Tonight, ask yourself: are you already running a calorie deficit and resistance-training programme? If yes, add cayenne or another chili to one meal a day and see if you tolerate it. If no, save your money — capsaicin can't replace the foundations.
Your body has a thermostat that fights every attempt to burn extra calories. Capsaicin nudges that thermostat up by about 50 calories a day, briefly, and then your body quietly compensates by moving less in other ways. What survives at the population level is small: roughly a quarter of a BMI point over months.
That's the general answer. Your stack is different.
Check your whole stackThe active compound in chili peppers. Real thermogenic effect. About a quarter of a BMI point in overweight adults over months. Not the marketing.
Tonight, ask yourself: are you already running a calorie deficit and resistance-training programme? If yes, add cayenne or another chili to one meal and see if you tolerate it. If no, save your money.
Capsaicin can't replace the foundations. It's a small adjunct on top of a working programme, not a substitute for one.
Takes less than 2 minutes. No equipment needed.
The Verdict
Capsaicin produces a small thermogenic effect that translates to about a quarter of a BMI point in overweight adults. Not a transformation.
Capsaicin is the active compound in chili peppers. It binds the same heat-detecting channel that fires when you touch a hot stove, and that brief signal nudges your metabolism up by about 50 calories a day. But your body has a thermostat that fights back. It quietly compensates by moving less in other ways, so what survives at the population level is small: roughly a quarter of a BMI point over a few months.
Adults BMI 25–35 already in a calorie deficit and training programme who want a small adjunct.
Active GERD, peptic ulcer, or IBD flare; pregnant or lactating; expecting transformation; tempted by premium nano-formulations.
Want the full evidence? Keep scrolling
| Population | Dose | Timing | Form |
|---|---|---|---|
| General adult, weight-management adjunct | 2–6 mg/day capsaicinoid total, 2–3 mg per main meal | With food | Standardised capsaicinoid capsule or dietary chili pepper |
| GI-sensitive subject (BAT-activation pathway) | 6–9 mg/day capsiate | With food | Capsinoid (capsiate, dihydrocapsiate) |
| Overweight-obese cardiovascular-risk-factor population | Pooled trials varied; high heterogeneity | With food | Variable |
| Athletes | Not recommended as standalone | — | — |
| Older adults (50+) | Same as general adult, with caution for ACE-inhibitor cough overlap | With food | Dietary chili pepper preferred |
Take capsaicin with food. Empty-stomach administration is dose-limiting for GI distress. Co-ingestion with fat increases absorption. Avoid stacking with other sympathetic-nervous-system stimulants (caffeine, synephrine, yohimbine) at upper-dose ranges. The constrained-energy ceiling caps any additive benefit; the cardiovascular sympathetic load adds without payoff.
Cardiovascular sympathetic load compounds without additive body-composition benefit beyond the class-level constrained-energy ceiling. Avoid stacking at upper-dose ranges.
Capsaicin-induced cough may compound ACE-inhibitor cough. Theoretical sympathetic interaction at high acute doses. Dietary route preferred over isolated supplement.
Theoretical platelet-effect modulation. Clinical magnitude unverified. Discuss with prescriber before chronic supplementation.
Theoretical TRPV1 desensitisation overlap. Avoid concurrent oral high-dose with topical Qutenza.
Common at supplement doses: epigastric burning, dyspepsia, increased gastric acid secretion. Always with food, titrate to tolerance. TRPV1 desensitisation (the burn fading with chronic use) is plausibly a warning that metabolic tolerance is also developing.
No formal Tolerable Upper Intake Level has been established by EFSA, NIH/ODS, or WHO for isolated capsaicin supplements. The dose-limiting factor in human trials is GI tolerance, not toxicity.
Acute thermogenesis MODERATE. Acute satiety MODERATE. BAT activation biomarker MODERATE. Chronic BMI in overweight adults LOW–MODERATE. Cardiometabolic LOW–MODERATE direction-only. Long-term body composition in healthy adults LOW. Cardiovascular hard outcomes NONE. Premium nano outcome superiority NONE.
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