- Inositol supplements (particularly myo-inositol) have a growing evidence base for improving insulin resistance in PCOS, though research is still developing. Discuss with your doctor before starting.
Monitoring matters
Ask your GP or specialist for regular metabolic screening — fasting glucose, HbA1c (a measure of average blood sugar over time), and a fasting insulin level if possible. The NHS recommends women with PCOS be monitored for metabolic risk, but in practice this doesn’t always happen. You may need to ask for it directly.
If you’re also thinking about managing PCOS symptoms more broadly, understanding your metabolic picture is a strong foundation to build from.
When to See a Doctor
Please speak to your GP or a PCOS-specialist clinician if:
- You have PCOS and have never had your blood sugar or insulin levels checked
- You recognise several of the signs of insulin resistance described above
- You have a family history of type 2 diabetes
- You are pregnant or planning to become pregnant (gestational diabetes risk is also elevated with PCOS)
- You’ve been told your glucose is “borderline” or in the pre-diabetic range
Catching insulin dysregulation early is genuinely powerful — this is not a scare tactic, it’s the whole point. Early intervention means far more options and far better outcomes.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does everyone with PCOS get type 2 diabetes?
No — having PCOS raises your risk considerably, but it doesn’t mean diabetes is inevitable. Many women with PCOS never develop it, especially with awareness and proactive metabolic care. Understanding your personal risk through regular screening gives you the best chance of keeping it that way.
Can you have insulin resistance with PCOS if you’re not overweight?
Yes. Insulin resistance in PCOS occurs across all body sizes. Lean women with PCOS can have significant insulin dysregulation that won’t show up just from looking at weight or BMI. This is why metabolic blood tests matter regardless of your size or appearance.
What’s the difference between insulin resistance and diabetes?
Insulin resistance is when cells don’t respond properly to insulin — blood sugar may still be normal because the pancreas compensates by producing more. Type 2 diabetes occurs when that compensation eventually fails and blood sugar rises persistently. Insulin resistance is an earlier, more reversible stage on that spectrum.
Is metformin safe for PCOS if you don’t have diabetes?
Metformin is widely used in PCOS management for insulin resistance, not just diabetes. It has a well-established safety profile. Whether it’s appropriate for you depends on your individual health picture — your doctor will assess this based on your test results and symptoms.
How often should I be screened for diabetes if I have PCOS?
Most guidelines recommend that women with PCOS have blood glucose and metabolic markers checked at least every one to three years, or more frequently if other risk factors are present. Ask your GP to put this on your monitoring plan — it often needs to be requested explicitly.
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.