Back to Supplement Score
58
SCORE

Coconut oil (supplement form)

MCTs · Energy · Antimicrobial claims
Tier 3 — Trending

What it is

Contains about 50 percent lauric acid and smaller amounts of medium-chain triglycerides. Despite heavy marketing, coconut oil raises LDL cholesterol more than other plant oils. The AHA advises against it as a heart-healthy fat. The MCT content is lower than pure MCT oil supplements. The antimicrobial benefits of lauric acid shown in lab studies do not reliably translate to oral supplementation. Cooking with it occasionally is fine.

Efficacy
2/5
Safety
3/5
Research
2/5
Onset
4/5
Cost
4/5
Drug-int.
5/5

Dose

Not recommended as a health supplement — raises LDL cholesterol comparably to other saturated fats. If MCT effects are the goal, use MCT oil (5–20 mL/day, build up gradually). If using coconut oil in cooking, do so in moderation as you would any saturated fat.

Time of day & tips

If taken, use with food. Raises LDL cholesterol — avoid if managing cardiovascular risk. Use MCT oil instead for ketogenic benefits.

Compare or learn more

Compare with another supplement →
Browse by symptom →
Open the full interactive view →

Educational reference, not medical advice. About · Methodology · Privacy · Terms