Inositol vs Taurine
Both are commonly discussed for anxiety & stress. Inositol and Taurine both have weak evidence — Taurine edges ahead on research volume (20 vs 20 studies referenced).
Evidence last reviewed May 2026
Evidence
🟠Weak Evidence
🟠Weak Evidence
Research says
Research agrees
Research agrees
Expert mentions
96
1 recommend
156
2 recommend
Studies
20
referenced
20
referenced
Study dose
2000–18000mg
Doses in PCOS and gestational diabetes research typically range from 2,000–4,000 mg/day of myo-inositol, while psychiatric studies (OCD, panic disorder, bipolar) have used up to 18,000 mg/day in divided doses; the D-chiro-inositol form is studied at much lower doses and the optimal myo- to D-chiro ratio (e.g., 40:1) varies by indication.
500–6000mg
Human studies and expert consensus reference a range of 1–6 grams per day, with energy drinks commonly delivering ~1 gram per serving; animal-to-human scaling from the 2023 longevity research suggests a broad human-equivalent range of roughly 500 mg to 6 g daily.
Best timing
MorningEveningWith food
MorningPre-workout
Who recommends
Caution
Generally safe
Generally safe
Inositol
Key findings
- ·Multiple meta-analyses support myo-inositol (typically 2–4 g/day) for improving metabolic and hormonal parameters in women with PCOS, representing the strongest evidence base for this supplement.
- ·Two meta-analyses of randomized controlled trials indicate that myo-inositol supplementation during pregnancy may reduce the incidence of gestational diabetes mellitus.
- ·Systematic reviews and network meta-analyses suggest inositol may provide modest benefit in Hashimoto's thyroiditis and subclinical hypothyroidism, though evidence is less definitive.
Evidence gaps
- ·Long-term safety and efficacy data are lacking across most indications — most trials are short-duration and do not establish whether benefits persist or whether adverse effects emerge with extended use.
- ·The optimal dose, form (myo-inositol vs. D-chiro-inositol vs. combined), and ratio for specific conditions have not been established through rigorous head-to-head dose-comparison trials.
Taurine
Key findings
- ·A meta-analysis found a modest positive effect of taurine supplementation on endurance exercise performance in humans, though effect sizes and methodological details are not fully reported in this evidence set.
- ·Multiple reviews consistently describe taurine's mechanistic roles in mitochondrial function, antioxidant defense, cardiovascular health, and calcium homeostasis, though most supporting evidence is from animal or in vitro studies.
- ·Taurine is classified as conditionally essential, meaning the body can synthesize it but may not produce sufficient amounts under conditions such as aging, illness, or high physiological stress.
Evidence gaps
- ·There is a near-absence of well-designed, placebo-controlled human RCTs isolating taurine's effects in healthy populations — most human data comes from multi-ingredient products or observational research, making causation difficult to establish.
- ·Optimal dosing, supplementation duration, and long-term safety in human populations have not been systematically studied in the evidence available, leaving basic clinical parameters undefined.