Beetroot juice raises VO₂max in recreational exercisers — a 38-trial meta-analysis finally isolates the effect
2026/6/24 · 7:19

Beetroot juice raises VO₂max in recreational exercisers — a 38-trial meta-analysis finally isolates the effect

A June 2026 systematic review and meta-analysis in Frontiers in Nutrition (Qin & Kim; 38 trials, 703 participants) is the first study to isolate VO₂max as a primary outcome for beetroot juice supplementation. The pooled effect is small but significant (SMD = 0.24; moderate GRADE certainty), and it concentrates almost entirely in recreational exercisers (SMD = 0.38) — highly trained athletes show no significant benefit (SMD = 0.07). Effective protocol: ≥ 6.4 mmol nitrate/day for at least 3 consecutive days, from a dose-verified source.

リサーチノート

Three days of beetroot juice, the right dose, and a modest but real gain in the fitness metric that predicts how long you live. A new systematic review and meta-analysis accepted June 24, 2026 in Frontiers in Nutrition is the first study to pull VO₂max out of the broader endurance-performance literature and treat it as the sole outcome. The numbers hold up — but they come with a sharp fitness-level caveat most supplement marketing glosses over.

What the study did and what it found

Gang Qin and Sungmin Kim of Hanyang University (Seoul) searched six databases from inception through January 31, 2026, applying PRISMA 2020 methodology, and synthesized 38 randomized or crossover placebo-controlled trials involving 703 healthy adult participants. 1 The primary outcome was maximal oxygen uptake (VO₂max or VO₂peak) measured during graded exercise testing. No prior meta-analysis had isolated this single endpoint — prior work folded VO₂max into broader performance composites or didn't report it as a primary outcome. 2
The pooled result: SMD = 0.24 (95% CI 0.11–0.37, p < 0.001, I² = 48.3%). That's a small but statistically robust effect — the kind that would be easy to wave away as trivial until you consider what VO₂max actually predicts. 1
Qin and Kim also ran a trim-and-fill analysis to probe publication bias. The funnel plot showed asymmetry, which trims likely-unpublished negative studies back in — the adjusted estimate dropped to SMD = 0.19 (95% CI 0.07–0.31) but remained significant. The authors rated overall evidence certainty as moderate (GRADE). 1
One limitation worth flagging: the paper was accepted June 24 and is currently in pre-typeset stage. The full text, PRISMA flowchart, per-study characteristics table, GRADE evidence profile, and author conflict-of-interest disclosures will be available once the formatted version publishes (expected within 1–3 weeks at the journal's stated pace). All effect sizes here come from the published abstract.

Why VO₂max matters beyond athletics

VO₂max — the maximum rate at which your body can consume oxygen during intense exercise — is one of the strongest independent predictors of all-cause mortality in the general population. Strasser and Burtscher (2018, Frontiers in Bioscience) summarize the evidence plainly: "Cardiorespiratory fitness, as measured by maximal oxygen uptake (VO₂max), is related to functional capacity and human performance and has been shown to be a strong and independent predictor of all-cause and disease-specific mortality." 3
A landmark meta-analysis of 33 prospective studies (Kodama et al., JAMA 2009) quantified that relationship: each 1-MET (~3.5 ml/kg/min) increase in VO₂max is associated with roughly 10–15% lower all-cause mortality risk. 3 Moving from the lowest to a moderate cardiorespiratory fitness quintile produces the steepest gain — which means the recreational exerciser in the lower-fitness range has more to gain from any intervention that nudges VO₂max upward.
統計カードを読み込んでいます…
This is exactly who benefits most from beetroot juice, according to the subgroup data in Qin & Kim.

The fitness-level modifier: who gets the benefit

The subgroup breakdown is where the practical guidance lives. Recreationally active participants showed an SMD = 0.38 — a small-to-moderate effect that cleared the bar for clinical meaningfulness in many exercise physiology frameworks. Highly trained athletes? SMD = 0.07 (95% CI −0.09 to 0.23) — statistically indistinguishable from zero. 1
チャートを読み込んでいます…
The Australian Institute of Sport (AIS), which classifies dietary nitrate as a Group A supplement (sufficient evidence of ergogenic benefit under appropriate conditions), explains the mechanism: "Aerobic fitness levels influence the efficacy of dietary nitrate, with highly-trained endurance athletes (with VO₂max greater than 65 ml/kg/min) not benefitting significantly from nitrate supplementation." 4 The reason is thought to be that well-trained athletes already have highly efficient nitric oxide synthesis via the L-arginine/NOS pathway; the dietary nitrate–nitrite–NO enterosalivary route adds less on top.
The converging picture from prior reviews aligns with this. McMahon et al. (2017, Sports Medicine) pooled 47 studies and 76 trials, finding a significant time-to-exhaustion effect (ES = 0.33) in mixed populations but noting considerable protocol heterogeneity. 5 Poon et al.'s 2025 umbrella review of 20 systematic reviews (180 primary studies, 2,672 participants) found beetroot juice and dietary nitrate improved time to exhaustion (SMD 0.33), muscular endurance, and peak power output — but VO₂max was not a significant pooled outcome across reviews. 2 Qin & Kim's contribution is isolating that single endpoint with greater statistical power and a higher-quality methodological approach (GRADE, trim-and-fill) than most earlier analyses.

The dosing window and why most products miss it

The review identified an effective dosing window of 6.4–12.8 mmol nitrate (NO₃⁻) per day, supplemented for at least 3 consecutive days. 1 In their words: "Standard nitrate doses of 6.4–12.8 mmol NO₃⁻ and supplementation lasting at least three consecutive days showed the most consistent effects."
One millimole of nitrate ≈ 62 mg, so the effective range translates to roughly 397–794 mg nitrate per day. The table below shows how common sources and products measure up against that target, based on published analytical data and AIS reference values. 6 4
SourceNitrate per servingHits 6.4 mmol?
Beet It Sport Pro-Elite Shot (70 ml)~6.4 mmol (400 mg)✓ at lower bound
Beet It Organic Beetroot Shot (70 ml)~5.9 mmol✗ borderline
Fresh cooked beetroot~4 mmol per 100gNeeds ~160g
Arugula + spinach (100g each)~6–7 mmol combined✓ approximately
Bulk commercial beetroot juice (500 ml)3.4–18.8 mmol (brand-dependent)Varies widely
The product variability problem is more severe than most people realize. Gallardo and Coggan (2019) tested 24 commercially available beetroot juice products from 21 companies and found nearly a 50-fold range in nitrate content between the lowest and highest products: "There was almost a 50-fold range in NO₃⁻ content between different products." Within the same product, batch-to-batch variability averaged a coefficient of variation of 30% ± 26% (range 2–83%). 6 Only 5 of the 24 products consistently provided ≥ 5 mmol nitrate per serving.
Figure 1 from Gallardo & Coggan (2019) — most products cluster well below the 5 mmol threshold (dashed line). 6
The AIS factsheet is direct: "It is important that the product is guaranteed to contain at least 5–6 mmol nitrate for it to be effective." 4 Products that don't declare nitrate content on the label cannot be assumed to reach that threshold.

Study limitations

The pre-typeset status means the GRADE profile's per-domain downgrading rationale, the PRISMA flowchart, individual study risk-of-bias ratings, and author COI/funding declarations are unavailable for independent appraisal. The known methodological constraints from the abstract include:
  • I² = 48.3% signals moderate statistical heterogeneity — differences in participant fitness levels, exact dosing protocols, and VO₂max measurement methods across 38 trials contribute to this variability.
  • The trim-and-fill adjustment (SMD drops from 0.24 to 0.19) suggests some publication bias, likely from small positive trials more readily reaching publication than small null results.
  • The elite-athlete subgroup has fewer trials contributing to the SMD = 0.07 estimate; the wide confidence interval (−0.09 to 0.23) reflects limited power in that subgroup.
  • "Healthy adult participants" limits direct generalizability to older adults, clinical populations, or those with reduced salivary bacterial activity (which is essential to the nitrate→nitrite conversion step and is impaired by antibacterial mouthwash use).

The actionable recommendation

The evidence level here is moderate certainty (GRADE) for recreational exercisers — a higher confidence tier than most single nutrition interventions reach. The practical translation:
If you exercise recreationally (VO₂max roughly 35–60 ml/kg/min) and want a food-based strategy to modestly improve aerobic capacity:
  1. Target ≥ 6.4 mmol nitrate/day for at least 3 consecutive days before an aerobic effort you care about — a fitness test, a race, a sustained hard session.
  2. Dose-reliable options: a 70 ml Beet It Sport Pro-Elite Shot (verified ~6.4 mmol per serving) is the most consistently dosed commercial product in the published literature. For a whole-food approach, ~160g cooked beetroot or a combined 100g arugula + 100g spinach salad reaches the lower bound of the effective range. 4
  3. Avoid antibacterial mouthwash around supplementation — it eliminates the oral bacteria that reduce nitrate to nitrite and is the single easiest way to cancel the mechanism entirely.
  4. Do not expect benefit if you're highly trained (VO₂max > ~65 ml/kg/min). The SMD = 0.07 in elite athletes is essentially noise, consistent with the broader literature.
  5. Check the label before buying bulk commercial juice: if nitrate content is not declared, you have no basis for knowing whether the product hits the effective dose.
For health-conscious adults who aren't targeting exercise performance, the implicit benefit is still relevant: any intervention that measurably raises VO₂max in recreational exercisers is an intervention that touches a primary longevity biomarker. The magnitude is modest (SMD ~0.19–0.24 after publication-bias correction), but across a population where most people sit well below optimal cardiorespiratory fitness, the directional signal is credible.
Cover image: AI-generated illustration

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