Caffeine is the single most-researched performance-enhancing substance in sports science. It's also the primary reason pre-workout supplements actually work.
Here's what the research says about caffeine — and why the $40 pre-workout scoop is largely a $0.15 caffeine dose surrounded by expensive marketing.
The evidence for caffeine is unusually solid
We're talking about hundreds of RCTs and multiple meta-analyses. The International Society of Sports Nutrition position stand on caffeine (Guest et al., 2021) reviewed the literature and concluded:
- Improves endurance performance by ~2–5%
- Improves anaerobic (short-duration, high-intensity) performance by ~3–7%
- Improves strength/power output by ~2–7%
- Improves cognitive performance (attention, vigilance) at doses of 3–6 mg/kg
- Effective across trained and untrained populations
- Effective in most exercise modalities
Effect sizes are small but consistent — which is the profile of a real, replicable phenomenon. "Small and boring" is the shape of the truth in performance nutrition.
Optimal dosing (from the research)
- Dose: 3–6 mg/kg bodyweight (200–400mg for most adults)
- Timing: 30–60 minutes pre-exercise
- Form: Anhydrous caffeine (pills/capsules) or coffee. Both work.
- Habituation: Regular users show some tolerance to subjective effects but retain most performance benefits
Above 6 mg/kg, side effects (anxiety, GI issues, sleep disruption) accelerate without additional performance benefit. Above 9 mg/kg, you're just uncomfortable and jittery.
What pre-workouts add (and don't add)
A typical pre-workout contains 5–15 ingredients. Let's rank them by evidence:
Evidence-backed ingredients:
- Caffeine (150–400mg) — the real ergogenic. Works.
- Beta-alanine (2–4g per serving) — works, but only if you take it daily for weeks, not as a pre-workout single dose. Pre-workout dosing is largely useless for beta-alanine's actual mechanism.
- Creatine (3–5g) — works, but timing doesn't matter for creatine. You could take it any other time.
- L-citrulline (6–8g) — modest pump/blood flow evidence at that dose. Most pre-workouts include 1–3g, which is functionally useless (Suzuki et al., 2016).
Weak-to-no evidence:
- Taurine — theoretically fine, negligible independent performance effect
- BCAAs — see previous article; incomplete protein source
- Beta vulgaris (beet extract) — marginal endurance effect at higher doses; usually underdosed
- Arginine — poor oral bioavailability; largely superseded by citrulline
- Yohimbine — stimulant with cardiovascular risks; questionable performance benefit
- "Proprietary energy blends" — no way to know doses. Marketing camouflage.
Straight-up filler:
- Random amino acids (tyrosine, phenylalanine)
- "Nootropic" blends at sub-therapeutic doses
- Anything ending in "-ate" that you've never heard of
The math on pre-workout vs. plain caffeine
Pre-workout example (typical):
- Cost: $30–50 for 30 servings
- Per serving: $1.00–1.66
- Active caffeine per scoop: usually 150–300mg
- Everything else: mostly filler or underdosed for genuine effect
Caffeine pills or coffee:
- Cost: $8 for 100 tablets of 200mg caffeine anhydrous
- Per dose: $0.08
- Or: coffee, ~$0.30 per cup, 100mg per 8oz
You're paying 10–20× the price for the ergogenic — plus a lot of things that either don't work at pre-workout doses or don't work at all.
Where pre-workout has legitimate value
Three cases:
- You genuinely can't handle plain caffeine or coffee on an empty stomach (some pre-workouts have buffering ingredients that reduce nausea)
- You want a training ritual — the ritual itself is a performance cue for some people
- The specific product contains adequately dosed beta-alanine + creatine + citrulline at reasonable per-serving cost — some higher-end products do this
But the last case really means "I'm paying a premium for the convenience of not measuring three supplements myself."
Caffeine timing details worth knowing
- Half-life is ~5 hours — a 200mg dose at 4pm means 100mg still in system at 9pm
- Genetics matter — CYP1A2 gene variants affect caffeine metabolism; "fast metabolizers" clear it in 3 hours, "slow metabolizers" in 8+
- Tolerance builds fast for subjective feel — 5–7 days of consistent use → less "buzz," but performance benefits mostly persist
- Withdrawal is real — reduce by 50mg every few days if quitting; don't cold turkey unless you enjoy headaches
The safety data
Caffeine has been consumed in massive amounts across human populations for centuries. Safety data is extensive:
- Doses up to 400mg/day are safe for healthy adults (FDA, EFSA)
- Doses up to 200mg per single dose are safe
- Above 600mg/day, insomnia and anxiety accelerate
- Above 1000mg single dose, cardiovascular events documented
- Contraindicated for people with certain arrhythmias, anxiety disorders, pregnancy (limit to 200mg/day)
One rare risk worth mentioning: pure caffeine powder is dangerous. A teaspoon of anhydrous caffeine powder is a lethal dose. Buy pills or capsules with pre-measured doses, not bulk powder.
The framework applied to pre-workout studies
Any pre-workout study should be evaluated on:
- Was it tested against caffeine alone? If not, you can't tell if the other ingredients did anything.
- Was the proprietary blend disclosed? Many studies use unnamed "blends," making replication impossible.
- Sample size? Most pre-workout studies use 10–20 subjects.
- Funded by whom? Almost universally the manufacturer.
- Effect size? "Statistically significant" and "meaningful for you at the gym" are different things.
We built Q-SCI to automate this. Paste a pre-workout study, get a quality score in seconds.
Bottom line
- Caffeine at 3–6 mg/kg pre-workout is the highest-evidence, cheapest legal ergogenic
- Pre-workouts work because they contain caffeine, not because of the proprietary blends
- If you like the ritual, buy a well-dosed pre-workout with disclosed ingredients (no blends). Otherwise, caffeine pills or coffee + your own creatine and beta-alanine schedules save 90% of the cost.
- Skip anything with a "proprietary blend" as its main selling point
Caffeine is the exception in supplement land: cheap, replicable, well-studied, actually works. Just don't let anyone sell you $40 caffeine.
More supplement research analyses at q-sci.org/blog. Score studies free at q-sci.org.
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