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Pre-Workout Supplements: How They Work, Key Ingredients & What to Expect

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

Pre-workout supplements work through distinct mechanisms — caffeine at 3–6 mg/kg blocks adenosine receptors; creatine monohydrate replenishes phosphocreatine for ATP regeneration; L-citrulline at 6–8 g drives nitric oxide vasodilation; beta-alanine at 3.2–6.4 g/day buffers hydrogen ions during high-intensity efforts. A pre-workout can only optimize a functional system — ferritin and vitamin D deficiencies limit performance before any formula can compensate.

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Table of contents

Core Ingredients and What the Evidence Shows

Caffeine

Caffeine is the most extensively studied and consistently effective ergogenic aid in sports nutrition. It works primarily by blocking adenosine receptors in the brain, reducing perceived fatigue and increasing alertness. At doses of approximately 3–6 mg per kilogram of body weight (roughly 200–400 mg for most adults), caffeine is associated with improvements in endurance performance, time to fatigue, power output, and reaction time. It is effective across both aerobic and strength-based exercise modalities.

Individual response to caffeine varies substantially based on CYP1A2 enzyme activity, which determines the rate of caffeine metabolism. Habitual caffeine consumers develop tolerance that partially attenuates ergogenic effects; a caffeine abstinence period of several days before an event may partly restore sensitivity for those who are regular users. Side effects at higher doses include elevated heart rate, palpitations, anxiety, and disrupted sleep — particularly when taken in the afternoon or evening.

Beta-alanine

Beta-alanine is a non-essential amino acid that is rate-limiting for the synthesis of carnosine in skeletal muscle. Carnosine is a dipeptide that acts as an intracellular buffer, neutralizing the hydrogen ions produced during high-intensity exercise that contribute to the sensation of muscular burning and eventual fatigue. Supplemental beta-alanine increases muscle carnosine concentrations over 4–12 weeks of daily use, with studies showing improved performance in exercise lasting 1–4 minutes — the intensity range where hydrogen ion accumulation is most limiting.

Beta-alanine is less relevant for ultra-short power efforts (under 30 seconds) or prolonged low-intensity aerobic work. Its hallmark side effect is paresthesia (a temporary tingling sensation in the skin, particularly the face, neck, and hands), which is harmless and dose-dependent. Extended-release formulations reduce this effect.

L-citrulline and citrulline malate

Citrulline is an amino acid that is converted in the kidneys to arginine, the substrate for nitric oxide synthesis. Unlike direct arginine supplementation, citrulline avoids significant first-pass metabolism in the gut and liver, producing larger and more sustained increases in plasma arginine and consequently in nitric oxide production. Elevated nitric oxide promotes vasodilation, increasing blood flow to working muscles and potentially supporting oxygen and nutrient delivery during exercise.

Clinical evidence shows citrulline supplementation is associated with modest improvements in endurance and resistance exercise performance, particularly in multi-set protocols, with some evidence for reduced post-exercise muscle soreness. Effective doses in studies are typically 6–8 g of L-citrulline or equivalent, taken 60 minutes before training.

Creatine monohydrate

Creatine is the most evidence-supported and broadly applicable performance supplement in sports nutrition. It is included in some pre-workout formulations, though it is more commonly supplemented separately. Creatine replenishes phosphocreatine stores in skeletal muscle, supporting rapid ATP regeneration during high-intensity, short-duration efforts (maximal sprints, heavy lifting). Meta-analyses consistently demonstrate improvements in strength, power, and training volume with creatine supplementation.

The timing rationale for creatine as a pre-workout ingredient is weaker than for caffeine or citrulline: creatine works through chronic tissue saturation rather than acute dose effects, so including it in a pre-workout blend does not meaningfully differ from taking it at other times, provided it is taken consistently.

B vitamins

B vitamins (B1, B2, B3, B6, B12) are involved in cellular energy metabolism, supporting the conversion of carbohydrates, fats, and proteins into usable ATP. Many pre-workout formulas include a B vitamin complex, often at high doses. The evidence for B vitamin supplementation producing direct performance benefits is limited in individuals who are not deficient. Their inclusion is most relevant for those with dietary gaps — particularly B12 in individuals following plant-based diets — where deficiency may otherwise limit energy metabolism capacity.

Ingredients to Approach with More Caution

High-dose stimulant combinations

Products combining caffeine with synephrine, yohimbine, or other sympathomimetic compounds amplify the stimulant effect but also amplify cardiovascular strain, including elevated heart rate and blood pressure. These combinations are particularly high-risk for individuals with existing cardiovascular conditions and should be approached with caution and provider guidance.

Proprietary blends

Formulations that list ingredients under a proprietary blend without specifying individual ingredient doses make it impossible to evaluate whether any single component is present at a clinically effective dose. This is a significant limitation in evaluating product quality; transparent labeling with individual ingredient quantities is a reasonable standard to apply when selecting a pre-workout supplement.

Biomarkers Relevant to Regular Pre-workout Supplement Use

Active individuals using pre-workout supplements regularly have reason to monitor certain biomarkers, both to assess the physiological demands of training and to ensure that supplementation is not introducing unrecognized stress on metabolic or cardiovascular systems.

  • Ferritin — Iron depletion is common in endurance athletes; affects energy and recovery
  • Hemoglobin — Oxygen-carrying capacity; endurance performance is directly limited by anemia
  • hs-CRP — Training-induced inflammation; elevated with overtraining or inadequate recovery
  • Fasting glucose + insulin — Metabolic health baseline; insulin sensitivity affects exercise fuel utilization
  • IGF-1 — Growth hormone axis; relevant to muscle adaptation and recovery capacity
  • Vitamin D — Muscle function, recovery, and immune resilience; commonly deficient in athletes

Superpower's Baseline Blood Panel covers ferritin, hemoglobin, vitamin D, fasting glucose, fasting insulin, and hs-CRP in a single draw — providing the core metabolic and recovery-relevant context for individuals who train regularly and use performance supplements.

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before starting supplementation. Individual responses to pre-workout ingredients vary. This content does not constitute an endorsement of any specific product.

FAQs

Most pre-workout formulas are designed to be consumed 20–45 minutes before training. Caffeine reaches peak plasma concentration at approximately 30–60 minutes after ingestion. Citrulline is typically studied at 60 minutes before exercise. If a product combines multiple active ingredients, 30 minutes is a reasonable standard timing for most formulations.

For healthy adults without cardiovascular conditions, most pre-workout supplements containing caffeine, beta-alanine, and citrulline at standard doses are considered safe for regular use. Risks increase with high-stimulant products, undisclosed ingredient doses, and use by individuals with heart conditions, hypertension, or sensitivity to stimulants. Checking with a healthcare provider before beginning supplementation is appropriate, particularly if any cardiovascular risk factors are present.

Yes. Caffeine produces a transient increase in blood pressure and heart rate that typically resolves within a few hours. High-stimulant combinations (caffeine plus synephrine or yohimbine) can produce larger and more prolonged cardiovascular effects. Individuals with hypertension or a history of cardiovascular disease should use stimulant-containing pre-workouts only with provider guidance. Routine blood pressure monitoring is a reasonable practice for regular users.

No. Creatine exerts its effects through chronic muscle saturation rather than acute dosing, so timing relative to exercise is less important than daily consistency. Post-workout or any other consistent timing may be equally effective. If creatine is included in a pre-workout blend for convenience, that is acceptable — but it does not need to be specifically pre-workout in timing.

The most reliable indicators are objective performance metrics: more reps at the same weight, improved time-to-fatigue, faster recovery between sets, or better sustained power output during intervals. Subjective feelings of alertness and energy are real but can reflect caffeine effects rather than actual performance improvement. Tracking workout data over several weeks with and without supplementation provides the clearest signal of whether a product is contributing measurably to your training.

It depends on the ingredient. Creatine should be taken daily regardless of training schedule to maintain muscle saturation. Beta-alanine also accumulates over time and benefits from consistent daily dosing. Caffeine and citrulline are acute performance enhancers and offer less benefit on rest days. If your pre-workout contains mostly creatine and beta-alanine, daily use is reasonable. If it is primarily caffeine-based, rest days are a good opportunity to reduce caffeine intake and manage tolerance.

References

  1. Guest, N. S., VanDusseldorp, T. A., Nelson, M. T., Grgic, J., Schoenfeld, B. J., Jenkins, N. D. M., Arent, S. M., Antonio, J., Stout, J. R., Trexler, E. T., Smith-Ryan, A. E., Goldstein, E. R., Kalman, D. S., & Campbell, B. I. (2021). International society of sports nutrition position stand: caffeine and exercise performance. Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition, 18(1), 1. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12970-020-00383-4
  2. Nehlig, A. (2018). Interindividual Differences in Caffeine Metabolism and Factors Driving Caffeine Consumption. Pharmacological reviews, 70(2), 384-411. https://doi.org/10.1124/pr.117.014407
  3. Hobson, R. M., Saunders, B., Ball, G., Harris, R. C., & Sale, C. (2012). Effects of β-alanine supplementation on exercise performance: a meta-analysis. Amino acids, 43(1), 25-37. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00726-011-1200-z
  4. Kreider, R. B., Kalman, D. S., Antonio, J., Ziegenfuss, T. N., Wildman, R., Collins, R., Candow, D. G., Kleiner, S. M., Almada, A. L., & Lopez, H. L. (2017). International Society of Sports Nutrition position stand: safety and efficacy of creatine supplementation in exercise, sport, and medicine. Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition, 14, 18. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12970-017-0173-z
  5. Tardy, A. L., Pouteau, E., Marquez, D., Yilmaz, C., & Scholey, A. (2020). Vitamins and Minerals for Energy, Fatigue and Cognition: A Narrative Review of the Biochemical and Clinical Evidence. Nutrients, 12(1). https://doi.org/10.3390/nu12010228

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