AntioxidantModerate evidence

Green Tea

Rich in catechins (especially EGCG) and the amino acid L-theanine. Associated in cohort studies with lower cardiovascular and all-cause mortality — and L-theanine gives its caffeine a calmer, more focused character.

Also known as: gruener-tee, grüner tee, green tea, egcg, catechine

How it works

Green tea provides catechins, chiefly EGCG, that act as antioxidants and can modestly increase fat oxidation. Combined with its L-theanine and caffeine, it produces a calm, focused alertness. Observational studies link regular intake to lower cardiovascular risk.

Goals
Longevity (broad)MetabolicCardiovascular
Timing
Any time
Price tier
Low

Dosage

Observational studies often show benefit from 2–3 cups/day. Well tolerated as a beverage.

Considerations

As with coffee, the benefit comes from the whole matrix, not caffeine alone (see the caffeine entry). Use caution with high-dose EGCG extracts (supplements): they have occasionally been linked to liver strain — as a beverage this risk is essentially absent. More concentrated as a powder: see matcha.

VeganNot during pregnancy
Form
LiquidPowder

Scientific detail

Mechanisms
EGCG & catechins (antioxidant, anti-inflammatory)L-theanine: calm focusImproved endothelial & metabolic function
Hallmarks of aging
Chronic inflammation
Evidence base

Studies on Green Tea

18,486 studies total · Open on PubMed

View all studies

Where to buy

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Articles on Green Tea