Check your cinnamon jar. If it does not say "Ceylon" (or "Cinnamomum zeylanicum"), it is almost certainly cassia, the kind with about 250x more of a liver-stressing compound called coumarin. For any daily habit, switch to Ceylon or an aqueous extract. Same flavor, the only real risk removed.
That's the general answer. Your stack is different.
Check your whole stackCeylon vs Cassia — blood sugar, and the coumarin safety twist
ConditionalCheck your cinnamon jar. If it doesn't say "Ceylon" (or "Cinnamomum zeylanicum"), it's almost certainly cassia — the kind with about 250 times more of a liver-stressing compound called coumarin. For any daily habit, switch to Ceylon or an aqueous extract.
Both kinds carry the same active compounds, so you keep the (modest) benefit and drop the only real risk. Same flavor, safer jar.
Takes 30 seconds. Just read the label.
The Verdict
Cinnamon nudges blood sugar down in diabetics, but it's not a treatment, and most people buy the riskier kind.
Cinnamon is the dried inner bark of the Cinnamomum tree. There are two common types: cheap "cassia" (what's in most jars and capsules) and "Ceylon," the true cinnamon. People take it hoping to lower blood sugar, cholesterol, and weight.
Think of cinnamon like a gentle helper that nudges glucose out of your blood and into your cells, mostly by helping insulin do its job and slowing how fast a meal hits your bloodstream. The catch: if your blood sugar is already normal, there's nothing for it to nudge. And the cheap version hides a liver-stressing passenger called coumarin that the expensive version barely carries.
Adults with type 2 diabetes, prediabetes, PCOS, or metabolic syndrome who want a low-risk add-on alongside real treatment.
You have normal blood sugar, or you're hoping to cut back or replace diabetes medication.
Want the full evidence? Keep scrolling
What to take, how much, and which kind. Nothing here matters as much as the species choice: Ceylon or an aqueous extract over cheap cassia.
| Who | Dose | Timing | Form |
|---|---|---|---|
| Type 2 diabetes / metabolic disease (add-on) | 1–6 g/day powder, or 120 mg–1 g extract | With meals | Ceylon or aqueous extract |
| PCOS (add-on) | ~1.5 g/day (trial range) | With meals | Ceylon |
| Mild high blood pressure (add-on) | ≤2 g/day (bigger effect at lower dose) | Daily | Ceylon |
| Healthy / normal blood sugar | No effective dose — culinary amounts only | — | Ceylon (cooking) |
Coumarin is a liver-stressing compound. Europe's food safety authority sets a safe daily intake around 7 mg for a 70 kg adult. One teaspoon of cassia (about 2–3 g) can supply 7–18 mg, so supplement-range cassia can pass that limit on its own. Ceylon barely has any.
Cinnamon can add to their glucose-lowering effect. If you stack them, watch for low blood sugar and tell your doctor.
Avoid high-dose, daily cassia — the coumarin adds to the liver burden.
Cinnamon's coumarin is not the blood-thinning kind. A Phase I trial of Ceylon found no blood-thinning effect. For Ceylon, this interaction is largely a myth.
Coumarin safe daily intake: ~0.1 mg per kg of body weight (~7 mg for a 70 kg adult).
This is a cassia problem, not a cinnamon problem. Choose Ceylon and it effectively disappears.
The glucose effect is real in direction but small, heterogeneous, surrogate-only, and unendorsed by the strictest review. The safety distinction (cassia coumarin) is the one thing here we hold with high confidence.
Go Deeper
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Cinnamon rides the same wave as berberine and apple cider vinegar — the spice-rack version of "Ozempic in a jar." Social media pushes it for weight loss and "balancing blood sugar" even in healthy people who have no blood-sugar problem to begin with. There's also a quieter, more sophisticated claim with real substance: that Ceylon ("true") cinnamon is meaningfully different from the cassia most people buy. That one is true, but for the opposite reason most people think. The difference that matters isn't efficacy. It's safety.
| Claim | Evidence | What the data shows |
|---|---|---|
| Lowers fasting glucose in T2D | MODERATE | Real but modest and heterogeneous (Zhou 2024, 24 RCTs; Allen 2013, FPG −24.59 mg/dL). Surrogate only. |
| Treats diabetes / replaces meds | DEBUNKED | Cochrane 2012 (n=577): insufficient evidence. No guideline endorses it. |
| Improves insulin resistance in PCOS | MODERATE | Consistent metabolic signal, small trials (Heydarpour 2020). |
| Lowers blood pressure | MOD–LOW | SBP −6.23 / DBP −3.93 mmHg, larger at ≤2 g (Hadi 2020, n=641). |
| Eases period pain | MOD–LOW | Pain reduction vs placebo (Niazi 2020, n=647). |
| Lowers LDL/HDL in general adults | LOW / NULL | No significant effect (Maierean 2017, n=750). Only triglycerides move, mainly in T2D. |
| Burns fat / weight loss | LOW | ~1 kg pooled — clinically trivial (Jamali 2020, n=786). |
| Helps healthy people "balance blood sugar" | LOW | Nothing to move in normal glucose. Debunked by absence. |
Cinnamon's active compounds are water-soluble polyphenols, mainly type-A procyanidins and cinnamaldehyde. In lab and human studies they appear to help insulin do its job (better glucose uptake into muscle and fat cells) and to slow how fast the stomach empties, which softens the spike after a meal. Both Ceylon and cassia carry these actives, so efficacy is roughly a wash between species. The honest version: the human effect is genuine in direction but small, and it only shows up clearly when there's elevated glucose to bring down.
The Ceylon-versus-cassia story is about a contaminant, not the active. Cassia (cheap "baker's" cinnamon) is loaded with coumarin, which is toxic to the liver in susceptible people at high chronic doses. Ceylon ("true" cinnamon) has almost none. So the species you choose changes your risk, not your benefit. One useful trick: an aqueous (water) extract pulls out the polyphenols while leaving most of the fat-soluble coumarin behind.
Lab studies name the cinnamon. Real jars usually just say "cinnamon" (it's usually cassia) and the buyer can't tell. The efficacy evidence and the safety evidence are stuck to different products on the same shelf.
The tidy pooled numbers come from many small, mostly non-Western trials with enormous variation. Trust the direction, not the magnitude.
Benefits are blood markers (glucose, HbA1c), not hard outcomes. No trial shows cinnamon reduces diabetic complications or heart events. A moved biomarker is not a treatment.
Who benefits most: adults with type 2 diabetes, prediabetes, or metabolic syndrome (MODERATE), women with PCOS-related insulin resistance (MODERATE), and people with mild high blood pressure as a minor add-on (MODERATE–LOW).
Food-first: if you want cinnamon, just cook with Ceylon. The supplement adds dose and cost, not magic. Your money does more on diet, training, and prescribed treatment.
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