Cloudy insulin is insulin that looks milky because it is a suspension, most often NPH or a premixed insulin containing NPH. The cloudy appearance matters because these products need gentle mixing before use, and some can be mixed with clear insulin only when your prescriber has specifically instructed it. Understanding what is cloudy insulin helps prevent wrong-product errors, contamination between vials, and avoidable glucose swings.
Most clear insulin products should stay clear. If a clear insulin looks cloudy, has particles, or changes color, do not use it until a pharmacist or healthcare professional checks it. If a cloudy insulin has clumps, strings, frost, or sediment that will not disperse after gentle rolling, it may be unsafe to inject.
Key Takeaways
- Cloudy usually means NPH or premixed insulin.
- Regular insulin is clear, not cloudy.
- Use clear-before-cloudy when mixing NPH and regular insulin.
- Do not mix long-acting analogs unless the label and prescriber allow it.
- Roll cloudy insulin gently; do not shake it hard.
What Cloudiness Means in Insulin
Cloudiness usually means the insulin contains particles suspended in liquid. NPH insulin, also called isophane insulin, includes protamine, a protein that slows absorption after injection. Because the insulin is not fully dissolved, the vial or cartridge can look cloudy, milky, or hazy.
This is different from a spoiled clear insulin. A suspension is expected to look uniformly milky after gentle mixing. A clear insulin should remain transparent. If you are asking what insulin is cloudy, the common answer is NPH and many premixed products, such as 30/70 or 70/30 combinations.
NPH is an intermediate-acting insulin. It is often used for background insulin coverage, depending on the person’s treatment plan. For broader context on onset, peak, and duration, see Intermediate-Acting Insulin.
Premixed insulin combines two components in a fixed ratio. These products may reduce the number of separate injections for some people, but they also give less flexibility than separate vials. For more context on fixed-ratio products, see Premixed Insulin.
Why it matters: Appearance checks help catch product mix-ups before an injection.
Clear or Cloudy: Common Types With Examples
The easiest first check is the label, not the appearance alone. Similar vials can look alike, and some brand names are easy to confuse. Still, appearance gives an important safety cue before each dose.
| Insulin group | Usual appearance | Common examples | Mixing note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rapid-acting analogs | Clear | Lispro, aspart, glulisine | Some may be mixed with NPH only if prescribed and label-supported |
| Short-acting regular insulin | Clear | Regular human insulin | Often the clear insulin used in NPH mixing instructions |
| Intermediate-acting insulin | Cloudy | NPH or isophane insulin | Roll gently before drawing up or injecting |
| Premixed insulin | Usually cloudy | 30/70, 70/30, and similar mixes | Do not change the ratio yourself |
| Long-acting analogs | Usually clear | Glargine, detemir, degludec | Do not mix with other insulins unless the specific label says otherwise |
People often ask whether regular insulin is clear or cloudy. Regular insulin is clear. NPH is cloudy. If both are prescribed in one syringe, the usual teaching is to draw up the clear regular insulin before the cloudy NPH insulin.
Long-acting insulin is usually clear, but clear does not mean mixable. Some long-acting analogs depend on their formulation to work predictably. Mixing or diluting them can change how they behave after injection. Always follow the current product label and your prescriber’s instructions.
Mixing NPH and Regular Insulin Safely
The mixing order matters because cloudy insulin can contaminate the clear vial. The common rule is clear before cloudy. In practice, that usually means regular insulin first, then NPH insulin, when both are prescribed for the same syringe.
Before mixing, confirm the exact insulin names, doses, syringe markings, and timing. Do not combine insulins unless your healthcare professional has instructed you to do so. Pens, premixed products, and concentrated insulins may have different rules.
- Wash your hands and gather the supplies.
- Check both labels and expiration dates.
- Roll the NPH vial gently until uniformly milky.
- Clean both rubber stoppers and let them dry.
- Inject air into the NPH vial, but do not draw insulin yet.
- Inject air into the regular insulin vial.
- Invert the regular vial and draw up the clear dose.
- Move to the NPH vial and draw up the cloudy dose.
- Check the final syringe volume and look for large bubbles.
This sequence is often taught as “clear to cloudy.” Another memory aid is “R before N,” meaning regular before NPH. The goal is to keep NPH particles out of the regular insulin vial.
If you draw too much NPH after the regular insulin is already in the syringe, do not push the mixture back into either vial. Ask your pharmacist, diabetes educator, or prescriber how to handle that situation safely. Product waste is frustrating, but vial contamination can affect future doses.
Some people compare NPH brands when reviewing their regimen. For a neutral discussion of product differences, see Novolin N vs Humulin N.
Can NPH Be Mixed With Lispro or Other Rapid Insulins?
NPH may be mixed with certain rapid-acting insulins in some prescribed regimens, but the answer depends on the specific product label and clinical plan. Do not assume that any clear insulin can be mixed with NPH. Compatibility, timing, and injection technique all matter.
Rapid-acting analogs are clear solutions. They are designed to absorb faster than regular insulin. Some instructions allow immediate mixing with NPH when directed, while other products or devices may have restrictions. Your care team should give product-specific instructions if they want you to mix these insulins.
Long-acting analogs are different. Insulins such as glargine and degludec are generally not mixed with other insulins. Their labels warn against mixing or diluting because it may change the expected action. If your regimen includes a basal analog and mealtime insulin, they are usually given as separate injections.
Quick tip: If the label says not to mix, treat that as a safety rule.
Rolling, Storage, and When Not to Use It
Cloudy insulin should be gently resuspended before each dose. Rolling the vial or pen between your palms helps distribute the particles evenly. Do not shake it hard, because shaking can create bubbles or foam and may make accurate dosing harder.
Ask your pharmacist to demonstrate the technique if you are unsure. Some pen products require rolling and tipping several times before priming. Vials are usually rolled gently until the liquid looks evenly milky. Follow the instructions that come with your exact insulin.
Do not use insulin if the appearance does not match the label instructions. For NPH or premixed insulin, watch for clumps that remain after rolling, white material stuck to the glass, strings, crystals, or unusual discoloration. For clear insulin, cloudiness, floating particles, or color change are warning signs.
Temperature is another safety issue. Insulin can lose potency if it freezes, overheats, or sits outside labeled storage limits. Unopened products are commonly refrigerated, while many in-use products can be kept at room temperature for a limited period. The exact window varies by product, so check your package insert.
For practical storage cues across insulin products, see Insulin Storage 101. If storage conditions were uncertain, ask a pharmacist before using the insulin.
Practical Safety Checks Before Each Dose
A short routine can prevent many common insulin errors. This is especially useful when you use more than one vial, share refrigerator space, travel, or rely on a caregiver for injections.
- Read the label: Confirm the insulin name every time.
- Check the appearance: Clear stays clear; cloudy becomes evenly milky.
- Confirm the device: Match vial, pen, cartridge, or syringe instructions.
- Use the right order: Draw clear before cloudy when mixing is prescribed.
- Avoid guessing: Ask before mixing unfamiliar insulin types.
- Track opening dates: Follow the in-use storage limit on the label.
Caregivers should use the same routine. If two people prepare insulin, agree on one checklist and keep it with the supplies. That reduces confusion when schedules change.
If you use specific NPH or premixed vial products, product pages can help you identify forms and names. Examples include Novolin GE NPH Vials, Humulin N Vials, and Novolin GE 30/70 Vials. Use product pages for identification support, not as a substitute for your prescription label.
What to Ask Your Healthcare Team
Insulin instructions should be personal to your prescription, meal pattern, blood glucose targets, and risk of hypoglycemia. If you are unsure about what is cloudy insulin in your current supplies, bring the vial, pen, or cartridge to your pharmacist or diabetes educator.
Useful questions include whether your insulins can be mixed, which one goes into the syringe first, how soon the injection should be given after mixing, and what to do if you see bubbles or draw up too much. Ask whether your insulin should be rolled, tipped, primed, or discarded after a certain number of days.
Seek urgent medical help if you have severe low blood glucose symptoms, confusion, fainting, seizure, or inability to keep carbohydrates down. If you repeatedly see unexplained highs or lows after opening a new vial, stop and ask for clinical guidance before changing doses on your own.
CanadianInsulin.com is a prescription referral platform, and prescription details may be confirmed with the prescriber where required. Dispensing and fulfilment are handled by licensed third-party pharmacies where permitted, which is separate from this educational information.
Authoritative Sources
The official Humulin R prescribing information describes drawing regular insulin first when mixing is directed.
The official Humulin N instructions for use explain resuspension and visual checks before injection.
The official Lantus prescribing information states that this insulin should not be mixed or diluted.
Recap
Cloudy insulin is usually NPH or a premixed insulin that contains a suspended component. It should look evenly milky after gentle rolling. Regular insulin, rapid-acting analogs, and many long-acting analogs are clear, although clear products have different mixing rules.
When NPH and regular insulin are prescribed together in one syringe, the usual order is clear before cloudy. Do not mix long-acting analogs or unfamiliar insulin types unless the current label and your prescriber support it. When in doubt, pause, check the label, and ask a qualified healthcare professional.
This content is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice.


