The VerdictMODERATE CONVICTIONVerdict Score 70

BCAAs trigger muscle building but can't finish the job — EAAs can, but only matter if your diet is already low on protein.

Tonight, check your current protein intake. If you're regularly eating about 1 gram of protein per pound of bodyweight daily (chicken, eggs, fish, whey), you don't need either supplement — your muscles already have everything they need. If you train fasted or you're over 50, EAAs (10–15g before or during training) are your best option.

Think of your muscle cells as a factory with an alarm system. BCAAs pull the alarm — all the machines fire up, ready to build. But the factory needs raw materials to actually assemble anything. With BCAAs alone, the alarm rings and the machines spin, but there are no bricks, no steel, no concrete. So the factory starts tearing down its own walls to find them. That's not building — that's the factory cannibalising itself.

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

Check your whole stack
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.
Performance · Amino Acids

EAAs vs BCAAs

The supplement gym culture built a billion-dollar market on — and what the evidence actually shows

Conditional

Tonight, check your protein intake. Are you regularly eating about 1 gram of protein per pound of body weight daily? If yes — you don't need either supplement. If you train fasted or you're over 50, EAAs (one serving, 10–15g) before your session is worth it.

At adequate protein intake, plasma amino acid pools are already saturated — adding a supplement on top is just expensive urine.

Takes 30 seconds to check.

BCAAs trigger muscle building but can't finish the job — EAAs can, but only matter if your diet is already short on protein.

Think of your muscle cells as a factory with an alarm system. BCAAs pull the alarm — all the machines fire up, ready to build. But building muscle requires raw materials — all nine essential amino acids — not just three. With BCAAs alone, the alarm rings and the machines spin, but there's nothing to build with. So the factory starts tearing down its own walls to find the missing bricks. That's not building — that's the factory eating itself.

  1. The verdict: Taking BCAAs alone can actually break down your muscle — your body is forced to raid its own tissue for the amino acids the supplement didn't provide. This is confirmed by intravenous tracer studies.
  2. What most people get wrong: BCAAs don't build muscle in any well-powered long-term trial, and if you're already eating about 1 gram of protein per pound of body weight daily, even EAAs won't move the needle.
  3. The protocol in plain English: If you're over 50 or training on an empty stomach, take 10–15g of EAAs (one standard serving) before or during your session — check the label shows at least one small scoop's worth of leucine (2.5–3g) per dose.

Want the full evidence? Keep scrolling

BCAA and EAA supplement context

"Take BCAAs to switch on muscle protein synthesis, prevent breakdown during training, reduce soreness, and recover faster. They're the insurance policy for your gains."

BCAAs — leucine, isoleucine, and valine — dominate the intra-workout supplement market. The marketing is straightforward: these three amino acids activate the anabolic switch (mTORC1) that tells your muscles to grow. Take them fasted, take them during training, take them post-workout. Keep the muscles fed. The logic sounds airtight.

EAAs are marketed as the scientifically-literate upgrade: BCAAs are only three of the nine essential amino acids. "Why settle for three when you can have all nine?" Premium price point, backed by a growing evidence base. The pitch positions BCAAs as incomplete and EAAs as the real deal.

Both categories are sold to everyone from recreational gym-goers to professional athletes. The global BCAA market alone was valued at over $10 billion in 2023. These are not niche products.

Clinical evidence overview
Claim Evidence Key Study Verdict
EAAs stimulate muscle protein synthesis better than BCAAsSTRONG Mechanistic consensus + intravenous tracer studies Wolfe 2017 (JISSN); Churchward-Venne 2012 (J Physiology, N=24) Works
BCAAs reduce DOMS and muscle sorenessMODERATE Consistent CK/LDH attenuation across systematic reviews Julea 2025 (Cureus SR, N=511); Zhang 2026 (Metabolites) Conditional
BCAAs build muscle (hypertrophy)DEBUNKED No reliable lean mass signal in any powered long-term RCT Julea 2025 (22 studies, N=511) Refuted
EAAs increase lean mass in aging adultsSTRONG +3.9% LBM in sarcopenic adults over 3 months Ferrando 2021 (15g EAA/day) Works
BCAAs help endurance / reduce central fatigueMODERATE Tryptophan competition at blood-brain barrier reduces serotonin-driven fatigue Central Fatigue Hypothesis; Zhang 2026 Endurance only
BCAA/EAA meaningful at adequate protein (1.6–2.2g/kg/day)LOW Statistically insignificant in protein-sufficient populations Wolfe 2017; Churchward-Venne 2012 Skip
Leucine-enriched BCAAs (4:1:1) superior to standard (2:1:1)DEBUNKED Competitive transporter inhibition — excess leucine blocks isoleucine/valine uptake Pharmacokinetic transport studies No benefit

What would change the BCAAs-for-DOMS verdict: A 12-week dietary-controlled RCT (N=100+) at equated protein showing BCAAs still reduce DOMS vs placebo — across the full recovery window, not just 24–48h markers.

Amino acid metabolism mechanism
The BCAA Trigger

Leucine physically binds to a protein called Sestrin2, releasing it from an inhibitory complex. This activates mTORC1 — the master regulator of muscle protein synthesis — which fires up the cellular machinery to start building new proteins.

The EAA Requirement

Building muscle requires all nine essential amino acids to physically assemble polypeptide chains. BCAAs only provide three. When mTORC1 fires and translation begins but the other six EAAs aren't available in the bloodstream, the body cannibalises its own muscle tissue to source them.

The BCAA Paradox (Confirmed)

Wolfe (2017) demonstrated this directly using intravenous infusion and isotopic tracers: isolated BCAA administration decreased net muscle protein synthesis by approximately 25% and pushed subjects into a net catabolic state. The trigger fires, but without all nine EAAs, building fails — and breakdown accelerates.

Why Free-Form EAAs Absorb Faster (But Whey Lasts Longer)

Intact proteins like whey require enzymatic digestion before absorption — peak plasma amino acids appear 1–3 hours after ingestion. Free-form EAAs and BCAAs require zero digestion — they're in the bloodstream within 15–30 minutes. This rapid spike is ideal for fasted training. However, the spike is transient. Whey's slower release keeps amino acids elevated for hours, which is why whey protein still outperforms free-form EAAs for long-term post-exercise muscle accretion.

The Leucine Threshold

The minimum leucine dose to maximally activate mTORC1 in adults is approximately 2.5–3g per meal. Adults over 50 may need slightly more due to reduced mTORC1 sensitivity (a process called anabolic resistance — when muscles get less efficient at using protein). This threshold explains why a 10–15g EAA dose works: it reliably delivers 2.5–3g of leucine within a complete amino acid profile.

The Central Fatigue Mechanism (BCAAs' Best Use Case)

During prolonged endurance exercise, the liver oxidises BCAAs, dropping plasma BCAA levels. Simultaneously, free tryptophan rises. Tryptophan and BCAAs compete for the same transport channel to enter the brain. When the ratio shifts toward tryptophan, more tryptophan enters the brain and gets converted to serotonin — causing central fatigue and perceived exhaustion. Supplementing BCAAs spikes plasma levels, crowding out tryptophan at the transport channel and blunting serotonin production. This is the one genuinely supported use case for isolated BCAA supplementation.

BCAAs: Anabolic Signal vs Net Catabolic State

Cellular Signalling Studies
BCAAs activate mTORC1 and transiently increase fractional muscle protein synthesis rates — measured using 2-hour isotopic tracer protocols.
VS
Wolfe 2017 (JISSN)
Isolated BCAA infusion decreased net muscle protein synthesis by 25% and created a net catabolic state — measured over time using full nitrogen balance.
Resolution: These measure different things. Cellular studies measure whether the anabolic switch fired. Wolfe measures whether muscle was actually built or broken down over time. The switch fires, but without all nine EAAs, the outcome is net breakdown — not net building.

BCAAs for DOMS: Real Benefit or Population Artefact?

Julea 2025; Zhang 2026
BCAAs significantly reduce CK/LDH (muscle damage markers) and subjective soreness 24–48 hours post-exercise in multiple systematic reviews.
VS
Dietary-controlled trials
In subjects already consuming 2.2g/kg/day of total protein, BCAA supplementation produced no significant additional reduction in DOMS vs placebo.
Resolution: Protein-sufficiency confound. DOMS trials frequently use fasted or low-protein populations. The benefit is real but disappears when diet is controlled. For protein-sufficient athletes, the marginal DOMS reduction is minimal.

EAAs for Lean Mass: Real in Healthy Athletes?

Hirashima 2025 (N=75); Ferrando 2021
EAA supplementation significantly increases total and lower-limb muscle mass (equivalent to 20g whey protein) and +3.9% LBM over 3 months in aging or sarcopenic adults.
VS
Protein-sufficient athlete trials
In athletes already consuming 1.6–2.2g/kg/day, EAA supplementation provides no statistically significant additional lean mass gain at week 8–12.
Resolution: Population-specificity. EAAs are clearly effective in protein-deficient, sarcopenic, or aging populations. The benefit in protein-sufficient athletes is real but marginal — the plasma amino acid pool is already saturated.

Current direction: Field consensus is consolidating that EAAs > BCAAs for any anabolic goal, and that neither supplement provides meaningful benefit over adequate whole-food protein. BCAA marketing is quietly pivoting toward recovery and endurance rather than muscle-building claims.

The Protein-Sufficiency Confound

Lab context
Most foundational BCAA and EAA benefit studies used protein-deficient or fasted populations (below 1.2g/kg/day).
Real world
Most gym-goers already hit 1.6–2.2g/kg/day from whole foods. Adding supplements on top provides statistically insignificant anabolic benefit.
MORE CONSERVATIVE

Acute Signalling ≠ Long-Term Outcomes

Lab context
Many "BCAAs build muscle" claims came from 2-hour isotopic tracer studies measuring mTOR phosphorylation — not 12-week DEXA-verified lean mass changes.
Real world
Acute anabolic signalling does not predict chronic hypertrophy. Long-term powered trials show no lean mass benefit from isolated BCAAs.
MORE CONSERVATIVE

Product Quality and Ratio Accuracy

Lab context
Research-grade BCAAs use verified 2:1:1 leucine:isoleucine:valine ratios confirmed by chromatographic analysis.
Real world
Most commercial BCAA products do not independently verify ratios via third-party testing. Labelled 2:1:1 products can be closer to 3:1:0.5 in practice.
MORE CONSERVATIVE
Supplement protocol and dosing

Dosing by Population

Population Supplement Dose Timing Source
Protein-sufficient adult (1.6–2.2g/kg/day) Neither Save your money N/A Wolfe 2017; Churchward-Venne 2012
Endurance athletes (>90 min session) BCAAs 2:1:1 10–15g/day Intra-workout (during long session) Central Fatigue Hypothesis; Zhang 2026
High-frequency training (DOMS management) BCAAs 2:1:1 10–15g/day Post-workout Julea 2025 SR

Forms Comparison

Free-Form EAAs
~100% absorbed | 15–30 min onset
All-round: peri-workout, fasted training, 50+ between meals. Complete profile.
BCAAs 2:1:1
~100% absorbed | 15–30 min onset
Endurance fatigue management, DOMS. Incomplete — not for hypertrophy.
Whey Protein
High | 1–3 hr onset (slower)
Post-workout sustained MPS. Often cheaper per gram than EAAs. Usually the better choice.
BCAAs 4:1:1 / 8:1:1
Variable — competitive transport inhibition
Avoid. Extra leucine crowds out isoleucine/valine. No benefit over 2:1:1.

Absorption Tips

  • Free-form amino acids absorb faster on an empty stomach — avoid mixing with a heavy meal immediately before
  • Stick to standard 2:1:1 BCAA ratio — avoid commercial 4:1:1 and 8:1:1 variants
  • For adults 50+: distribute EAA intake across 3–4 meals to repeatedly hit the 2.5–3g leucine threshold per dose — not just one peri-workout serving
  • If you're diabetic on medication: leucine stimulates insulin release — take away from your medication timing and check with your prescriber
Safety and drug interactions

⚠ SEVERE — Levodopa (Parkinson's disease medication)

BCAAs and EAAs use the exact same brain-barrier transport channel as Levodopa — both are "large neutral amino acids." High circulating BCAA/EAA levels competitively block Levodopa absorption at the intestinal wall and its entry into the brain, drastically reducing its therapeutic effect. This is not a theoretical interaction — it has been documented clinically. If you or someone you coach is on Levodopa: amino acid supplements are contraindicated. If clinically necessary, separate doses by at least 2 hours and consult the prescribing physician.

⚡ MODERATE — Antidiabetic medication (insulin, glimepiride)

Leucine is a potent stimulator of pancreatic insulin secretion. In healthy adults this is beneficial post-workout. In diabetics on medication, adding leucine-rich supplements can create acute hypoglycaemia (low blood sugar). Avoid fasted pre-workout use of BCAAs/EAAs if on antidiabetic medication. Consult prescribing physician before use.

Chronic Insulin Resistance — Paradox Alert

While acute leucine intake improves post-workout glucose handling, chronically elevated fasting BCAA levels are a leading biomarker for future Type 2 diabetes risk. This is a population-level finding (high-meat, low-fibre diets), not a supplement dosing effect — but worth noting for context.

Contraindicated Populations

Upper Limit

The safe daily upper limit for leucine is 500mg/kg/day — approximately 35g/day for a 70kg adult, or 30g/day for adults over 65. Above this: hyperammonemia (elevated blood ammonia) risk. At standard supplement doses (10–15g EAAs or BCAAs per day), this limit is nowhere near reached.

Nuance and population stratification

Who Benefits Most

1. Adults 50+ with reduced muscle protein response

EAAs (15–20g, distributed 2–3x daily) are one of the few supplements with real clinical evidence for combating the reduced muscle protein response that comes with age. The key is distribution — not just one peri-workout dose — because the mechanism requires repeatedly hitting the leucine threshold throughout the day. STRONG

2. Fasted training individuals

EAAs prevent net breakdown during training without meaningfully breaking a fast from a caloric standpoint. 10–15g free-form EAAs provide ~50–60 calories — negligible impact on a fasted state but meaningful protection against catabolism. MODERATE

3. Endurance athletes during prolonged sessions (>90 minutes)

BCAAs specifically — the tryptophan competition mechanism at the blood-brain barrier is real and specific to endurance contexts. Not relevant for strength/hypertrophy training. MODERATE

What Doesn't Work

  • BCAAs for muscle building — The foundational claim is mechanistically wrong. Isolated BCAAs cannot produce net muscle protein synthesis without the other six essential amino acids. Every well-powered long-term human trial confirms no hypertrophy benefit. The billion-dollar BCAA market for "gains" is built on 2-hour cellular signalling studies, not lean mass outcomes.
  • Leucine-enriched BCAAs (4:1:1 and 8:1:1) — Leucine, isoleucine, and valine share the exact same intestinal transport channel. Excess leucine competitively inhibits isoleucine and valine uptake — reducing glucose handling capacity and negating the central fatigue benefit. Standard 2:1:1 is the pharmacokinetically optimal ratio.
  • BCAAs or EAAs as a substitute for total protein — Replacing a post-workout protein shake with BCAAs or EAAs to "save calories" is mechanistically counterproductive. Whey protein is cheaper per gram of EAAs and provides sustained plasma amino acid elevation that outperforms free-form supplements for long-term MPS.

Cost-Effectiveness

Product Effective Dose Monthly Cost (approx) Food Alternative Value
Free-Form EAAs 10–15g/session £25–40/month 30g whey protein (£1–2/serving) Conditional
BCAAs (2:1:1) 10–15g/day £15–25/month 100g chicken breast (~6g natural BCAAs) Conditional
Whey Protein 25–30g post-workout £30–50/month Best food-adjacent option Better value than EAAs
MODERATE

EAAs are clearly superior to BCAAs for any anabolic goal — the mechanistic and intravenous tracer evidence is strong. But the overall conviction is MODERATE because the real-world benefit to protein-sufficient adults is minimal. The finding that's HIGH conviction is the BCAA Paradox itself — and what it means for how this market has been sold.

What would change this verdict?
A 12-week, double-blind RCT (N=100+) involving resistance-trained adults with diet tightly controlled at 1.6g/kg/day of whole-food protein. Group A: 15g 2:1:1 free-form BCAAs intra-workout. Group B: 15g free-form EAAs. Group C: isocaloric carbohydrate placebo. Primary endpoint: DEXA-verified lean mass change + isotopic tracer net myofibrillar protein synthesis at week 12. If Group A equals Group B AND both outperform placebo significantly — the verdict on BCAAs for hypertrophy would change from DEBUNKED to LOW.

Evidence-based coaching from SLH Fit — slhfit.com

Verdict Score

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.

70 Mixed evidence
80–100Strong evidence
60–79Mixed but supportive ◀
40–59Uncertain
0–39Weak support

Get the complete dosing protocol

Evidence-scored dosing, timing, forms, and who should skip it. One page, no fluff.

Get the protocol

Related free research

Supplements
Plant Sterols & Stanols — The Verdict
Supplements
Exogenous Ketones — The Verdict
Supplements
Serrapeptase — Does the Silkworm Enzyme Actually Work?

There are 424 more inside

Conviction-scored verdicts on supplements, nutrition, training, physio, and recovery.

Explore all Get weekly verdicts