If you’ve been told to cut carbs to “fix” your thyroid, I want you to lean in for a second—because the truth is, the exact opposite might be what your body actually needs.
I work with women every day who are exhausted, bloated, constipated, foggy, and stuck—despite following “clean eating” plans and cutting carbs in the name of health. Their thyroid labs might even come back looking “normal.” But they still feel anything but normal.
Here’s the thing no one is talking about: Your thyroid doesn’t just need nutrients to function. It needs fuel. And that fuel is glucose—the simplest form of carbohydrates.
Your thyroid is responsible for producing hormones that regulate energy, metabolism, body temperature, digestion, and even your menstrual cycle. But in order for it to work properly, the entire Thyroid Hormone Journey has to be supported:
Carbohydrates—especially from whole-food, nutrient-rich sources—support all three. Let’s break this down.
Let’s start at the source: thyroglobulin—a protein that your thyroid uses to make hormones. What most people don’t realize is that thyroglobulin is a glycoprotein, meaning it actually contains carbohydrate. Without enough carbs, your thyroid can struggle to make adequate hormone in the first place.
And that’s not all…
The Na+/I- symporter—the transport system that brings iodine into the thyroid gland—is also glucose dependent. Iodine is one of the key raw materials for thyroid hormone production, but it can’t even get inside the gland without enough glucose in circulation.
🚫 Low carb = low glucose
🛑 Low glucose = poor iodine uptake + reduced hormone production
Your thyroid mainly produces T4, but your cells need T3—the active form. That conversion happens in the liver, kidneys, and peripheral tissues. And guess what? It’s highly sensitive to stress.
Here’s what happens when carbs are too low:
This is your body’s way of saying: “We don’t feel safe. Slow everything down.”
Carbs help buffer the stress response, stabilize blood sugar, and send a safety signal to your metabolism that it’s okay to use energy again.
This part gets overlooked—even in functional medicine circles.
It’s not enough to have T3 available. Your cells have to:
That last part happens in the mitochondria, and it’s glucose-dependent. Without enough glucose, your mitochondria struggle to respond to T3 and produce energy.
So even if your labs show “perfect” T3, you can still feel hypothyroid if your cells don’t have the fuel to act on it.
Exactly. The quality, quantity, and distribution of carbs matter far more than the outdated idea of “cutting carbs to lose weight.”
Choose whole-food, nutrient-dense carbs that come with fiber, minerals, and color. Think:
Most women with thyroid issues are eating too few carbs to support hormone function, especially earlier in the day. Under-fueling = over-reliance on cortisol = slowed conversion and metabolism.
Eating most of your carbs at night or being wildly inconsistent sends mixed messages to your blood sugar and thyroid.
Better strategy:
Low or inconsistent carb intake leads to:
Translation?
Your labs might look normal, but you feel anything but.
If you’re still:
… it’s time to stop fearing carbs and start using them strategically.
When you give your body the fuel it needs to produce, convert, and use thyroid hormone, everything changes.
We recently supported a client with thyroid dysfunction, major blood sugar swings, and all the symptoms I just mentioned. And guess what? We didn’t cut carbs.
We:
And the result? Energy came back. Brain fog lifted. The scale started moving without extreme restriction. Here is the video training.
🧼 Apply to work 1:1 with our team of Functional Dietitians.
We’ll help you stop chasing symptoms and start rebuilding your metabolism from the inside out.
Your thyroid doesn’t hate carbs. It needs them. And we’re here to help you figure out how to use them in a way that works with your body—not against it.
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