Tonight, look at the back of your pre-workout. If it says "citrulline malate" at under 8g — or "L-citrulline" at under 6g — you're below the therapeutic dose. Either take more of it separately, or switch to bulk L-citrulline powder (£8-15/month).
Your body makes nitric oxide from arginine — it's the signal that tells your blood vessels to relax and let more blood through. The problem with taking arginine as a supplement is that your liver destroys about 70% of it before it ever reaches your blood. Citrulline is arginine's backdoor: it slips through the liver undetected, gets converted to arginine by your kidneys, and arrives fully intact. It's like sending a package via a courier the sorting office doesn't inspect.
That's the general answer. Your stack is different.
Check your whole stackSupplement Engine — Performance / Cardiovascular
L-Citrulline & Citrulline Malate — Evidence Review
Conditional MODERATE ConvictionTonight, flip your pre-workout label. If it says "citrulline malate" under 8g — or "L-citrulline" under 6g — you're below the therapeutic dose.
Most commercial pre-workouts use 2-4g of citrulline malate (often 1:1), delivering less than 2g of active ingredient. Minimum effective dose is 6g pure L-citrulline or 8g CM 2:1.
Takes 30 seconds. Possible outcome: stop wasting money on underdosed products.
The Verdict
Citrulline genuinely improves pump and blood pressure — but most pre-workouts underdose it by 3-4x.
Your body makes nitric oxide from arginine — it's the signal that tells your blood vessels to relax and let more blood through. The problem with taking arginine as a supplement is that your liver destroys about 70% of it before it ever reaches your blood. Citrulline is arginine's backdoor: it slips through the liver undetected, gets converted to arginine by your kidneys, and arrives fully intact. It's like sending a package via a courier the post room doesn't inspect.
Want the full evidence? Keep scrolling
What People Claim
"Citrulline malate is the ultimate pump and performance ingredient — superior to arginine, proven to boost nitric oxide, reduce fatigue, and accelerate recovery."
Pre-workout brands pitch citrulline as a universal performance ingredient. The core claim is straightforward: take it before training, get more blood to your muscles, train harder, recover faster. Because the pump is a real, tangible sensation, the marketing writes itself.
A secondary claim positions "citrulline malate" specifically as a premium product — where the malate (malic acid) component independently fuels energy production via the body's aerobic energy cycle, compounding the effect of citrulline alone. Some brands claim this makes CM 2:1 fundamentally different from pure L-citrulline, justifying a premium price.
Cardiovascular claims have gained traction more recently: citrulline marketed as a natural antihypertensive for people with high blood pressure, particularly older adults and women after menopause.
What the Evidence Shows
| Claimed Benefit | Evidence | Key Finding | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|
| Blood flow / muscle pump | STRONG | Mechanistically irrefutable — hepatic arginase bypass confirmed in multiple human PK studies | Works |
| Blood pressure reduction | STRONG | SBP -3.7 to -9 mmHg in hypertensive/older adults (3 independent meta-analyses, N=734) | Works (specific populations) |
| Resistance training / reps to failure | MODERATE | +52.9% reps on bench press final sets at 8g CM (Pérez-Guisado 2010, N=41) | Conditional (dose-dependent) |
| DOMS recovery (soreness) | MODERATE | ~40% reduction in soreness at 24-48h post-training (Pérez-Guisado 2010) | Conditional |
| Endurance / aerobic performance | DEBUNKED | No significant benefit — JISSN 2023 systematic review and meta-analysis, definitively null | Does not work |
What would change the endurance rating: A well-powered RCT (N>80) in VO2max-matched aerobic athletes using ≥8g pure L-citrulline (not CM) for ≥4 weeks — to rule out dose and form confounds in prior null findings.
What would change the cardiovascular rating: Long-term safety data beyond 8 weeks; current evidence is predominantly short-to-medium term.
How It Works
The Core Mechanism
L-Citrulline → kidney conversion to L-Arginine → eNOS activation → Nitric Oxide → vasodilation
Most NO-boosting supplements try to deliver more arginine directly. This doesn't work well because arginine runs straight into the liver, where an enzyme called arginase destroys most of it — leaving less than 30% to reach the bloodstream. Citrulline is not a substrate for arginase, so it passes through the gut and liver intact.
About 83% of circulating citrulline is taken up by the kidneys, where two enzymes (argininosuccinate synthase and argininosuccinate lyase) convert it back to arginine. This converts citrulline into a sustained-release arginine precursor that delivers more plasma arginine than taking arginine directly. Elevated arginine then activates endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) in blood vessel walls, triggering NO production, smooth muscle relaxation, and vasodilation — the pump.
Citrulline also plays a role in the urea cycle, accelerating the clearance of ammonia that builds up during high-intensity exercise. High blood ammonia drives fatigue — clearing it faster lets you push out more reps before your muscles give out. This is the key mechanism behind the resistance training benefit (and probably the DOMS reduction). It has nothing to do with the malate component.
The Malate Reality
Most commercial "Citrulline Malate 2:1" is a physical dry blend of L-citrulline and malic acid — not a bonded compound. The bond, if it exists, breaks in stomach acid. No clinical trial has isolated whether malic acid independently contributes to the ergogenic effect. The evidence credits L-citrulline, not the blend.
The Debate
Pérez-Guisado 2010 (N=41)
8g CM: +52.9% bench press reps to failure, 40% less soreness at 24-48h vs placebo
da Silva 2017
6g CM: No significant improvement in lower-body multi-joint exercise performance
Why they disagree: 6g CM 2:1 yields only ~4g active citrulline vs 8g CM yielding ~5.3g — below the threshold where ammonia buffering becomes meaningful. Exercise modality matters too: upper-body isolation (bench press) accumulates more localised acid than compound leg movements.
Multiple resistance training RCTs
Citrulline improves high-volume anaerobic performance (sets to failure, short-burst capacity)
Harnden 2023 meta-analysis (JISSN)
Citrulline shows no significant benefit for continuous aerobic endurance (time-to-exhaustion, time-to-completion)
Why they disagree: These aren't contradictions — they're different metabolic limiting factors. Resistance training is limited by ammonia/acid accumulation in short high-intensity sets. Aerobic endurance is limited by cardiovascular output (VO2max) and glycogen — neither of which citrulline significantly addresses.
Honest Limitations
Exactly How to Use It
| Goal | Dose | Timing | Loading? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Athletic pump / strength (performance) | 6-8g pure L-citrulline OR 8-10g CM 2:1 | 45-60 min before resistance training | No — acute effects proven from first dose |
| DOMS reduction (recovery) | 8g CM 2:1 (= ~5.3g active citrulline) | 45-60 min pre-workout | No |
| Blood pressure management | 6g pure L-citrulline/day | Split across 2-3 doses daily | Yes — 4+ weeks chronic dosing |
| Postmenopausal vascular support | 6-10g pure L-citrulline/day | Split doses, morning and afternoon | Yes — 4-8 weeks minimum |
L-Citrulline (pure)
100% active per gram
Any goal — most efficient form, exact dosing
£8-15/month at performance dosing
Citrulline Malate 2:1
67% active per gram
Pre-workout stacks — requires 50% more by weight than pure
£10-18/month
Citrulline Malate 1:1
50% active per gram
Budget — requires double the weight of pure L-citrulline
Cheapest per gram, worst value per dose
L-Arginine
<30% bioavailable
Avoid — hepatic catabolism makes it inferior to citrulline
N/A — not recommended
Absorption Tips
No food restrictions — unlike arginine, citrulline absorption is not impaired by food. Do not co-ingest arginine (competitive absorption, redundant). No cofactors required. Split dosing is preferable for cardiovascular goals; single pre-workout dose is fine for athletic use.
Safety & Interactions
Sildenafil (Viagra), tadalafil (Cialis), vardenafil — combining with citrulline creates synergistic vasodilation via the same cGMP pathway. Risk: severe, potentially life-threatening, refractory hypotension (blood pressure that won't recover). Do not combine under any circumstances.
Nitroglycerin, isosorbide, and similar cardiac nitrates — additive cGMP amplification causes dangerous BP drops and reduced cardiac output. Absolute contraindication.
ACE inhibitors, ARBs, calcium channel blockers, diuretics — additive blood pressure lowering can cause orthostatic hypotension (dizziness on standing). Monitor BP if combining; consider reducing citrulline dose.
Competitive GI absorption. Citrulline simultaneously downregulates hepatic arginase, making extra arginine redundant. Avoid co-ingestion — it adds nothing.
Generally benign. Mild GI distress or bloating (<15% at doses above 8-10g), transient headache from cerebral vasodilation (<15% at high doses). Osmotic diarrhea possible above 15g/day. No toxic threshold identified in human clinical data at standard supplemental doses.
Upper Limit: ~15g/day (clinical estimate — no formal EFSA or ISSN upper limit established).
The Nuance
| Form | Effective Dose | Monthly Cost | Food Alternative |
|---|---|---|---|
| L-Citrulline bulk powder | 6-8g pre-workout (3-5×/week) | £8-15/month | ~400g watermelon flesh = 1.5-2g citrulline — impractical for performance doses |
| Citrulline Malate 2:1 bulk | 8-10g pre-workout | £10-18/month | Same watermelon reference |
| Pre-workout product (typical) | Usually sub-therapeutic (<2g active) | £25-45/month | You're paying for 10+ ingredients to get sub-dose citrulline |
Value verdict: Conditional. Bulk pure L-citrulline at 6-8g is genuinely cost-effective. Pre-workout products citing citrulline malate at under 8g are poor value for citrulline specifically — buy standalone L-citrulline in bulk.
Conviction
Endpoint-stratified: HIGH for pump/blood flow and cardiovascular; MODERATE for strength and DOMS; LOW for endurance. Underdosing fraud in commercial products is the primary translational barrier.
Sources
How strong is the evidence for the claims in this review? Higher = more confidence the claims are supported. This does not measure how large the effect is or how important it is compared with other levers.
Is this worth your time, money, effort, risk, and trust for this goal? Different from Verdict Score (evidence strength) and Leverage Map (relative importance) — Action ROI is the worth-it call once friction is priced in.
Evidence-scored dosing, timing, forms, and who should skip it. One page, no fluff.
Get the protocolConviction-scored verdicts on supplements, nutrition, training, physio, and recovery.