Understanding Normal A1C With Elevated Insulin

Yes, it is entirely possible to have a normal A1C while experiencing high insulin levels. This pattern often appears in my clients in their mid-40s to mid-50s who struggle with stubborn weight, joint pain, and blood pressure concerns. A1C measures average blood glucose over 2-3 months and can read below 5.7% even as your pancreas pumps out excess insulin to keep glucose in check. This early stage of insulin resistance frequently goes undetected in standard doctor visits focused only on A1C or fasting glucose.

In my book The CFP Method, I explain how hormonal shifts during perimenopause and menopause amplify this mismatch. Declining estrogen makes cells less responsive to insulin, forcing your body to produce more just to maintain normal blood sugar. Many women I work with see fasting insulin above 10 μU/mL — sometimes as high as 20 — despite perfect-looking A1C results.

Why This Matters for Your Weight and Health

High insulin is a powerful fat-storage hormone. Even with normal A1C, elevated insulin promotes abdominal weight gain, inflammation that worsens joint pain, and increases diabetes and cardiovascular risk. Insurance rarely covers advanced testing, so many feel embarrassed asking for more thorough labs. Yet catching this early prevents the progression to full type 2 diabetes that so many in our community have faced after failed diets.

Common triggers include chronic stress, poor sleep, and diets heavy in refined carbs that spike insulin repeatedly. For those managing blood pressure alongside weight, this hidden resistance often explains why pounds refuse to budge despite calorie restriction.

How to Test and What Numbers Reveal

Ask your doctor for a fasting insulin test alongside your next A1C. Optimal fasting insulin sits below 5 μU/mL; levels between 8-15 signal early resistance even if A1C is normal. The HOMA-IR calculation (fasting glucose × fasting insulin ÷ 405) offers additional insight — aim for under 1.8.

Continuous glucose monitors can reveal post-meal spikes your A1C misses. In The CFP Method, we combine these metrics with simple at-home tracking to create sustainable changes without complex meal plans or gym schedules that feel impossible with joint pain.

Practical Steps to Lower Insulin Naturally

Start with 12-14 hour overnight fasts to give your pancreas a break — many beginners see insulin drop within weeks. Prioritize protein (25-30g per meal) and fiber-rich vegetables while reducing processed carbs. Gentle movement like walking after meals improves insulin sensitivity without stressing painful joints.

Target 7-9 hours of sleep and stress-reduction practices; both directly lower insulin. My clients following the CFP approach often normalize insulin in 90 days while losing 1-2 pounds weekly, even when previous diets failed. Consistency with these fundamentals beats perfection every time. If you feel overwhelmed by conflicting advice, begin with one change: test your fasting insulin this month and build from real data.