The VerdictMODERATE CONVICTION

Taurine genuinely helps if your blood pressure or blood sugar is high, and does almost nothing if they're not.

Before you buy taurine, ask one question — is your blood pressure or blood sugar already running high? If yes, plain taurine powder at 1.5-3g a day is a cheap thing to trial. If no, skip it and keep your money.

  1. In people with high blood pressure or blood-sugar problems, taurine gives a small but real improvement for a few pounds a month.
  2. The viral "anti-aging" claim comes from a mouse study, and the "energy" in your energy drink is the caffeine, not the taurine.

Taurine is an amino acid your body already makes, and also gets from meat and fish. It works like power steering that only kicks in when the car drifts out of its lane. If your blood pressure or blood sugar is drifting, taurine helps pull it back toward normal. If your numbers are already steady, there is nothing for it to correct, so you feel nothing.

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

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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 Acid

Taurine

The supplement in every energy drink. Spectacular in mice, modest in humans, and sold to mostly the wrong people.

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Before you buy taurine, ask one question: is your blood pressure or blood sugar already running high?

If yes, plain taurine powder at 1.5-3g a day is a cheap thing to trial alongside the basics. If no, skip it and keep your money. Taurine corrects a system that is off-balance. It does not improve one that is already fine.

Takes less than 2 minutes. No equipment needed.

The Protocol

Taurine protocol

Taurine is the rare supplement where the "which one should I buy" question is boring: there is only one form. The real decision is whether it applies to you at all.

PopulationDoseTimingFormLoading
Endurance athlete (acute use)1-3g, single dose60-120 min before exercisePlain taurine powderNo
Older adults 50+1.5-3g/day, only if blood pressure or metabolic risk is elevatedDaily with mealsPlain taurine powderNo
Healthy, normotensive adultNot routinely indicated

Forms Comparison

Plain powder
Well absorbed
Everyone. One scoop in water.
~£3-7/month
Capsules
Same absorption
Convenience only — you pay for not measuring a scoop.
~£8-15/month
"Vegan" labelled
No difference
A marketing label. Nearly all taurine is synthetic, so it is vegan anyway.
Premium price
In energy drinks
Bundled ~1g/can
Not a sensible way to dose it — comes with caffeine and sugar.
High per gram

Absorption tips

Taurine dissolves in water and is well absorbed on its own, so timing is forgiving. Take it with food if higher doses upset your stomach. It clears the blood within a couple of hours, so splitting a daily dose across two servings is reasonable. No cofactors are needed, and nothing meaningful blocks it.

Safety & Interactions

Taurine safety

Taurine has a strong safety record at supplement doses. It is something your body already makes, it is water-soluble, and it is cleared by the kidneys. The interactions worth knowing are about additive effects, not toxicity.

Blood-pressure medication

Taurine lowers blood pressure a little on its own, so it can add to the effect of antihypertensive drugs. Not dangerous, but monitor your blood pressure and mention it to your prescriber.

Diabetes medication

Possible additive blood-sugar lowering in people with metabolic problems. Monitor your glucose and keep your clinician in the loop.

Beta-alanine (a pre-workout ingredient)

Beta-alanine and taurine use the same cellular transporter. In animal studies high-dose beta-alanine can lower tissue taurine, but no meaningful depletion has been shown in humans. No action needed.

Side effects

The only recurring complaint is mild stomach upset (nausea or loose stools), and it is uncommon. It is more likely above 3g per day. Take with food, split the dose, or reduce it if it persists.

Who should not take it

Upper limit

No official upper limit has been set. The most-cited safety figure is an observed safe level of about 3g per day. Trials have used up to 6g per day without serious problems. Stomach tolerance, not toxicity, is the practical ceiling.

Conviction

MODERATE

Multiple meta-analyses agree on a small, real cardiometabolic benefit. The effect size is modest and most reliable in people who already have elevated risk. The longevity claim has no human evidence at all.

What would change this verdict

A large (1,000+ people), multi-year, placebo-controlled trial in middle-aged and older adults measuring a hard outcome — heart attacks, strokes, lifespan, or a validated biological-age measure — would, if positive, move the longevity claim from unproven to credible.

For the cardiometabolic claim, a dedicated large trial in people with diagnosed high blood pressure or type 2 diabetes showing a sustained, meaningful effect at 12 months would push conviction to HIGH. A well-run trial finding nothing would push it down.

Worth Your Money?

Weekly costAbout £1-2 per week — one to one-and-a-half small scoops of plain powder daily.
Worth it ifYour blood pressure is high or borderline, or you have blood-sugar and cholesterol problems, and the basics (sleep, training, protein) are already in place.
Lower priority ifYour numbers are normal, or your sleep and nutrition are inconsistent. Your next £10 will do more there than on any supplement.
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Sources

  1. Waldron M, et al. (2018). The Effects of Oral Taurine on Resting Blood Pressure in Humans: a Meta-Analysis. Current Hypertension Reports. Meta-analysis of RCTs. Taurine reduced resting blood pressure, effect concentrated in higher-pressure subjects. PMID 30006901.
  2. Sun Q, et al. (2016). Taurine supplementation and blood pressure in prehypertension. Hypertension. Double-blind RCT, 1.6g/day for 12 weeks; clinically meaningful blood-pressure reduction. PMC5933890.
  3. Taurine reduces the risk for metabolic syndrome: a systematic review and meta-analysis of RCTs (2024). Nutrition & Diabetes. Favourable shift across metabolic-syndrome components. PMID 38755142.
  4. Insights into the cardiovascular benefits of taurine: a systematic review and meta-analysis (2024). Nutrition Journal. Modest favourable direction across blood-pressure, glucose and lipid markers. PMID 39148075.
  5. Waldron M, et al. (2018). The Effects of an Oral Taurine Dose and Supplementation Period on Endurance Exercise Performance: A Meta-Analysis. Sports Medicine. Small but significant pooled endurance improvement, high heterogeneity. PMID 29546641.
  6. Caffeine and taurine: a systematic review and network meta-analysis (2025). Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition. Caffeine drives the physical and cognitive effects; taurine alone is modest. PMID 41032459.
  7. Yadav R, et al. (2023). Taurine deficiency as a driver of aging. Science. Taurine declined with age across species; supplementation extended healthspan and lifespan in mice and improved aging markers in monkeys. Preclinical model, not human efficacy. DOI 10.1126/science.abn9257.
The Verdict · Evidence-graded supplement reviews · Taurine · 2026-05-22

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