
Pre-Workout's Buzz: Real Effect or Just Placebo?
Published: 2026-06-25
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.
Let the data settle it.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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).
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.
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?
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.
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.
Related supplements
PR
Small gains in maximal strength and power

Improved muscular endurance (increased repetitions confirmed in research)
The links below include affiliate links (PR).
Related research
Sources
- Grgic J et al. (2018) Br J Sports Med — Effects of caffeine intake on muscle strength and power: a systematic review and meta-analysis
- Harty PS et al. (2018) J Int Soc Sports Nutr — Multi-ingredient pre-workout supplements, safety implications, and performance outcomes: a brief review
- Hobson RM et al. (2012) Amino Acids — Effects of β-alanine supplementation on exercise performance: a meta-analysis
- Pérez-Guisado J & Jakeman PM (2010) J Strength Cond Res — Citrulline malate enhances athletic anaerobic performance and relieves muscle soreness
Published: 2026-06-25

Written by
Shingo YoshizakiSoftware 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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Reviewed by: Tomonobu Someda
Content reviewed from the perspective of coaching practice and supplement-industry experience