What A1C Actually Measures
Haemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) measures the percentage of your red blood cells that have glucose stuck to them. Because red blood cells live about 90–120 days, your A1C is essentially a rolling 3-month average of your blood sugar. You can't fake it with one healthy week — it reflects the long game.
The Numbers: Three Ranges That Matter
- < 5.7% — Normal.
- 5.7% – 6.4% — Prediabetes. This is the critical window where reversal is most achievable. More than 80% of people in this range will progress to type 2 within 10 years if they don't act.
- ≥ 6.5% — Diabetes (on two separate tests). The ADA 2026 standard.
Less discussed but important: 6.5–7.5% is the 'early diabetes' window where most damage can still be prevented or even reversed with aggressive intervention. Above 8.0%, complications accumulate measurably.
What a 1% Drop Actually Buys You
This is the most under-communicated fact in diabetes care: dropping your A1C by just 1% reduces your risk of diabetes-related death by 21% (UKPDS study, the largest and longest diabetes trial ever conducted). Other findings from the same 20-year dataset:
- 14% fewer heart attacks
- 37% fewer microvascular complications (kidney, eye, nerve damage)
- 43% fewer amputations
The inverse is also true: a 1% rise is roughly 21% more dying. This is why the 'close enough' attitude to diabetes control is dangerous.
The Average-Glucose Conversion
A1C maps roughly to average daily glucose as follows:
| A1C | Average glucose (mg/dL) |
|---|---|
| 6% | 126 |
| 7% | 154 |
| 8% | 183 |
| 9% | 212 |
| 10% | 240 |
If your A1c is 8% but your fasting readings are always 110, your post-meal spikes are almost certainly the culprit. This is why measuring post-meal matters.
Things That Falsely Skew A1C
A1C isn't infallible. These conditions can push it artificially high or low:
- Anaemia / recent blood loss — lowers A1C (fewer red cells)
- Pregnancy — rapidly changing red cell turnover
- Chronic kidney disease — lowers A1C
- Recent transfusion — new cells mask your old average
- Some haemoglobin variants — common in South Asian, African populations
If your A1C doesn't match how you feel or what your glucometer shows, ask your doctor about a fructosamine test as a cross-check.
How Often Should You Test?
- Not yet diagnosed, at risk — every 3 years if under 45, yearly if 45+ or obese
- Prediabetic — every 6 months
- Diabetic, stable A1C under 7% — every 6 months
- Diabetic, A1C above 7% or recently changed medication — every 3 months
The Most Common Misread: 'My A1C Is Fine'
An A1C of 5.8% is technically 'prediabetic' but many people hear 'fine' because the doctor says 'keep doing what you're doing.' In fact, 5.8% represents about 114 mg/dL average — your body is already in metabolic trouble, it just hasn't progressed. This window is the best time to intervene because insulin sensitivity can still be fully restored.
The JForH Approach: Close the Loop
An A1C every 3 months tells you if you're winning or losing. It doesn't tell you what to change. That's why we pair A1C tracking with daily glucose readings and meal data. Our 365-day Diabetes Programme includes quarterly 70+ parameter blood and urine workups so you see which specific drivers (fasting, post-meal, insulin resistance, triglycerides) are bending your A1C.
Bottom Line
A1C is the most important single number in diabetes care — and the most under-interpreted. Get it every 3 months. Understand what it maps to in daily glucose. Know that each 1% drop saves lives literally. And don't let 'prediabetes' be translated to 'fine.'