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Research vs Bro-science

Pre-Workout's Buzz: Real Effect or Just Placebo?

Published:

Written by: Shingo YoshizakiReviewed by: Tomonobu Someda

Pre-workout supplements are famous for delivering an unmistakable buzz. But is that energy and focus a genuine physiological effect, or mostly expectation and caffeine riding shotgun? We break down the evidence ingredient by ingredient.

Round1

Is the energy and focus boost from pre-workout real?

What's said

フィットネス系YouTuber・トレーニーSNS全般

Pre-workout noticeably increases focus and strength. The difference between days you take it and days you don't is obvious — it definitely works.

VS

What research says

  • The main active ingredient — caffeine — has robust evidence behind it.
  • Caffeine antagonizes adenosine receptors, suppressing fatigue signals and increasing alertness.
  • Its positive effects on strength, power, muscular endurance, and aerobic performance are consistently confirmed across multiple meta-analyses (Grgic et al.
  • 2018), with average strength gains around +3–7%.
  • The buzz is a genuine pharmacological effect, not placebo.
  • That said, individual response varies substantially due to CYP1A2 genetic polymorphisms affecting caffeine metabolism.
Verdict

The buzz is real — primarily caffeine's pharmacological effect, not imagination. Measurable strength and power gains are well-supported. Note that this verdict applies to caffeine specifically, not pre-workout blends as a whole. Individual response varies considerably.

Confidence:Strong evidence
Round2

Do non-caffeine ingredients like citrulline and beta-alanine actually work?

What's said

サプリメーカーの製品説明・マーケティングコンテンツ

Pre-workouts contain a range of ingredients beyond caffeine — citrulline, beta-alanine, creatine, and more. Manufacturers tout synergistic blends, and each ingredient is there for a reason.

VS

What research says

  • Citrulline (L-citrulline or citrulline malate) increases nitric oxide production and improves blood flow.
  • RCTs show improvements in repetition counts and muscular endurance during high-intensity anaerobic exercise (Pérez-Guisado & Jakeman 2010).
  • Beta-alanine increases intramuscular carnosine and buffers acid buildup during high-intensity efforts; meta-analyses support efficacy for 60–240 second maximal efforts (Hobson et al.
  • 2012).
  • However, both ingredients have less robust and consistent evidence than caffeine.
  • Many products also underdose these ingredients relative to studied effective doses.
  • Creatine has strong standalone evidence, but a single pre-workout serving rarely delivers the required daily accumulation (3–5 g/day continuous).
Verdict

Citrulline and beta-alanine have real standalone evidence, but it's less robust than caffeine's. Whether a product's serving size actually delivers effective doses requires checking the label. Synergistic 'proprietary blend' effects are rarely studied as a whole.

Confidence:Mixed evidence
Round3

Does tolerance to pre-workout build up over time?

What's said

トレーニーの体感・フィットネスフォーラム

After taking it daily for a while, it doesn't hit as hard as it used to. But skipping it feels off, and stopping makes me sluggish. Is this real tolerance, or am I imagining it?

VS

What research says

  • Caffeine tolerance is well established.
  • Upregulation of adenosine receptors reduces the alertness and performance-enhancing effects at the same dose over time.
  • Habitual caffeine consumers (including coffee drinkers) show smaller performance boosts from caffeine compared to non-users.
  • Withdrawal symptoms — headache, fatigue, reduced focus — can emerge when stopping, typically lasting 24–72 hours.
  • Cycling strategies (e.g., skipping weekends, taking 1–2 week breaks) are practically recommended to mitigate tolerance.
Verdict

Tolerance is real and well-supported by evidence. Caffeine's alertness and performance effects do weaken with continuous daily use. 'It doesn't hit like it used to' is pharmacologically valid — cycling use is a practical strategy to preserve effectiveness.

Confidence:Strong evidence

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Published:

Shingo Yoshizaki

Written by

Shingo Yoshizaki

Software Engineer / Research Writer at BODYDATA

An engineer's job is verification. I read the source before I trust gym lore — same as code.

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Tomonobu Someda

Reviewed by: Tomonobu Someda

Content reviewed from the perspective of coaching practice and supplement-industry experience

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