What is Leptin?
Also: leptin resistance
The 'satiety hormone' released by fat cells. Tells your brain to stop eating. Often blunted in obesity.
Leptin is the "satiety hormone" — released by fat cells in proportion to how much fat you carry. It travels to the hypothalamus and tells your brain "you have enough energy stored; you can stop eating now." In leptin resistance, common in obesity, the brain stops listening to that signal even when leptin levels are high. The result: persistent hunger despite plenty of stored energy.
Quick definition
Leptin is the long-term satiety hormone. Ghrelin is the short-term hunger one. Both work together to regulate appetite, but leptin sets the baseline for whether your body thinks it has enough energy in storage.
How it actually works
Leptin was discovered in 1994 by Jeffrey Friedman's lab. Mice without leptin (the ob/ob strain) eat constantly and become massively obese. Injecting them with leptin restored normal eating. The hope was that leptin therapy could treat human obesity. Then the studies happened.
It turned out most obese people already have elevated leptin — sometimes 4 to 10 times the levels of lean adults. Their problem isn't leptin deficiency. It's leptin resistance: the brain's leptin receptors stop responding adequately. Leptin therapy works for the rare leptin-deficient patient but doesn't help typical obesity.
Inflammation, high fasting insulin, and chronic excess intake all contribute to leptin resistance. The fix is weight loss itself — as fat mass drops, inflammation drops, and leptin sensitivity tends to improve. Sleep also matters: a single night of bad sleep drops leptin by 18 percent and raises ghrelin by 28 percent (Spiegel et al., 2004, Annals of Internal Medicine).
Why it matters for weight loss
Leptin resistance is part of why obesity is hard to reverse — the body's "energy is plentiful" signal is broken, so hunger persists even when intake is sufficient. GLP-1 agonists partially bypass this by activating different satiety pathways.
The lifestyle levers (sleep, walking, weight loss, reduced ultra-processed intake) all support leptin sensitivity. The supplement-marketing claims about "fixing leptin resistance" with a single pill are not backed by clinical-trial evidence in healthy humans.
Common misconceptions
The biggest myth: low leptin causes obesity. The opposite is more common — obese people typically have high leptin and resistance to its signal.
The second myth: supplements "reset" leptin. The category is a wishful one. No supplement has clinical-trial evidence for restoring leptin sensitivity at meaningful scale in healthy adults.
Related terms
- Ghrelin The 'hunger hormone' produced in the stomach. Rises before meals. The opposite of leptin.
- Insulin Sensitivity How responsive your cells are to insulin. High sensitivity = good. Low sensitivity (resistance) = trouble.
- Cortisol & Weight The chronic-stress hormone. Real link to belly fat — but not the magic-pill scapegoat marketers sell.
- Metabolic Adaptation The drop in calorie burn that follows sustained dieting — real, but smaller than TikTok claims.
- Visceral Fat Deep belly fat packed around your organs. Metabolically active. The dangerous kind.
Read next on Real Easy Diet
Sources
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[01]
Leptin & body weight — NIH PMC NIH PMC
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[02]
Obesity research — NIDDK NIDDK
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