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Cover image for Caffeine Is the Most Effective Legal Ergogenic. Pre-Workouts Bury This Under $30 of Filler.
Jonas Prenissl
Jonas Prenissl

Posted on • Originally published at q-sci.org

Caffeine Is the Most Effective Legal Ergogenic. Pre-Workouts Bury This Under $30 of Filler.

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:

  1. You genuinely can't handle plain caffeine or coffee on an empty stomach (some pre-workouts have buffering ingredients that reduce nausea)
  2. You want a training ritual — the ritual itself is a performance cue for some people
  3. 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:

  1. Was it tested against caffeine alone? If not, you can't tell if the other ingredients did anything.
  2. Was the proprietary blend disclosed? Many studies use unnamed "blends," making replication impossible.
  3. Sample size? Most pre-workout studies use 10–20 subjects.
  4. Funded by whom? Almost universally the manufacturer.
  5. 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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