Insulin Clinics / Starting and managing
Storage, handling, and travel
Insulin is stable when handled as designed and ruined more easily than people think. Heat is worse than mild cold. Always check the package insert for your specific product.
Medically reviewed by [Name, MD] · Last reviewed: [Month YYYY]
Unopened insulin: refrigerate
Unopened vials, pens, and cartridges should be kept in the refrigerator between 36°F and 46°F (2°C and 8°C) until the expiration date printed on the package. Store them in the main body of the fridge, not in the door (which warms with each opening) and not against the back wall (which can freeze).
Frozen insulin is ruined and cannot be saved by thawing. If you find a vial or pen with ice crystals or that has been in a freezer compartment, discard it.
In-use insulin: room temperature
Once a vial or pen is in active use, it is generally kept at room temperature, below 86°F (30°C), and away from direct sunlight or heat sources. Cold injections sting more and can absorb slightly differently, so most people simply keep the in-use pen on a counter or in a pocket.
The "in-use" period — how long an opened or unrefrigerated insulin remains usable — depends on the specific product. The numbers below are typical, but you should always confirm with the package insert. Manufacturers update these limits over time, and they are not all the same.
| Insulin (typical examples) | In-use period at room temp |
|---|---|
| Most rapid-acting analogs (lispro, aspart, glulisine) | ~28 days |
| Faster aspart (Fiasp), lispro-aabc (Lyumjev) | ~28 days |
| Regular human insulin (Humulin R, Novolin R) | ~28–31 days, varies |
| NPH (Humulin N, Novolin N) | ~14–31 days, varies |
| Glargine U-100 (Lantus, Basaglar, Semglee) | ~28 days |
| Glargine U-300 (Toujeo) | ~56 days |
| Detemir (Levemir) | ~42 days |
| Degludec (Tresiba) | ~56 days |
| Premixed insulins | ~10–28 days, depending on product |
A simple practice: write the date you started the pen or vial on the label. When the in-use period ends, throw it out even if there is insulin left. Insulin past its in-use date does not always look or smell different — it just works less well, and it can produce unexplained high readings.
Heat, cold, and direct sunlight
Insulin is a protein. Like other proteins (think of an egg white), heat changes its structure and breaks its function — but unlike a fried egg, you cannot see the change. Once damaged by heat, insulin is permanently weaker.
- Above 86°F (30°C) — degradation accelerates. A car dashboard in the sun can hit 140°F (60°C) in summer; an unattended car interior, a beach bag, or a closed mailbox in summer can all cook insulin in a single afternoon.
- Below 32°F (0°C) — freezing destroys insulin. A backpack on a winter ski lift, a checked airline bag at altitude, or a window sill in a sub-freezing room can freeze it.
- Direct sunlight — UV light damages insulin even when temperatures are mild. Keep pens and vials in their boxes or in a closed bag.
Carrying insulin in heat
For day-to-day use in warm weather, an insulated pouch or a Frio (an evaporative-cooling wallet that keeps contents below 79°F for around 45 hours when soaked) is widely used. For longer trips, a small soft-sided cooler with a freezer pack works — but the freezer pack must be wrapped in cloth so the insulin never touches it directly. Insulin frozen against an ice pack is ruined.
Carrying insulin in cold
Keep insulin close to your body in cold weather, ideally in an inside pocket. If you are skiing, hiking, or otherwise outside in freezing temperatures for hours, do not leave a pen in a backpack pocket where it can freeze.
Signs insulin has gone bad
Most damaged insulin still looks normal. Some changes are visible, however, and any of these means the product should be replaced:
- Clumps, particles, or floating threads in clear insulins (rapid, short, glargine, degludec, detemir).
- "Frosting" on the inside of the cartridge or vial — a white film that does not redissolve when rolled.
- Color changes — clear insulin that has turned yellow or brown.
- Cloudy insulin (NPH, premixes) that does not become uniformly cloudy after gentle rolling. Clumps that stay clumped, or a layer that will not mix back in, mean it is no longer good.
- Crystals in any insulin.
If your blood sugar is unusually high for several days and you cannot find a behavioral or dose explanation, suspect the insulin — open a new vial or pen and see if readings improve.
Flying with insulin (U.S. TSA rules)
Insulin is exempt from the standard 3.4 oz / 100 mL liquid rule for carry-on items. Practical points:
- Always carry insulin in your hand luggage, never in checked bags. Cargo holds are not climate-controlled and routinely freeze.
- Bring more than you think you need. A common rule of thumb is double the amount needed for the trip, in case of delays, breakage, or theft.
- Keep insulin in its original pharmacy-labeled box when possible. The label matters more than the prescription paper.
- Declare insulin and supplies at security if asked, including pens, vials, syringes, lancets, CGM sensors, and sharps containers.
- You can request hand-inspection rather than X-ray for insulin and CGMs. CGM transmitters and pump devices generally tolerate airport metal detectors and X-ray scanners; manufacturers' guidance varies on the millimeter-wave full-body scanners. When in doubt, ask for a pat-down.
- A doctor's letter is not required by TSA but can save time at international borders. Many clinics will provide one on request.
- Glucose tablets, juice boxes, and snacks for treating lows are also generally allowed in carry-on without size limits. Mention them at security.
For international travel, check the destination country's rules; some require a letter from your prescriber. The U.S. State Department has guidance for traveling with medications by country.
Time zone changes
Crossing several time zones changes when your basal insulin is "due." A few practical principles:
- For short trips (under 3 time zones, under a few days), most people stay on home time. The body usually tolerates a basal dose given 2–3 hours earlier or later than usual.
- For longer trips eastbound, the day shrinks. A once-daily basal that would normally come 24 hours after the previous dose may need to be given a few hours later than the local time you usually take it, or temporarily reduced for a day.
- For longer trips westbound, the day lengthens. Some people add a small extra dose during the longer travel day; others adjust by shifting the timing forward over several days.
- Mealtime insulin simply follows your meals on the new schedule.
- Pumps simplify time zone changes — the pump's clock is the only thing to adjust, and the basal pattern moves with it. Most clinicians recommend adjusting the pump clock on arrival, not gradually.
For trips of more than 3 time zones, ask your care team for a written plan tailored to your specific basal insulin and your itinerary. The plan does not have to be complicated, but it should be made before you leave.
Power outages and disasters
If a power outage warms your fridge, unopened insulin in the fridge is generally still usable as long as it has not been above 86°F for an extended period — at that point it is essentially "in use" and can be moved into the in-use period (typically 28 days). When in doubt, the FDA's guidance is to use it for short-term needs but replace it as soon as possible.
Frozen insulin should be discarded, even if it appears clear after thawing.
For wildfire, hurricane, or evacuation situations: keep a small "go bag" with at least a week of insulin, supplies, glucose tablets, a glucose meter, and a printed list of your medications. Insulin manufacturers operate emergency replacement programs — the page on cost and access covers the contact numbers.
Disposal
Used needles, pen needles, and syringes should always go into a hard-sided sharps container. Most pharmacies sell these. Many states and counties run free drop-off programs; some pharmacies and hospitals will accept full sharps containers. Never throw loose needles in regular trash or recycling.
Empty insulin pens can typically go in the trash, but local rules vary; check your municipal waste guidance.