We use essential cookies (authentication, your saved goals/stack) by default. With your permission we'll also enable privacy-respecting analytics (Vercel Web Analytics, anonymous load-time metrics) and error-replay diagnostics (Sentry — DOM snapshots only when an error fires) so we can fix bugs faster. Learn more about cookies
Head-to-head evidence comparison — which supplement is right for you?
Green Tea Extract wins 2 of 3 categories. Both are solid choices — the best pick depends on your specific goals.
Verdict
Mostly mechanism / observational
1 of 1 studies with measurable effects showed benefit.
Top outcomes
Verdict
Likely helps
8 of 10 studies with measurable effects showed benefit.
Top outcomes
Shared outcomes (1)
Outcomes where both Cinnamon and Green Tea Extract have evidence — compare verdict strength side-by-side.
1000-6000mg (1-6g) cinnamon powder daily, or 250-500mg standardized extract; prefer Ceylon for regular use
with-meals
Ceylon cinnamon powder or standardized aqueous extract
250-500mg EGCG (or 500-1000mg green tea extract)
With meals, Morning or pre-exercise
Standardized extract (45-50% EGCG)
4-12 weeks
4-12 weeks
8-12 weeks
8-12 weeks
Acute and 4-8 weeks
Acute
30-60 minutes
The effect of cinnamon supplementation on glycemic control in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus: An updated systematic review and dose-response meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials
Phytotherapy research : PTR (2024) · Meta analysis
Significant reduction in fasting blood sugar (SMD −1.32; 95% CI −1.77 to −0.87; p<0.001)
Effects of cinnamon supplementation on metabolic biomarkers in individuals with type 2 diabetes
Nutrition reviews (2025) · Meta analysis
Improvements in glycemic and lipid biomarkers reported
Efficacy and safety of cinnamon in type 2 diabetes mellitus and pre-diabetes patients: A meta-analysis and meta-regression
Diabetes research and clinical practice (2019) · Meta analysis
Significant reduction in fasting blood glucose
Green tea (Camellia sinensis) for the prevention of cancer
The Cochrane database of systematic reviews (2020) · Meta analysis · n=1795
For incident prostate cancer, the summary risk ratio (RR) in the green tea-supplemented participants was 0.50 (95% confidence interval (CI) 0.18 to 1.36), based on three studies and involving 201 participants (low-certainty evidence).
Impact of flavan-3-ols on blood pressure and endothelial function in diverse populations: a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials
European journal of preventive cardiology (2025) · Meta analysis · n=5205
Flavan-3-ol interventions included epicatechin, epigallocatechin-gallate, cocoa products, tea, grape extract, and apples delivering 586 mg (95% CI 510, 662) total flavan-3-ols.
The effects of green tea extract supplementation on body composition, obesity-related hormones and oxidative stress markers: a grade-assessed systematic review and dose-response meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials
The British journal of nutrition (2024) · Meta analysis · n=3802
Pooled effect sizes indicated that BM, BFP, BMI and MDA significantly reduced following GTE supplementation.
Based on meta-analysis showing 9.29 mg/dl LDL reduction with 107-856 mg/d EGCG. Optimal cardiovascular benefits observed at 400-500 mg/day. Take with food to reduce GI side effects.
AI-estimated from published studies. Interpret as directional guidance.
Green Tea Extract has a higher evidence score (7.5/10 vs 6.8/10) and wins in 2 of 3 categories.
For manage blood sugar, Cinnamon has a higher relevance score (88 vs 50).
No known interactions between Cinnamon and Green Tea Extract have been documented in our database. However, always consult a healthcare provider before combining supplements.