Curcumin (Turmeric)
The main active compound in turmeric, the yellow spice used in curry. Studied extensively for its anti-inflammatory and antioxidant effects. In the context of weight loss, the evidence shows a small but real effect — likely related to reducing the chronic inflammation that accompanies obesity rather than directly burning fat.
Quick read · 3 min
- •Evidence: Moderate — some consistent evidence but with limitations
- •A 2023 network meta-analysis of 111 randomised controlled trials found that curcumin produced 0.
- •Generally safe at supplement doses.
- •Unlike prescription drugs, supplements are not tested for effectiveness by the FDA before sale
Based on clinical trials · No rankings · Every claim linked to source
Last reviewed: March 2026
How it works
Curcumin inhibits several inflammatory pathways (including NF-κB signalling) that are chronically activated in obesity. Chronic inflammation contributes to insulin resistance and metabolic dysfunction — reducing it may modestly improve how the body processes fat and glucose. Curcumin has very poor natural absorption from food; supplements typically include piperine (black pepper extract) or use specialised formulations to improve bioavailability.
What the evidence shows
A 2023 network meta-analysis of 111 randomised controlled trials found that curcumin produced 0.82 kg more weight loss than placebo — moderate certainty evidence. This is a modest effect. Additional benefits on blood sugar and cholesterol have also been shown in trials, which may be more relevant for some people than the weight loss effect alone. The results are consistent across studies, but the magnitude is small.
Safety
Generally safe at supplement doses. GI discomfort (nausea, diarrhoea) can occur at high doses. May interact with blood-thinning medications — curcumin has mild anticoagulant effects. Turmeric in food is safe at culinary quantities. High-dose supplements (1g+ of curcumin per day) have been linked to rare cases of liver injury in people taking large amounts for extended periods — stick to recommended doses.
Community insights
These are personal experiences shared in public online communities — not medical advice.
“Plain turmeric powder from the spice aisle has almost no bioavailability. You need a supplement with piperine or a specialised formulation for any meaningful absorption.”
“The anti-inflammatory effect is more reliably demonstrated than the weight loss effect. If you have joint pain alongside weight, it might be worth trying for both reasons.”
Common questions
After reading this page, most people compare this with other supplements, look at prescription options, or check what they can do today without a prescription.