Supplements: By Goal — Best Options for Each Training Objective

Category: reference Updated: 2026-04-04

Only 6 supplements are Tier 1 across all goals. Protein and creatine appear in 4 of 6 goal categories. Most goal-specific additions (adaptogens, sleep aids) are Tier 2 at best — get fundamentals right before adding category-specific supplements.

Key Data Points
MeasureValueUnitNotes
Evidence TierReferencemulti-tierThis page is a cross-goal reference card — individual supplement pages contain tier assignments
Goals Covered6categoriesStrength/Hypertrophy, Endurance, Body Composition, Recovery, Sleep, Cognitive Performance
Cross-Goal Supplements2countCreatine and protein appear in 4 of 6 goal categories — always foundational
Supplements with Goal-Specific Evidence4countBeta-alanine (endurance buffer), melatonin (sleep onset), dietary nitrates (endurance O2), citrulline (high-rep training)
Minimum Effective Dose — Protein1.6g/kg/dayBelow this threshold, muscle-building goals are protein-limited regardless of other supplements
Creatine Time to Saturation28days at 5g/dayLoading (20g/day × 5 days) achieves same saturation in ~7 days

Supplement decisions by goal. Each row shows the top 3 evidence-backed options with dose, tier, and context. Tier 1 first — always.

Goal × Supplement Reference Table

GoalSupplementEvidence TierStandard DoseTimingKey BenefitPriority
Strength / HypertrophyCreatine MonohydrateTier 13–5g/dayAny time+20% PCr → more reps at heavy loads#1
Strength / HypertrophyProtein (1.6–2.2g/kg/day)Tier 10.4g/kg per mealAcross all mealsMPS ceiling; without adequate protein no supplement matters#1
Strength / HypertrophyCaffeineTier 13–6mg/kg60min preStrength output +3–5%; pain perception ↓#2
EnduranceDietary NitratesTier 1~400mg nitrate (~500ml beetroot juice)2–3hr preMitochondrial O₂ efficiency; VO₂ cost ↓ 3–5%#1
EnduranceBeta-AlanineTier 13.2–6.4g/day (split)Daily (chronic loading)Carnosine ↑ → muscle pH buffer → delays fatigue at 1–4min efforts#2
EnduranceCaffeineTier 13–6mg/kg60min preAerobic endurance, pacing, perceived effort#2
Body CompositionProtein (≥1.6g/kg/day)Tier 1Per daily targetWith mealsPreserves muscle during deficit; highest thermic effect#1
Body CompositionCaffeineTier 1200–400mgMorning/pre-workoutMild thermogenesis, fat oxidation, appetite suppression#2
Body CompositionCreatineTier 13–5g/dayAny timePreserves lean mass during deficit; strength in cut#2
RecoveryProteinTier 10.4g/kg post-exercisePost-workoutMPS — muscle repair substrate#1
RecoveryOmega-3 (EPA+DHA)Tier 21–3g EPA+DHAWith mealsAnti-inflammatory; DOMS reduction 24–48hr post#2
RecoveryTart CherryTier 2480ml juice or 30ml concentratePost-workoutAnthocyanin anti-inflammatory; DOMS ↓ in RCTs#3
SleepMelatoninTier 20.5–3mg30–60min pre-sleepCircadian phase shift; sleep onset latency ↓#1
SleepMagnesium GlycinateTier 2200–400mg1hr pre-sleepGABA modulation; muscle relaxation; common deficiency in athletes#2
SleepAshwagandhaTier 2300–600mg (KSM-66)DailyCortisol ↓; HRV ↑; sleep quality in stressed populations#3
Cognitive PerformanceCaffeineTier 1100–200mgPer cognitive demandAdenosine blockade; working memory, attention, reaction time#1
Cognitive PerformanceCreatineTier 13–5g/day (20g acute if sleep-deprived)Any timeBrain PCr ↑ 5–15%; memory in older adults; cognitive decline reversal with sleep deprivation#2
Cognitive PerformanceAshwagandhaTier 2300–600mgDailyCortisol ↓ → improved working memory in high-stress cohorts#3

Supplement Priority by Goal — Summary Matrix

SupplementStrengthEnduranceBody CompRecoverySleepCognition
Creatine✅ #1✅ #2✅ #2
Protein✅ #1✅ #1✅ #1
Caffeine✅ #2✅ #2✅ #2❌ avoid✅ #1
Beta-Alanine✅ #2
Dietary Nitrates✅ #1
Omega-3✅ #2
Tart Cherry✅ #3
Melatonin✅ #1
Magnesium Glycinate✅ #2
Ashwagandha✅ #3✅ #3

How to use this data: Pick your primary goal and read the #1 and #2 supplements for that goal first. Add cross-goal supplements (creatine, protein) regardless of primary goal. Do not add Tier 3 category-specific supplements until Tier 1 fundamentals are saturated.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Which supplements overlap the most goals?

Creatine monohydrate and protein supplementation (whey or equivalent) appear across strength, hypertrophy, recovery, and cognitive performance. These are the most universal. Caffeine appears in strength, endurance, and cognitive categories. If budget is limited, creatine + protein covers the broadest evidence base.

Should I use goal-specific stacks from pre-made products?

No. Pre-made goal stacks typically add cost without adding evidence. A 'recovery stack' product often contains tart cherry, glutamine, BCAAs, and magnesium — of these, only magnesium (if deficient) has strong individual evidence. Buy ingredients separately: you pay for what works. See cost-per-serving-comparison for dollar comparisons.

Does the order of goal priority matter?

Yes. Always address fundamentals (protein intake, sleep, training consistency) before adding goal-specific supplements. An athlete sleeping 5 hours will get more from melatonin + sleep hygiene than from any performance stack. An athlete under-eating protein gets more from hitting 1.6g/kg/day than from any individual amino acid product.

What is the evidence for cognitive performance supplements?

Creatine (Tier 1 under metabolic stress/sleep deprivation) and caffeine (Tier 1 for alertness and working memory) have the strongest evidence. Everything else in the cognitive performance category is Tier 2 at best — ashwagandha reduces cortisol which indirectly supports cognition, but it is not a direct cognitive enhancer in the way caffeine is.

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