POST-SLEEVE RECOVERY
Gastric Sleeve Surgery Recovery: What to Expect and How Long It Takes
A realistic week-by-week guide to recovery — from the first 24 hours through return to normal life at 6 weeks. No sugar-coating, no scare tactics.
By Dr. Alejandro López Ortega · Bariatric & Metabolic Surgeon · ALO Bariatrics
The Short Version
Hospital stay 1-2 nights. Liquids only weeks 1-2, puréed weeks 3-4, soft weeks 5-6, full diet at week 6-8. Office work return at 1-2 weeks, physical work at 4-6. Most patients feel “back to normal” energy-wise by week 4-6. Pain peaks day 2-3, drops significantly after day 5. Driving at 7-10 days off opioids.
Recovery from gastric sleeve is faster than most people expect — it is a laparoscopic procedure with small incisions and short hospital stay. But “fast recovery” does not mean “back to your old life in a week”. Every stage has rules that protect the staple line. Patients who follow them recover smoothly. Patients who skip steps run into setbacks.
Surgery day to day 7
Day of surgery: 90-120 minute laparoscopic procedure, you wake in recovery, get up to walk within 6 hours. Walking prevents blood clots and speeds gas resolution. Day 1-2: hospital stay, IV fluids, sips of clear liquids, walking every 2 hours. Day 3-7: discharge, clear liquids advancing to full liquids, walk 4-6 times daily, manage incision care. Pain peaks day 2-3 (mostly shoulder pain from CO2 gas, not incision pain). By day 5-7 most patients are off opioid pain medication.
Six things to expect during recovery
1 OF 6
Shoulder/back pain from gas — normal
CO2 used during laparoscopy travels and refers pain to shoulders for 2-4 days. Walking, heat packs, and a mild gas-relief medication (simethicone) help. Not a complication.
2 OF 6
Fatigue is intense weeks 1-3
Your body is healing on 400-600 kcal/day. Plan for naps. Energy returns dramatically week 3-4 as protein intake stabilizes and inflammation resolves.
3 OF 6
Nausea is common — and manageable
Smaller sips, anti-nausea medications (ondansetron) for the first week, ginger tea. Persistent vomiting past day 3 = call us, not normal.
4 OF 6
Bowel changes are universal
Constipation week 1-2 (from opioids + low fiber), then loose stools as diet advances. Stool softener for week 1-2, hydration always. Resolves by week 4.
5 OF 6
Emotional ups and downs are real
Anesthesia, hormones, blood sugar shifts, food coping unavailable — many patients feel weepy or low at week 2-3. Resolves by week 4-6. If persistent, mental health support helps.
6 OF 6
Diet stages are non-negotiable
Liquids → purée → soft → full progression is set by tissue healing speed, not personal pace. Skipping ahead risks leak, stricture, or stretched sleeve.
Pin this
Walk every 2 hours, sip continuously, follow your stage diet, take vitamins from day 14, sleep when tired. Those five rules cover 90% of a smooth recovery.
Week-by-week recovery timeline
Week 1: clear liquids, walking, pain medication tapering. Energy low. Week 2: full liquids (protein shakes, broth, sugar-free yogurt). Pain mostly resolved. Office work possible from home. Week 3-4: purée stage — Greek yogurt, blended chicken, mashed avocado. Energy returning. Office work in person OK. Week 5-6: soft food — eggs, fish, ground turkey, cottage cheese. Light exercise approved. Week 6-8: full diet — solid proteins, vegetables, fruit, small grains. Full exercise approved. Return to physical work. Month 3: daily routine fully back to normal. Weight loss is rapid.
Warning signs — call us same day
Same-day call: fever over 101°F (38.3°C), severe abdominal pain not relieved by medication, persistent vomiting (more than 24 hours), heart rate over 120 at rest, shortness of breath, calf pain or swelling, no urine for 8+ hours, dark or bloody stool, drainage from incisions, opening of incision. These are not “wait and see” symptoms. Bariatric complications respond best to early intervention — call us first, ER second.
Considering gastric sleeve?
We offer a free pre-op consultation to walk through your specific recovery timeline, hospital experience, and what to plan at home. Honest answers, no pressure.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long is the hospital stay?
Typically 1-2 nights at ALO. Some patients with comorbidities or anesthesia complexity stay 2-3. Discharge criteria: tolerating liquids, walking independently, pain controlled, no fever, normal vital signs.
When can I drive after sleeve surgery?
7-10 days for most patients, off opioids and able to twist comfortably to check blind spots. Sooner if you discontinued opioids early and feel safe to react in traffic.
When can I exercise?
Walking from day 1. Light cardio (stationary bike, easy treadmill) week 3-4. Strength training week 6 with light weights. Full lifting and high-intensity from week 8. No core work until week 6.
When can I shower?
Day 2 with the incisions covered by waterproof dressings. From day 5-7 directly on incisions allowed. No tub, pool, or ocean for 3 weeks.
Will I feel hungry during recovery?
Hunger is dramatically reduced for most patients in the first 3 months. Ghrelin (the hunger hormone) is largely removed with the sleeve. If you feel “hungry” early, it is often thirst or boredom — not biological hunger.
How much weight will I lose in the first month?
Average 15-25 lbs in the first month. Rapid early loss is mostly water plus fat. Slows to 1-2 lbs/week by month 2-3. Total loss at 12 months: 60-70% of excess weight typically.
When can I travel after surgery?
Short flights (2-3 hours) at week 2 with surgeon clearance. Long international flights at week 3-4. Walking on planes every hour prevents blood clots. Travel insurance with medical coverage recommended.
Bottom line
Gastric sleeve recovery is well-defined, fast for a major surgery, and very predictable when patients follow the stage rules. Most patients are back to office work in 1-2 weeks, full daily life by week 6, and feel transformatively better by month 3. The patients who run into trouble usually skipped a stage, ignored a symptom, or stopped follow-up. The protocol works — follow it.