The VerdictLOW CONVICTION

Copper is essential, but a supplement does nothing for a healthy person who already gets it from food.

Ask yourself one question. Are you taking high-dose zinc (40mg+ a day) for months? If no, skip the copper supplement and save your money. If yes, that is the one real reason to add about 1-2mg of copper, dosed separately from the zinc.

  1. No study shows a copper pill helps a healthy adult, and higher blood copper actually tracks with higher death rates.
  2. The scary "copper is high in Alzheimer's and diabetes" headlines are mostly measuring inflammation, not copper.
  3. The only real reason to take copper is if you take a lot of zinc, which can quietly drain it.

Copper is a trace mineral that powers a few key enzymes, like the spark plugs in an engine. If your engine already has working spark plugs, throwing more in the glovebox does nothing. The only way to actually run low is if something is stealing your copper, and the usual thief is high-dose zinc.

That's the general answer. Your stack is different.

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SH
Dr. Seth Holbrook, DPT — Doctor of Physical Therapy • Coach to 300+ clients
I built The Verdict to cut through recycled health advice and show what the evidence actually supports.

Vitamin & Mineral · Essential Trace Element

Copper

An essential mineral your body needs in tiny amounts. The question isn't whether copper matters. It's whether the supplement does anything.

Skip (for most)

Ask yourself one thing: are you taking high-dose zinc (40mg+ a day) for months on end? If no, skip the copper supplement. If yes, that's the one real reason to add about 1-2mg of copper, taken separately from the zinc.

Copper is essential, but a healthy diet already covers it. The only common way to actually run low is high-dose zinc quietly draining your copper over time.

Takes less than 2 minutes. No equipment needed.

The Protocol

For almost everyone, the protocol is "eat food." Supplementation only has a real role in two narrow cases.

Copper-rich foods
PopulationDoseFormNotes
Documented deficiency~2mg/day, titratedGluconate / sulfate / bisglycinateClinician-directed, with food, until counts normalise
Chronic high-dose zinc (40mg+/day)~1-2mg/day copperAny absorbable formDose separately from zinc, or monitor copper + blood count
Older adults (50+)RDA via foodDietSame as general adult
Wilson's diseaseCONTRAINDICATEDAvoidCopper accumulation is the disease. Restrict, don't add.

Forms — what to buy (if you need it)

Copper gluconate
Good absorption
The sensible default for deficiency correction
~£3-6/mo
Copper sulfate
Good absorption
Works; can irritate the gut at higher doses
Low
Copper bisglycinate
Good; "gentler"
Premium price, no proven outcome advantage
~£8-15/mo
Cupric oxide
Poorly absorbed
Avoid — cheap multivitamin filler, barely works
Lowest
Absorption tips: Copper absorption is reduced by high-dose zinc, very high vitamin C, antacids, and high-fibre/phytate meals. If you take both copper and zinc, separate them. For almost everyone, a varied diet covers copper without any of this mattering.

Safety & Interactions

Copper has one of the narrower safety margins of any common mineral. The gap between what you need (about 0.9mg) and the upper limit (10mg) is small.

Copper safety

High-dose zinc (40mg+/day)

The key interaction. Chronic high zinc traps copper in the gut and causes deficiency (anemia, low white cells, nerve symptoms). This runs the opposite way to the marketing.

Penicillamine / trientine (copper chelators)

These drugs remove copper on purpose. Supplementing copper fights the treatment. Severe in Wilson's disease.

Iron supplements

High supplemental iron and copper interfere with each other's status. Separate and monitor if both are needed.

High-dose vitamin C, antacids/PPIs

Reduce copper absorption. Minor, but worth knowing if you're correcting a deficiency.

Who should not take it

Upper limit: 10mg/day (IOM, adults); 5mg/day (EFSA, adults). Standard copper tablets are 1-2mg, which is fine, but copper stacks quietly across a multivitamin, a standalone tablet, and fortified foods.
Conviction: LOW

Low overall for supplementation in healthy, replete adults. Stratified: correcting a real deficiency is HIGH-confidence, and offsetting high-dose zinc is HIGH-confidence. Everything else — energy, immunity, skin, cognition, heart health — is unsupported or points the wrong way.

What would change this verdict?
An adequately powered (400+ people), independent, placebo-controlled trial of copper supplementation (e.g. 2mg/day for a year or more) in copper-replete adults, with a real clinical endpoint (heart events, validated cognitive-decline measure, or an objective connective-tissue outcome) showing benefit over placebo. A reliable, inflammation-independent test of body copper status would also help. Neither exists today.

Worth Your Money?

Weekly costUnder £1.50/week as a 1-2mg gluconate tablet — but for most people the right spend is £0, because food covers it.
Worth it ifYou have a diagnosed copper deficiency, or you run high-dose zinc (40mg+/day) for months and want to offset it.
Lower priority ifYou eat a varied diet. Your next £10 goes further on protein, sleep, or vegetables than on a copper pill that has no evidence behind it.
Skip (Conditional for deficiency / zinc offset)

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Sources

  1. Rutjes AWS et al. (Cochrane), 2018. Vitamin and mineral supplementation for maintaining cognitive function in healthy people. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. PMID 30556597. No cognitive benefit.
  2. Trace Element Supplementation Following Severe Burn Injury, 2016. J Burn Care Res. PMID 26056754. Combined Cu/Se/Zn repletion reduced infections; copper not isolable.
  3. Comparative effectiveness of common therapies for Wilson disease, 2019. Liver Int. PMID 31206982. Copper-overload treatment, the opposite of supplementation.
  4. Circulating copper and cardio-cerebrovascular disease & all-cause mortality, 2024. Environ Pollut. PMID 37852312. Higher copper, higher mortality (GRADE low).
  5. Blood copper and cardiometabolic disease: Mendelian randomization, 2022. Hum Mol Genet. PMID 34523676. No strong causal effect.
  6. Copper in Diabetes Mellitus: meta-analysis of serum studies, 2017. Biol Trace Elem Res. PMID 27785738. Elevated copper in diabetes (observational).
  7. Copper in depressive disorder: SR/MA of observational studies, 2018. Psychiatry Res. PMID 29980131. Higher copper in depression (observational).
  8. Biological variation of serum zinc, copper, selenium, 2022. Clin Chem Lab Med. PMID 34225400. Substantial variation; biomarker caveat.
  9. Institute of Medicine, 2001. Dietary Reference Intakes (incl. Copper). RDA 900mcg/day; UL 10mg/day.
The Verdict · Evidence-graded supplement reviews · Copper · 2026-06-08

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