The Fasting Plasma Glucose Test is a lab blood test that measures glucose after at least 8 hours without calories. Clinicians use it to screen for diabetes and prediabetes, or to help confirm a diagnosis when results are repeated or supported by other tests.
This matters because fasting glucose reflects how your body manages blood sugar when food is not entering the bloodstream. A result outside the expected range can point to insulin resistance, medication effects, illness, or diabetes risk, but it needs clinical context.
Key Takeaways
- A fasting test usually requires no food or caloric drinks for at least 8 hours.
- Many U.S. references define normal fasting glucose as below 100 mg/dL, or below 5.6 mmol/L.
- Results from 100 to 125 mg/dL may suggest prediabetes in common U.S. guidance.
- A result of 126 mg/dL or higher may suggest diabetes, but confirmation is usually needed.
- Pregnancy, illness, medications, and recent eating can change how results are interpreted.
How the Fasting Plasma Glucose Test Works
The Fasting Plasma Glucose Test measures glucose in the plasma, the liquid part of blood, at one point in time. After you fast, your liver still releases some glucose. Insulin, a hormone that helps move glucose into cells, should keep that level within a controlled range.
When fasting glucose is higher than expected, the body may not be responding well to insulin, or the pancreas may not be making enough insulin. This pattern can occur before type 2 diabetes is diagnosed. It can also appear during stress, infection, steroid use, or after an incomplete fast.
The test is simple, but its meaning is not always simple. It is one data point. Clinicians often review symptoms, family history, weight changes, blood pressure, cholesterol, kidney health, pregnancy status, and other lab results before making decisions.
If you are comparing screening options, the Type 2 Diabetes Screening resource explains how testing can fit into broader risk assessment.
How to Prepare Before the Blood Draw
Most fasting glucose testing requires at least 8 hours without food or drinks that contain calories. Water is usually allowed. Some labs or clinicians may ask for an 8 to 12 hour fasting window, especially when other blood tests are drawn at the same visit.
Do not change your usual medicines unless your clinician gives instructions. This is especially important if you use insulin, sulfonylureas, or other medicines that can lower blood sugar. Fasting can raise the risk of low glucose for some people who use these treatments.
Before the test, ask for clear instructions about:
- Fasting window: how many hours to avoid calories.
- Allowed drinks: whether water, plain coffee, or tea is permitted.
- Morning medicines: which medicines to take or hold.
- Exercise timing: whether strenuous activity should be avoided.
- Illness or pregnancy: whether the test should be delayed or interpreted differently.
Quick tip: Bring a current medication list to the lab or appointment.
Try not to game the result by changing your diet sharply the day before. A single very low-carbohydrate day, unusually heavy exercise, alcohol use, or poor sleep may affect the result. Your clinician usually wants a result that reflects your typical physiology, not a one-day experiment.
Fasting Blood Sugar Ranges and Interpretation
A Fasting Plasma Glucose Test result is interpreted in relation to diagnostic thresholds, symptoms, and whether the result is repeated. The ranges below reflect commonly used U.S. categories for non-pregnant adults. Some international guidance uses slightly different cutoffs for impaired fasting glucose, while the diabetes threshold is commonly set at 126 mg/dL, or 7.0 mmol/L.
| Category | Fasting glucose | Approximate mmol/L | What it may suggest |
|---|---|---|---|
| Usually normal | Below 100 mg/dL | Below 5.6 mmol/L | Glucose is within the expected fasting range for many adults. |
| Prediabetes range | 100 to 125 mg/dL | 5.6 to 6.9 mmol/L | Glucose is higher than expected and may reflect increased diabetes risk. |
| Diabetes range | 126 mg/dL or higher | 7.0 mmol/L or higher | Diabetes may be present, especially if confirmed by repeat testing or other criteria. |
These numbers are not a diagnosis by themselves. A lab error, incomplete fast, acute illness, recent steroid use, or pregnancy can change the interpretation. If a result falls in the diabetes range and there are no classic symptoms, clinicians often repeat the test or use another diagnostic test for confirmation.
For a broader look at numbers across fasting, after-meal, and A1C contexts, see the Blood Sugar Normal Range Chart.
Some labs report glucose in mg/dL, while others use mmol/L. This converter can help with general unit conversion, but it does not interpret your result or replace clinical guidance.
Blood Glucose Unit Converter
Convert glucose readings between mg/dL and mmol/L without changing the clinical value.
These calculations are for education only and do not replace clinical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always confirm medical decisions with a qualified healthcare professional.
Use converted values only as a reference. Your lab report, clinician, and local diagnostic guidance should take priority.
What High or Low Results Can Mean
A high fasting result means glucose stayed above the expected range after a period without calories. It does not automatically explain why. Common clinical possibilities include insulin resistance, prediabetes, type 2 diabetes, stress hormone effects, certain medications, endocrine conditions, or an incomplete fast.
Insulin resistance means cells respond less effectively to insulin. The pancreas may compensate for a time by producing more insulin. Over time, fasting glucose can rise if that compensation is not enough. If this concept is new, the Insulin Resistance and Weight Gain article explains the connection in plain language.
Higher fasting glucose can also appear alongside abdominal weight gain, high triglycerides, low HDL cholesterol, or elevated blood pressure. This cluster is often discussed under Metabolic Syndrome, which can increase cardiovascular and diabetes risk.
Why it matters: A high result is a prompt for follow-up, not a reason to self-diagnose.
When fasting glucose is low
Low fasting glucose can occur if you fast longer than intended, drink alcohol, eat less than usual, exercise heavily, or use glucose-lowering medicines. Symptoms can include shakiness, sweating, hunger, weakness, confusion, blurred vision, or a racing heartbeat.
Seek urgent help if low blood sugar symptoms are severe, if confusion or loss of consciousness occurs, or if symptoms do not improve with appropriate treatment already prescribed for you. People using insulin or medicines that can cause hypoglycemia should ask their care team how to prepare for fasting labs.
When symptoms change the urgency
High blood sugar symptoms can include unusual thirst, frequent urination, fatigue, blurred vision, nausea, or unexplained weight loss. Urgent care is important if high glucose symptoms are severe, if vomiting occurs, or if there are signs of dehydration or altered mental status.
Symptoms matter because some diagnostic pathways use both glucose level and symptoms. A random glucose result may be interpreted differently when classic symptoms are present, while fasting values are judged against fasting-specific thresholds.
How This Test Compares With Other Glucose Tests
The Fasting Plasma Glucose Test is useful because it is quick, widely available, and easy to repeat. It does not show your usual blood sugar over several months, and it may miss some people whose glucose rises mainly after meals.
An A1C test estimates average blood sugar exposure over roughly the past 2 to 3 months. It does not require fasting. However, anemia, some hemoglobin variants, recent blood loss, kidney disease, or pregnancy can affect accuracy for some people.
An oral glucose tolerance test checks how your body handles a measured glucose drink after fasting. It takes longer than a fasting blood draw. It is often used in pregnancy screening and can detect after-glucose abnormalities that a fasting test may not show.
A random blood sugar test can be done at any time of day. Because meals affect glucose, interpretation depends on timing, symptoms, and clinical context. A random result is not read the same way as a fasting result.
Home glucose meters and continuous glucose monitors can help some people track patterns, but they are not usually used alone to diagnose diabetes. Lab-based tests remain the standard for diagnosis and confirmation.
If your clinician is evaluating type 2 diabetes, you can browse related educational content in the Type 2 Diabetes Articles hub.
What to Discuss After Your Result
The next step depends on the actual number, your symptoms, and your risk factors. If the result is near a cutoff, your clinician may repeat fasting glucose, order A1C, consider an oral glucose tolerance test, or review other metabolic markers.
Useful discussion points include whether the fast was complete, whether you were sick, whether any medicines could have affected the result, and whether pregnancy or recent weight change matters. Bring home glucose readings only if your clinician has asked you to monitor them.
For results in the prediabetes range, clinicians may discuss nutrition quality, physical activity, sleep, weight management, and cardiovascular risk factors. Lifestyle steps should be individualized, especially if you have kidney disease, pregnancy, eating disorder history, gastroparesis, repeated hypoglycemia, or complex medication needs.
The Improving Insulin Sensitivity resource reviews general lifestyle concepts that may come up after abnormal screening. It should not replace a personalized care plan.
If medication is discussed, the right choice depends on diagnosis, other conditions, preferences, tolerability, and safety considerations. For example, our Metformin Comprehensive Guide provides background on one commonly discussed diabetes medicine.
CanadianInsulin.com is a prescription referral platform, not a diagnostic testing service. Use your lab result conversation with a licensed clinician to decide what testing or treatment is appropriate.
Common Interpretation Pitfalls
Fasting glucose is easy to measure, so it can seem more definitive than it is. The number needs context before it can guide decisions.
- Comparing unlike tests: fasting, random, A1C, and after-meal values use different cutoffs.
- Ignoring the fast: coffee additives, juice, snacks, or gum with sugar can affect results.
- Overreacting to one result: repeat testing may be needed when symptoms are absent.
- Missing medication effects: steroids and some other medicines can raise glucose.
- Forgetting pregnancy: gestational diabetes testing follows different protocols and thresholds.
For a one-hour glucose screening test, follow the lab or obstetric care instructions. Do not intentionally load up on sugar or restrict carbohydrates unless your clinician specifically tells you to do so.
Authoritative Sources
The ranges and testing concepts above align with widely used clinical references. These sources can help you verify current diagnostic language.
- American Diabetes Association diagnostic testing guidance summarizes common diabetes tests and diagnostic thresholds.
- CDC diabetes testing ranges provides plain-language categories for fasting blood sugar.
- NIDDK diabetes tests and diagnosis explains fasting, A1C, random, and glucose tolerance testing.
Keep a copy of your lab report and ask how your result compares with prior values. Trends often help more than one isolated number.
This content is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice.



