The global energy supplement market exceeds $50 billion annually. Most products in it are expensive placebos for people who are not deficient in anything. The supplements that genuinely improve energy do so either by correcting a deficiency or through mechanisms with proper clinical trial support.
Evidence-based energy supplementation in 2026 requires distinguishing between three categories: supplements that work for people with specific deficiencies, supplements with genuine clinical evidence for people without deficiencies, and supplements that do not have adequate human evidence despite popular appeal. The first category is the most impactful and the most overlooked.
Category 1: Deficiency Corrections (Highest Impact, Most Overlooked)
Iron
Iron deficiency is the most common nutrient deficiency globally and one of the leading causes of fatigue. Iron is required for haemoglobin production, which carries oxygen to cells. Iron deficiency anaemia produces fatigue, weakness, impaired cognitive function, and reduced physical performance. Supplementing iron in iron-deficient individuals produces significant, measurable improvements in energy and cognitive function within weeks.
The essential point: iron supplementation in individuals with normal iron levels produces no energy benefit and can cause harm (constipation, nausea, and at high doses, serious toxicity). Get a ferritin blood test before supplementing. If ferritin is below 30 ng/mL, supplementation is likely warranted. Discuss with a doctor.
Vitamin D
Vitamin D deficiency is extremely common in populations with limited sun exposure, particularly in northern latitudes, people who work indoors, and darker-skinned individuals in low-sunlight environments. Deficiency is consistently associated with fatigue, mood impairment, and reduced physical performance.
Evidence for supplementation: strong for correcting deficiency-related fatigue. Evidence for benefits in individuals with normal vitamin D levels: limited. The intervention is a blood test, not a blanket supplement recommendation.
B Vitamins (B12 and Folate Specifically)
B12 deficiency is most common in strict vegans and vegetarians (who consume no animal products), older adults (absorption declines with age), and people taking metformin (which impairs B12 absorption). Deficiency produces fatigue, neurological symptoms, and megaloblastic anaemia. Supplementing B12 in deficient individuals produces clear improvements.
B vitamin complexes heavily marketed for energy contain the full range of B vitamins at doses well above dietary requirements. For individuals without deficiency, the extra B vitamins are excreted in urine at the cost of expensive bright yellow urine. The energy benefit is from correcting deficiency, not from taking B vitamins in addition to adequate dietary intake.
Category 2: Evidence-Based Supplements Without Deficiency Requirement
Creatine Monohydrate
Creatine is the most extensively researched supplement in sports science, with over 1,000 published studies. It increases phosphocreatine stores in muscle, improving the regeneration of ATP during short, intense efforts. Evidence for improved strength, power, and short-duration exercise performance is very strong.
In 2026, research on creatine has expanded to cognitive benefits. Multiple studies show improved cognitive performance on tasks requiring short-term memory and processing speed, particularly in sleep-deprived individuals and older adults. Recommended dose: 3 to 5g daily of creatine monohydrate. No loading phase is required for most people.
Caffeine
Caffeine is the most widely consumed psychoactive substance globally and one of the most evidence-backed ergogenic aids available. It reliably increases alertness, reduces perceived effort during physical and mental tasks, and improves performance on attention and reaction time measures. These effects are well-replicated across hundreds of controlled studies.
The dose-response relationship: 100 to 200mg for sustained alertness improvement with minimal side effects. 400mg is the upper end of the safe range for most healthy adults (Mayo Clinic). Effects diminish with tolerance; caffeine-free periods restore sensitivity. Timing matters: caffeine’s half-life is approximately 5 to 7 hours, meaning afternoon consumption commonly impairs sleep quality.
Ashwagandha
Ashwagandha (Withania somnifera) is an adaptogenic herb with a growing body of controlled trial evidence for reducing cortisol levels, reducing perceived stress and anxiety, and improving fatigue scores in stressed adults. A 2023 meta-analysis in the Journal of Clinical Medicine found statistically significant improvements in stress and fatigue measures across multiple randomised controlled trials.
Evidence is strongest for stress-related fatigue rather than fatigue from other causes. Standard evidence-based dose: 300 to 600mg of ashwagandha root extract daily for 8 to 12 weeks. Look for KSM-66 or Sensoril forms that have been used in clinical trials.
Coenzyme Q10 (CoQ10)
CoQ10 is essential for mitochondrial energy production. Levels decline with age and are depleted by statin medications. For individuals taking statins who experience statin-associated muscle fatigue, CoQ10 supplementation has reasonable evidence for symptom improvement. For general population fatigue without these specific factors, evidence is weaker. Typical dose: 100 to 200mg daily with food.
Category 3: Popular But Limited Evidence
Rhodiola Rosea: Some positive studies on stress and fatigue, but evidence quality is mixed. May have modest benefits for acute stress-induced fatigue but effects are smaller than ashwagandha in head-to-head studies. Not well enough evidenced to strongly recommend.
Maca: Limited quality human evidence. Most studies are small and short. Not currently supported by enough evidence to recommend for energy specifically.
Ginseng: Modest evidence for cognitive function and fatigue in specific populations (cancer patients, older adults). Evidence for general healthy adults is less convincing.
Most ‘energy blends’: Products combining multiple ingredients at sub-effective doses in a proprietary blend do not have evidence for the blend itself. The individual ingredients at effective doses do. Blends are a formulation strategy that reduces raw material cost, not an evidence-based approach.
The Foundation Before Supplements
No supplement corrects the fatigue caused by consistently poor sleep, sedentary lifestyle, chronic dehydration, or significantly calorie-restricted diets. These foundations are larger determinants of energy than any supplement and should be addressed before optimising supplement protocols.
Supplement categories in priority order: correct deficiencies first (blood tests before spending), then consider evidence-based non-deficiency supplements if foundational factors are in place.
What is the best supplement for energy in 2026?
It depends on the cause of fatigue. For deficiency-related fatigue (very common): iron, vitamin D, or B12 depending on which is deficient, confirmed by blood test. For general energy and cognitive function: creatine monohydrate has the strongest evidence base. For stress-related fatigue: ashwagandha. Caffeine is the most reliably effective acute energy aid.
Do B vitamin supplements actually improve energy?
Only in people deficient in B vitamins (particularly B12 and folate). For individuals with adequate B vitamin status from diet or existing supplementation, additional B vitamins produce no measurable energy benefit. The urine turns bright yellow as excess B vitamins are excreted.
Is creatine just for athletes or does it help with general energy?
Creatine has strong evidence for physical performance and growing evidence for cognitive function, particularly in sleep-deprived individuals and older adults. It is not exclusively for athletes. 3 to 5g of creatine monohydrate daily is safe, well-tolerated, and has genuine evidence for both physical and cognitive energy in non-athletes.
Does ashwagandha actually work for fatigue?
Clinical trial evidence supports ashwagandha for reducing stress-related fatigue and cortisol levels. Multiple randomised controlled trials show significant improvements in fatigue and stress measures at 300 to 600mg of standardised extract (KSM-66 or Sensoril) over 8 to 12 weeks. Evidence is strongest for stress-related fatigue rather than fatigue from other causes.
What should you check before taking energy supplements?
A blood panel including ferritin (iron stores), vitamin D (25-hydroxyvitamin D), B12, and a full blood count to identify deficiency-related causes of fatigue. These tests cost relatively little and identify the supplement that will most significantly improve energy before spending money on products that address causes you do not have.
What is the safest daily caffeine amount for energy?
100 to 200mg for mild sustained alertness improvement. Up to 400mg is within the generally recognised safe range for most healthy adults. Above this level, most people experience anxiety, jitteriness, and heart rate elevation disproportionate to the benefit. Caffeine timing matters: avoiding caffeine after 1 to 2 PM prevents sleep quality impairment from the 5 to 7 hour half-life.
Test Before You Supplement
The most expensive supplements are the ones that address problems you do not have. A blood test for ferritin, vitamin D, and B12 costs less than most supplement products and identifies whether deficiency correction would be more impactful than any performance supplement.
Correct deficiencies first. Then address foundations (sleep, exercise, hydration). Then consider evidence-based supplements for specific goals. This order produces far better results than the reverse.