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This Is The Newest Alternative To Caffeine — But Does It Work?

Source: MindBodyGreenView Original
lifestyleMay 8, 2026

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Integrative Health

This Is The Newest Alternative To Caffeine — But Does It Work?

Author: Sela Breen

May 08, 2026

Assistant Health Editor

By Sela Breen

Assistant Health Editor

Sela Breen is the Assistant Health Editor at mindbodygreen. She is a graduate of the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University, where she studied journalism, international studies, and theatre.

Image by Gradyreese / iStock

May 08, 2026

If you've scrolled onto the health and wellness side of social media recently, you might be seeing a new ingredient popping-up. I've seen focus pouches that claim to boost concentration without the crash, and new energy drinks that come without the jitters (one is even backed by Kim Kardashian).

The secret to these products? Paraxanthine, a compound being hailed as a "cleaner" stimulant than caffeine.

It seems like a compelling argument, especially if you start feeling anxious after one too many cups of coffee, or if you're like me and crash the second the sugary energy drink wears off. But before swapping out the caffeine for something new, it's important to ask, does the science behind Paraxanthine actually support the hype?

What is paraxanthine?

"Think of paraxanthine as caffeine's 'sequel,'" says Stevie Smith, M.S., RDN, CSSD, CDN. While marketing teams are promoting it as something entirely different, Smith says it's actually the main byproduct your body creates after processing caffeine.

When you drink coffee, your liver breaks down caffeine into three compounds. Paraxanthine is the most abundant of these, accounting for roughly 80% of caffeine's breakdown in humans, and typically peaks about four hours after you consume caffeine.

Paraxanthine and caffeine operate through similar pathways. Both act as adenosine receptor antagonists, meaning they block the brain chemical that makes you feel sleepy, which is how they promote alertness.

So paraxanthine isn't a novel lab creation. Your body already makes it every time you have caffeine heavy foods like coffee or dark chocolate. The difference is that the compound is now being isolated and added directly into products.

The "safer than caffeine" are based on preclinical data

The marketing around paraxanthine leans into what it has that caffeine doesn't, namely, less side effects. Brands suggest it offers the focus and energy benefits of caffeine with less anxiety, fewer sleep disruptions, and no crash.

There is only some preclinical research to support this framing. However, the claims are mainly derived from one rat study.

One study published in 2023 1compared paraxanthine and caffeine head-to-head in rats over 90 days. The researchers found that paraxanthine had a higher safety threshold. There was no adverse effect observed at 185 mg/kg body weight of paraxanthine, versus 150 mg/kg for caffeine. Two rats in the high-dose caffeine group died during the study, while none died in the paraxanthine groups.

The study also established that paraxanthine's LD50 (the dose at which 50% of test animals die) was 2.3-fold higher than caffeine's reported LD50. Additionally, paraxanthine showed no evidence of having the capacity to permanently alter an organism's DNA and cause mutations

Based on these findings, the authors of this study concluded that paraxanthine "could be a safer alternative to caffeine."

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You might read that and think paraxanthine sounds kind of incredible, but a critical caveat in this research is being completely overlooked in simplified social media claims.

"It's important to note that there is currently a serious lack of extensive research regarding paraxanthine toxicity in humans," Smith says.

Even the 2023 review itself acknowledges this limitation directly, stating that "human toxicity studies on paraxanthine are scarce."

This is the crux of the case against paraxanthine. The safety data that exists is largely from rat studies, and while animal research is a standard starting point, it doesn't always translate cleanly to humans. We metabolize compounds differently, respond to doses differently, and experience side effects differently.

So when you see claims that paraxanthine is "clinically proven" to be safer or more effective than caffeine, it's important to ask who it's been proven in.

Caffeine actually has a well-established safety profile

Many of the claims about paraxanthine being a "safer" alternative to caffeine hinge on the idea that caffeine is unsafe. But in reality, caffeine is one of the most well-studied food compounds and actually has a strong safety profile for most healthy adults.

Coffee consumption, in particular, has been consistently linked with longevity and better health outcomes2. A 2019 meta-analysis3 of 3.8 million individuals even found that drinking about 3.5 cups of coffee a day (about