The VerdictLOW CONVICTION

Sea moss is sold as a 92-mineral miracle, but it's never been properly tested in people, and its only proven effects are risks.

Before you buy sea moss for your thyroid, energy, or immunity, ask one question: do you have thyroid disease, kidney disease, or take a blood-pressure drug like losartan? If yes, don't take it without your doctor. If no, you're spending £8-30 a month on an unpredictable iodine dose for no proven benefit. Save the money.

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.
Niche / Superfood · Red Seaweed

Sea Moss

Irish Moss (Chondrus crispus) — the viral "92 minerals" seaweed

Verdict: Skip

Before you buy sea moss, ask one thing: do you have thyroid disease, kidney disease, or take a blood-pressure drug like losartan?

If yes, don't take it without your doctor. If no, you're paying £8–£30 a month for an unpredictable iodine dose with no proven benefit. Either way, the answer is to keep your money in your pocket.

Takes less than 2 minutes. No equipment needed.

Sea moss is sold as a 92-mineral miracle, but it's never been properly tested in people.

Sea moss is a red seaweed, also called Irish moss, that people take as a gel, powder, or capsule. Think of seaweed as a sponge for the ocean: it soaks up minerals, which is the kernel of truth behind "92 minerals." But a sponge soaks up whatever is in the water, so the same seaweed also pulls in iodine in wildly unpredictable amounts, plus toxic metals like arsenic, lead, and mercury. You can't get the good without a random dose of the bad.

  1. Once you throw out the test-tube and worm studies, there are basically zero proper human trials showing sea moss does anything it's sold for.
  2. The thing it's most marketed for, thyroid support, is exactly what too much of its iodine can wreck.
  3. If you want the nutrients, iodised salt and seafood give you iodine, oats or psyllium give you fiber, and a varied diet gives you minerals, all cheaper and safer.

Best for

Honestly, no one with a proven health benefit. At most a minor fiber source if you enjoy it as a food and have no thyroid, kidney, or medication risk.

Skip if

You have thyroid disease, kidney disease, take ARBs or ACE inhibitors, or are pregnant or breastfeeding. For you it's a real risk, not a neutral one.

Want the full evidence? Keep scrolling

The Protocol

There is no evidence-based protocol, because no human trial has ever established a dose for any benefit. The only number that matters clinically is the iodine ceiling.

Sea moss preparation
GoalDoseReality
Any health benefitNo evidence-based dose existsNothing has been proven to dose for

Forms

Raw / gel
No target active
Most unpredictable iodine and contaminant load
~£8–15/mo
Dried powder
No PK data
Concentration step can raise per-gram iodine
~£10–20/mo
Capsules / blends
No PK data
Label accuracy and composition unverified
~£15–30/mo

There is nothing to optimise the absorption of, because no benefit-conferring active has been identified or measured. "High absorption" claims on these products describe nothing measurable.

Safety & Interactions

This is the part with the most solid, human-relevant evidence, and it runs in the opposite direction to the marketing.

Sea moss safety

ARBs / ACE inhibitors (e.g. losartan) — Severe

Sea moss is potassium-rich. Hyperkalemia (dangerously high potassium) with cardiac arrhythmias has been reported with excessive use in a patient on losartan. Avoid without medical advice.

Potassium-sparing diuretics / kidney disease — Moderate to Severe

Additive potassium load. If your kidneys can't clear potassium efficiently, this is a real risk.

Thyroid medication / thyroid disease — Moderate

An unpredictable iodine load can destabilise managed thyroid disease, pushing it toward under- or over-active.

Heavy-metal exposure — chronic

Seaweeds concentrate arsenic, cadmium, lead, and mercury alongside their minerals. Content varies by harvest site, so chronic intake of untested product carries an accumulation risk.

Contraindicated: thyroid disease or on thyroid medication; on ARBs/ACE inhibitors, potassium-sparing diuretics, or with chronic kidney disease; pregnancy and breastfeeding. Upper limit: there is no UL for "sea moss." The operative ceiling is the iodine UL of 1,100 µg/day for adults.

Conviction

LOW

No adequately-powered human efficacy trials exist for any marketed sea-moss benefit. The only firm findings are cautionary. That keeps overall conviction LOW, with the safety signals (iodine overload, toxic elements, potassium interaction) rated more strongly than any benefit.

What would change this verdict

An independent (non-seller-funded), double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of at least 150 adults using a standardised, iodine-disclosed sea-moss preparation for 12 weeks or more, with a single pre-registered primary endpoint (HbA1c or fasting glucose with iodine and total diet controlled, or thyroid function with safety monitoring), showing a clinically meaningful effect that survives adjustment for fiber intake. Absent that, sea moss stays a food, not a therapy.

Worth Your Money?

Weekly costRoughly £2–£7 per week (£8–£30 a month) for gel, powder, or capsules.
Worth it ifYou simply enjoy it as a food, have no thyroid, kidney, or medication risk, and aren't expecting it to treat anything.
Lower priority ifYou're buying it for a health outcome. Your next £10 goes much further on iodised salt and seafood for iodine, oats or psyllium for fiber, and a varied diet for minerals.
Skip

Go Deeper

Want to stop wasting money on supplements that don't work? The Verdict reviews one every week, free.

Get the free weekly review
Claims vs Evidence — See What the Research Found

What People Claim

Sea moss claims

Sea moss went viral as a near-miraculous "92 minerals" superfood. The headline: because the body supposedly needs 102 minerals and sea moss contains 92, a daily spoonful fills your nutritional gaps in one go.

From there it gets stacked with claims for thyroid support, stronger immunity, glowing skin, better digestion, higher libido, more energy, weight loss, and "detoxing."

The pitch leans on it being a whole food rather than a synthetic supplement, so it must be safe and gentle. The mineral content is genuinely real. The problem is the leap from "contains minerals" to "treats conditions."

What the Evidence Actually Shows

Sea moss evidence
ClaimEvidenceVerdict
"92 minerals"Real, but also delivers variable iodine + toxic elements LOWTechnically true, clinically misleading
Thyroid "support"No human efficacy; iodine excess can cause dysfunction LOWMost likely to harm, not help
Blood sugarModest, direction only, 2 tiny trials LOWUnproven, likely a fiber effect
Digestion / regularityImproved stool frequency, direction only LOWUnproven, likely a fiber effect
Antioxidant capacitySlight rise, blood marker only LOWA biomarker, not a health outcome
Immunity / skin / libido / energy / detoxNo human trials LOWUnproven
Anticancer / antiviral / neuroprotectiveCell-line and worm models only LOWLab curiosity, not a human benefit

What would change this: a single adequately-powered, independent, placebo-controlled human trial with a standardised iodine-disclosed preparation and a pre-registered primary endpoint. None currently exists.

The Full Picture — Mechanism, Debate & Nuance

How It Works

Sea moss mechanism

Sea moss is a red seaweed. Its main bioactive component is carrageenan, a family of sulfated polysaccharides (the same compound used industrially to thicken ice cream and plant milks). It also carries iodine, potassium, soluble fiber, and trace minerals pulled out of seawater.

That filter-feeder biology is the whole story, for better and worse. Seaweed concentrates whatever is in the water it grows in. That is why it can be mineral-rich, and also why it can carry arsenic, cadmium, lead, and mercury, and why its iodine content swings wildly between batches.

The one plausible human effect is mundane: soluble fiber can modestly slow glucose absorption and bulk stool. That fits the only signal seen in the small trials, and it's a fiber effect you could get from oats or psyllium. Everything more exciting (anticancer, antiviral, brain-protecting) comes from carrageenan acting on cells in a dish or on worms, which tells you nothing about what happens when a person eats a spoonful of gel.

The Debate

Marketing claim vs evidence

The marketing
"Great for your thyroid because it has iodine."
vs
The evidence (iodine risk assessments)
Seaweed iodine can exceed the safe limit and cause thyroid dysfunction.
Iodine is biphasic: fixing a deficiency helps, but an unpredictable excess can trigger an under- or over-active thyroid. The "thyroid support" claim ignores the overdose direction.

Lab signal vs human absence

In vitro / animal
Carrageenan shows anticancer, antiviral, and neuroprotective activity in cells and worms.
vs
Humans
No human efficacy for any of these from eating sea moss.
Cell-line and C. elegans effects do not establish oral human efficacy. Isolated carrageenan in a dish is not a swallowed seaweed gel.

Honest Limitations

No standardisation

Iodine, mineral, and toxic-element content vary by species, harvest waters, and processing. There is no "a dose of sea moss" the way there is a dose of a defined compound. Two jars are not the same product.

Label accuracy is unverified

Authorities note wide composition variation in commercial products. A capsule's stated content is not a measured guarantee, and there is no target active to standardise to.

The human signal is confounded at the root

The modest glucose, stool, and antioxidant signals are consistent with a generic soluble-fiber effect and with uncontrolled iodine and diet, not a unique sea-moss mechanism. The trials were tiny (under 60 people), short (under 12 weeks), and unreplicated.

The Nuance

If you already meet your iodine needs from iodised salt, dairy, and seafood (most people do), there's no gap for sea moss to fill, only a risk of overshooting. For the curious, here's what actually doesn't work:

What doesn't work

  • "92 minerals means 92 benefits." Containing a mineral is not the same as delivering a clinical benefit, and the same intake delivers an unpredictable iodine dose and toxic elements.
  • "Sea moss supports your thyroid." This is backwards. It's the single ingredient most likely to destabilise a thyroid, through iodine excess.
  • "Detox and immune-boosting." No human trials support either. The antimicrobial and antioxidant activity is in cells and test tubes.
  • "It cured my [condition] in a TikTok." Anecdote, not evidence. The two real human trials were tiny, short, and showed only fiber-like effects.

Food-first alternatives: iodised salt and seafood for iodine, oats or psyllium for fiber, a varied diet for minerals. All cheaper, safer, and with far more evidence behind them.

Sources

  1. News-Medical synthesis (2024). Does Eating Sea Moss Provide Health Benefits? Summarised the human-trial landscape: two small RCTs (each under 60 people, under 12 weeks) with modest fasting-glucose, stool-frequency, and antioxidant-capacity signals; iodine and diet uncontrolled.
  2. Office of Dietary Supplements / Operation Supplement Safety (2021). Sea moss in dietary supplements. Reliable human evidence for safety or effectiveness is lacking; composition varies widely.
  3. The Conversation (2024). Is TikTok right? Are there health benefits to eating sea moss? The vast majority of evidence is test-tube, cell, or animal; very little human evidence.
  4. Risk assessment of iodine intake from the consumption of red seaweeds (Palmaria palmata and Chondrus crispus) (2020). PMID 32803579. Seaweed iodine intake can exceed safe upper limits.
  5. Iodine in Edible Seaweed, Its Absorption, Dietary Use, and Relation to Iodine Nutrition in Arctic People (2019). PMID 30990756. High and variable iodine content of edible seaweeds.
  6. Essential and toxic elements in seaweeds for human consumption (2016). PMID 26817952. Seaweeds concentrate arsenic, cadmium, lead, and mercury alongside nutritive minerals.
  7. ASN Kidney Week abstract (2024). Hyperkalemia with arrhythmias from excessive sea-moss supplementation in a patient on losartan.
  8. Anti-Cancer Activity of Porphyran and Carrageenan from Red Seaweeds (2019). PMID 31775255. In-vitro anticancer activity; preclinical, not human efficacy.

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