Nootropic Ingredients Guide 2026
Evidence-based breakdown of the most studied nootropic compounds available in the EU. Clinical doses, mechanisms of action, and which EU-compliant stacks contain each ingredient.
| Ingredient | Category | Clinical dose | Time to effect | Products |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lion's Mane | Mushroom | 500–1000mg/day (standardised fruiting body extract) | 4–8 weeks of consistent use | |
| Bacopa Monnieri | Herb | 300–450mg/day (standardised to 55% bacosides) | 6–12 weeks of consistent use | |
| Citicoline (CDP-Choline) | Cholinergic | 250–500mg/day | Acute effects within 1–2 hours; optimal at 4–6 weeks | |
| L-Theanine | Amino Acid | 100–200mg/day (often paired with caffeine at 1:2 ratio) | 30–60 minutes (acute) | |
| Rhodiola Rosea | Adaptogen | 200–600mg/day (standardised to 3% rosavins, 1% salidroside) | 1–2 weeks for baseline effects; acute anti-fatigue within hours | |
| Phosphatidylserine | Cholinergic | 100–300mg/day (soy-free sunflower-derived preferred) | 4–6 weeks for memory effects; cortisol reduction within 2 weeks | |
| Alpha-GPC | Cholinergic | 300–600mg/day | 1–2 hours (acute); optimal cognitive effects at 4 weeks | |
| Ashwagandha (KSM-66) | Adaptogen | 300–600mg/day (KSM-66 extract) | 2–4 weeks for anxiety/stress; 4–8 weeks for cognitive effects | |
| Huperzine A | Herb | 50–200mcg/day (note: micrograms, not milligrams) | 30–60 minutes (acute) | |
| L-Tyrosine (NALT) | Amino Acid | 500–2000mg/day (L-Tyrosine); 300–500mg as NALT | 30–60 minutes before a demanding cognitive task | |
| Caffeine | Herb | 100–200mg for cognitive enhancement | 15–45 minutes (acute) | |
| Ginkgo Biloba | Herb | 120–240mg/day (standardised extract EGb 761) | 4–6 weeks for cognitive effects; acute blood flow effects within hours | |
| DHA (Omega-3) | Herb | 500–1000mg DHA/day (often combined with EPA) | 8–12 weeks for cognitive effects | |
| Maritime Pine Bark Extract | Herb | 100–200mg/day (Pycnogenol or equivalent standardised extract) | 4–8 weeks | |
| Acetyl-L-Carnitine (ALCAR) | Amino Acid | 500–2000mg/day | 2–4 weeks for mental energy; 8–12 weeks for neuroprotective effects | |
| Lutemax 2020 | Vitamin | 20mg/day (10mg lutein + 10mg zeaxanthin isomers) | 2–4 weeks for eye fatigue reduction; 6 months for measurable MPOD increase | |
| Oat Straw Extract | Herb | 800–1600mg/day (green oat extract, 10:1 concentration) | 1–2 hours (acute); 4 weeks for sustained effects | |
| Zynamite (Mangifera indica) | Herb | 140–300mg/day (standardised to >60% mangiferin) | 1–2 hours (acute) | |
| Dynamine (Methylliberine) | Herb | 100–200mg/day | 15–30 minutes (acute, fast onset) |
Lion's Mane
MushroomA 2009 double-blind, placebo-controlled trial (Mori et al.) found significant improvements in cognitive function scores in mild cognitive impairment subjects after 16 weeks of 3g/day. A 2020 study found measurable nerve regeneration effects at 500mg standardised extract. Evidence is strongest for long-term neuroprotection rather than acute effects.
Bacopa Monnieri
HerbA meta-analysis of 9 RCTs (Kongkeaw et al., 2014) found Bacopa significantly improved attention, cognitive processing, and working memory versus placebo. Effects are cumulative — most studies measure outcomes at 8–12 weeks. Best evidence is for memory consolidation rather than acute recall.
Citicoline (CDP-Choline)
CholinergicMultiple RCTs (Spiers et al., 1996; Secades & Lorenzo, 2006) show citicoline improves attention, working memory, and verbal memory in healthy adults and cognitive decline patients. It is one of the most bioavailable choline sources — studies show ~18% greater cognitive improvement compared to choline bitartrate.
L-Theanine
Amino AcidA 2008 RCT (Haskell et al.) found the L-theanine + caffeine combination significantly improved attention and alertness vs. either compound alone. Multiple studies confirm alpha wave induction within 45 minutes. It is one of the best-evidenced acute nootropics for calm focus without sedation.
Rhodiola Rosea
AdaptogenA 2009 RCT (Shevtsov et al.) found significant reductions in mental fatigue and improved cognitive function in night-shift physicians after single doses. A larger 2012 Swedish study confirmed sustained benefits for stress-induced burnout over 12 weeks. Strongest evidence for anti-fatigue and stress resilience.
Phosphatidylserine
CholinergicFDA allows a qualified health claim for PS and reduced risk of dementia. Multiple RCTs (Crook et al., 1991; Cenacchi et al., 1993) show improvements in memory, learning, and concentration in age-related cognitive decline. The 2010 soy-free sunflower-derived form shows equivalent bioavailability to the original bovine-cortex-derived PS used in older trials.
Alpha-GPC
CholinergicItalian multicenter trials (De Jesus Moreno, 2003) in Alzheimer's patients found Alpha-GPC improved memory scores more than placebo over 90 days. Sports studies (Bellar et al., 2015) confirm power output increases in athletes at 600mg. Of all choline sources, Alpha-GPC has the strongest acute cognitive data.
Ashwagandha (KSM-66)
AdaptogenA 2019 RCT (Choudhary et al.) found KSM-66 at 300mg twice daily significantly improved memory, attention, and information processing speed versus placebo over 8 weeks. A 2012 RCT showed 27.9% reduction in cortisol. KSM-66 has the most clinical trials of any ashwagandha extract (>24 gold-standard studies).
Huperzine A
HerbMultiple Chinese RCTs (Xu et al., 1995; Zhang et al., 2002) show Huperzine A significantly improved memory and learning in Alzheimer's patients and students. A meta-analysis of 20 studies confirms its efficacy for memory. Requires cycling (5 days on, 2 days off) due to long half-life and potential acetylcholine accumulation.
L-Tyrosine (NALT)
Amino AcidMilitary research (Neri et al., 1995; Deijen et al., 1999) shows tyrosine supplementation significantly reduced performance decrements from sleep deprivation and cold stress. A 2015 meta-analysis confirmed benefits specifically during multitasking and high-demand cognitive scenarios. Benefits are most pronounced under stress, not in rested baseline conditions.
Caffeine
HerbCaffeine is the most studied psychoactive compound in the world. Hundreds of RCTs demonstrate reliable improvements in alertness, reaction time, sustained attention, and mood. A 2016 meta-analysis (McLellan et al.) confirmed cognitive benefits at 100–300mg. Effects are dose-dependent with diminishing returns above 400mg/day. Tolerance develops to some effects (subjective alertness) but not others (reaction time, vigilance).
Ginkgo Biloba
HerbGinkgo is one of the most studied herbal nootropics with over 400 clinical trials. The landmark GEM trial (2008, n=3,069) found no benefit for dementia prevention in healthy elderly. However, meta-analyses of shorter trials (Tan et al., 2015) show modest improvements in cognitive function and daily living in existing mild cognitive impairment. EGb 761 is the most studied extract form. Benefits are most consistent in populations with existing cognitive decline rather than healthy young adults.
DHA (Omega-3)
HerbDHA is essential for brain development and maintenance. Observational studies consistently link higher omega-3 intake to reduced cognitive decline risk. However, RCT results are mixed: a 2012 Cochrane review found no benefit of omega-3 supplementation for preventing cognitive decline in healthy elderly. More targeted research (Yurko-Mauro et al., 2010) showed 900mg DHA/day improved episodic memory in age-related cognitive decline. Benefits are most consistent in populations with low baseline omega-3 status and existing cognitive concerns.
Maritime Pine Bark Extract
HerbA 2014 Pycnogenol RCT (Belcaro et al.) in healthy professionals showed significant improvements in attention, memory, and executive function after 12 weeks at 150mg/day. A 2012 trial in elderly subjects found improved cognitive function and reduced oxidative stress markers. The evidence base is smaller than for ingredients like Bacopa or Ginkgo but consistently positive. Most studies use the branded Pycnogenol extract (65-75% proanthocyanidins).
Acetyl-L-Carnitine (ALCAR)
Amino AcidA 2003 meta-analysis (Montgomery et al.) of 21 RCTs found ALCAR produced significant improvement in cognitive function and reduced cognitive deterioration in mild cognitive impairment and early Alzheimer's. Dose range across studies was 1500-3000mg/day. In healthy young adults, evidence is thinner — a few small trials show modest improvements in mental energy and processing speed. ALCAR is better supported as a neuroprotective agent for aging brains than as an acute cognitive enhancer.
Lutemax 2020
VitaminThe LAMA II trial (Stringham et al., 2017) found 20mg Lutemax 2020 daily for 6 months significantly improved MPOD, visual processing speed, and glare recovery time versus placebo. A 2019 study in healthy young adults showed reduced screen-related eye strain and headache frequency at 12 weeks. Evidence is strongest for visual-cognitive performance rather than traditional memory/focus nootropic effects.
Oat Straw Extract
HerbA 2011 RCT (Berry et al.) found 1600mg green oat extract acutely improved attention and concentration on the Stroop test in healthy adults. A 2017 trial (Kennedy et al.) confirmed dose-dependent improvements in cognitive function and cerebral blood flow at 800mg and 1600mg. Evidence is moderate — fewer trials than top-tier nootropics, but consistently positive for acute attention.
Zynamite (Mangifera indica)
HerbA 2020 RCT (Lopez et al.) found 300mg Zynamite acutely improved reaction time, attention, and working memory versus placebo. A 2019 sports performance study showed Zynamite + luteolin (Dynamine) improved repeated sprint performance and cognitive function under physical fatigue. Evidence base is small but growing — Nektium (the manufacturer) funds most research.
Dynamine (Methylliberine)
HerbA 2020 pharmacokinetic study confirmed rapid absorption and short half-life (~2 hours). A 2019 pilot study showed 100mg Dynamine improved subjective energy, focus, and motivation without affecting heart rate or blood pressure. Evidence base is very early — primarily pharmacokinetic and pilot data from Compound Solutions (the manufacturer). No large-scale RCTs published yet.