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Thermogenic fat burners

Overhyped
OverhypedFat loss

Active part

Mostly caffeine

Need it?

No

Vs diet/exer

Worse

Verdict

Save your money

Does it work?

  • -Mostly no. "Thermogenic" blends nudge your metabolism up by a few percent for a few hours, almost entirely from caffeine — but in real trials that barely moves the scale, and when tested head-to-head, fat burners lose to plain diet and exercise. You're paying premium prices for a hidden dose of caffeine plus a long list of ingredients that don't do much.

The catch

  • -The 'thermogenic boost' is real but tiny — a small, short-lived bump in metabolic rate that's driven almost entirely by caffeine. The green tea, L-carnitine, forskolin, raspberry ketones and exotic extracts add cost, not results.
  • -In a meta-analysis of 21 trials (about 2,400 people), fat burners produced only limited, statistically shaky changes in body mass — and were less effective than diet and exercise done without any supplement.
  • -Proprietary blends hide how much caffeine you're actually getting. A serving can stack a large dose on top of your coffee, so you're paying for stimulant jitters dressed up as fat loss.

Better option

  • -Keep a modest calorie deficit with enough protein and resistance training; if you want a real pre-workout lift, just take plain caffeine (3-6 mg/kg) for a fraction of the price.

Safety

  • -These blends can carry a big, undisclosed caffeine load — easy to overdo when combined with coffee or pre-workout, causing jitters, insomnia, racing heart and raised blood pressure.
  • -Skip them if you're pregnant, breastfeeding, sensitive to stimulants, or have heart, blood pressure or anxiety conditions. Some 'fat burner' brands have been recalled for hidden or banned stimulants (e.g. DMAA), so check ingredient lists carefully.
  • -Fat loss comes from a sustained calorie deficit — no pill substitutes for that, and these add cost and side-effect risk for little return.

Key research

Related

Educational information, not medical advice. Talk to a healthcare professional before starting a supplement — especially if you're pregnant, nursing, or managing a health condition.

Reviewed Jun 2026

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