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Beetroot Powder: Benefits, Dosage & How to Use It

REVIEWED BY
Bill Maish, MD
Clinical Content Consultant
Published
May 31, 2026
Last updated
May 30, 2026
Key takeaway:

Beetroot powder works via the nitrate-nitrite-nitric oxide pathway — dietary nitrates convert to nitric oxide, a potent vasodilator that increases blood flow to working muscle. Blood pressure meta-analyses show mean reductions of roughly 3–5 mmHg systolic, and peak effects occur 2–3 hours post-ingestion. Beetroot powder is not a substitute for medical management of hypertension.

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Table of contents

How Beetroot Powder Works in the Body

The nitrate-nitrite-nitric oxide pathway

Dietary nitrates from beetroot are absorbed in the small intestine and circulated to the salivary glands, where oral bacteria reduce nitrate to nitrite. Swallowed saliva delivers nitrite to the stomach and bloodstream, where it is further reduced to nitric oxide (NO) — particularly under conditions of low oxygen. Nitric oxide is a potent vasodilator: it signals vascular smooth muscle to relax, widening blood vessels and reducing resistance to blood flow. This mechanism underlies the blood pressure and exercise performance effects observed in clinical trials. The process is oxygen-sensitive, meaning nitric oxide generation is upregulated precisely when tissues are working hardest and oxygen delivery is most critical.

Blood pressure and vascular function

Multiple randomized controlled trials have demonstrated that dietary nitrate supplementation from beetroot juice or powder produces measurable reductions in systolic and diastolic blood pressure in healthy adults, typically within 2–3 hours of ingestion, with effects persisting for up to 24 hours with repeated dosing. Meta-analyses of these trials suggest mean reductions of approximately 3–5 mmHg systolic, which — while modest individually — is clinically meaningful at a population level. The effect appears most pronounced in individuals with elevated baseline blood pressure, where vascular tone is higher and the vasodilatory effect of nitric oxide produces greater measurable change. Blood pressure is straightforwardly assessed through standard measurement and, at the biomarker level, through markers including hs-CRP and lipid profiles that characterize the vascular risk context.

Exercise endurance and oxygen efficiency

By improving oxygen delivery and reducing the oxygen cost of a given workload, dietary nitrate supplementation may allow muscles to sustain activity longer at the same perceived effort. The mechanism involves both improved blood flow and mitochondrial efficiency: nitric oxide partially inhibits cytochrome c oxidase in a way that appears to reduce oxygen consumption per unit of ATP produced under submaximal conditions. Clinical trials in recreationally active adults have shown improvements in time to exhaustion and time-trial performance, with effects more consistently observed in non-elite than in highly trained athletes — likely because elite athletes already have highly optimized cardiovascular and muscular oxygen delivery systems.

Cognitive blood flow

Emerging evidence suggests dietary nitrate may support cerebral blood flow, particularly in older adults in whom vascular function has declined. The proposed mechanism is the same: nitric oxide-mediated vasodilation in cerebrovascular beds. A small number of trials have reported improvements in cognitive performance tasks alongside increased cerebral perfusion following nitrate supplementation, though this area of research is earlier-stage than the cardiovascular and exercise data.

Anti-inflammatory and antioxidant activity

Beetroot contains betalains — the pigment compounds responsible for its distinctive deep red color — which have demonstrated antioxidant and anti-inflammatory activity in laboratory studies. Betalain concentrations vary between products and beetroot varieties. The clinical relevance of betalain intake at typical supplementation doses is not yet well established in human trials, but this component contributes to the broader nutritional profile of beetroot beyond its nitrate content. Systemic inflammation is quantifiable through markers including hs-CRP.

Dosage and Practical Considerations

Most clinical trials have used approximately 300–500 mg of dietary nitrates as the effective dose, typically provided as 70–140 ml of concentrated beetroot juice (approximately 2–3 times the concentration of standard juice) or equivalent powder. Raw beetroot powder is not standardized for nitrate content across commercial products, which varies substantially based on soil conditions, storage, and processing. This means that product labels listing only the weight of beetroot powder (rather than nitrate content specifically) are difficult to use for accurate dose comparison.

Timing relative to exercise matters: the peak nitrite conversion and nitric oxide elevation occurs approximately 2–3 hours after ingestion, making ingestion 2–3 hours before planned activity the most studied protocol for exercise performance applications. For blood pressure and vascular support, daily consistent intake appears more relevant than acute timing.

A well-known harmless side effect is beeturia — pink or red discoloration of urine following beetroot consumption — which occurs in approximately 10–14% of individuals due to incomplete breakdown of betacyanin pigments. It is not an indicator of pathology. Individuals on medications that affect blood pressure or nitrate-based drugs (such as medications for erectile dysfunction) should discuss beetroot supplementation with their prescribing provider before use.

What Beetroot Powder is Not

Beetroot powder is not a substitute for medical management of hypertension, nor is it an evidence-based standalone intervention for cardiovascular disease. Its effects on blood pressure are modest and most consistently demonstrated in controlled research settings. It does not replace the value of baseline cardiovascular biomarker assessment in understanding where your cardiovascular risk actually sits.

Which Biomarkers Provide Context for Beetroot Powder Use?

  • hs-CRP — Systemic inflammation and vascular risk context
  • Glucose / HbA1c — Metabolic context for vascular health
  • Ferritin — Iron status; iron influences nitric oxide metabolism

Understanding your baseline vascular and metabolic markers gives meaningful context for interpreting any changes you observe from dietary modifications including beetroot supplementation. Superpower's Baseline Blood Panel includes hs-CRP, HbA1c, glucose, ferritin, and lipid markers in a single draw.

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before making changes to your health routine. Dosage information reflects findings from published research and is not a personal recommendation.

FAQs

Clinical trials consistently show that dietary nitrates from beetroot produce measurable reductions in systolic blood pressure, with effects typically in the 3–5 mmHg range in healthy adults. Effects appear most pronounced in individuals with higher baseline blood pressure. This does not replace medical management of hypertension and results vary between individuals. Blood pressure should be monitored by a qualified provider when making dietary changes intended to affect it.

Peak nitrite levels in the blood occur approximately 2–3 hours after ingestion, with the corresponding blood pressure and blood flow effects following this timeline. For exercise applications, ingesting beetroot powder 2–3 hours before activity is the most studied protocol. For sustained vascular benefits, consistent daily intake appears more relevant than timing alone.

Daily beetroot powder intake has been used in clinical trials without reported safety concerns in healthy adults. Individuals with low blood pressure, kidney disease (particularly those managing dietary oxalate), or those taking medications affecting blood pressure or nitrates should consult a provider before daily use. Beeturia (red urine) is a benign side effect that occurs in some individuals and is not cause for concern.

Beetroot powder is a concentrated form of dried beetroot and can be equivalent to beet juice if the nitrate content is comparable. The challenge is that powder products are not standardized for nitrate content, making direct comparison difficult. Products that specify nitrate content per serving allow for more accurate dosing. When comparing products, look for nitrate content listed explicitly rather than only total beetroot weight.

Yes. The nitrate-to-nitrite conversion that makes beetroot effective depends on oral bacteria in the mouth. Antibacterial mouthwash significantly reduces these bacterial populations, which can blunt or eliminate the blood pressure and exercise benefits of dietary nitrate supplementation. If you are using beetroot powder for its nitric oxide effects, avoiding antibacterial mouthwash around the time of consumption is a practical step supported by the research.

Beetroot powder can interact with medications that lower blood pressure or those containing nitrates, such as drugs prescribed for erectile dysfunction or angina. The combined vasodilatory effect could cause an excessive drop in blood pressure. If you take any blood-pressure-lowering or nitrate-based medication, consult your prescribing provider before adding beetroot supplementation to your routine.

References

  1. Benjamim, C. J. R., Porto, A. A., Valenti, V. E., Sobrinho, A. C. D. S., Garner, D. M., Gualano, B., & Bueno Júnior, C. R. (2022). Nitrate Derived From Beetroot Juice Lowers Blood Pressure in Patients With Arterial Hypertension: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Frontiers in nutrition, 9, 823039. https://doi.org/10.3389/fnut.2022.823039
  2. Siervo, M., Lara, J., Ogbonmwan, I., & Mathers, J. C. (2013). Inorganic nitrate and beetroot juice supplementation reduces blood pressure in adults: a systematic review and meta-analysis. The Journal of nutrition, 143(6), 818-26. https://doi.org/10.3945/jn.112.170233
  3. Silva, K. V. C., Costa, B. D., Gomes, A. C., Saunders, B., & Mota, J. F. (2022). Factors that Moderate the Effect of Nitrate Ingestion on Exercise Performance in Adults: A Systematic Review with Meta-Analyses and Meta-Regressions. Advances in nutrition (Bethesda, Md.), 13(5), 1866-1881. https://doi.org/10.1093/advances/nmac054
  4. Poortmans, J. R., Gualano, B., & Carpentier, A. (2015). Nitrate supplementation and human exercise performance: too much of a good thing?. Current opinion in clinical nutrition and metabolic care, 18(6), 599-604. https://doi.org/10.1097/MCO.0000000000000222
  5. Watts, A. R., Lennard, M. S., Mason, S. L., Tucker, G. T., & Woods, H. F. (1993). Beeturia and the biological fate of beetroot pigments. Pharmacogenetics, 3(6), 302-11. https://doi.org/10.1097/00008571-199312000-00004
  6. Senkus, K. E., & Crowe-White, K. M. (2020). Influence of mouth rinse use on the enterosalivary pathway and blood pressure regulation: A systematic review. Critical reviews in food science and nutrition, 60(17), 2874-2886. https://doi.org/10.1080/10408398.2019.1665495
  7. McMahon, N. F., Leveritt, M. D., & Pavey, T. G. (2017). The Effect of Dietary Nitrate Supplementation on Endurance Exercise Performance in Healthy Adults: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Sports medicine (Auckland, N.Z.), 47(4), 735-756. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40279-016-0617-7

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