Is This Supplement Legit

Safety lens

Is Niacin safe?

Independent ingredient analysis - not a product endorsement. Open full verdict hub

If you’re asking whether Niacin is safe, the honest answer is context-dependent: dose, duration, your health history, and what else you take all matter. Below is a structured read on tolerability signals, common side effects, cautions, and interaction notes from our ingredient file - use it to ask better questions, not to self-diagnose risk.

Mixed evidenceOverall 64/100Safety track: 58/100
How we score →

Overview

Safety in plain terms

Flush, liver enzyme shifts, and glucose effects matter; ER formulations change risk profiles.

Tolerability

Commonly reported effects

  • Flush and itching
  • Hypotension with alcohol or vasodilators
  • GI upset

Higher-risk contexts

Who should pause or get medical guidance first

  • Unsupervised high-dose nicotinic acid
  • Active liver disease without hepatology input

Polypharmacy

Interactions & cautions

  • Statins and niacin combinations need medical oversight
  • Diabetes monitoring when doses are high

Practical

Dose context (not a prescription)

Do not mimic clinic niacin protocols without medical supervision and lab monitoring.

Our editorial safety score is 58/100 - methodology and limitations are on the full hub page.

Verdict context

Studies conflict or are small; some plausible benefits, but the signal is too noisy for strong claims.

Mixed evidence

Same ingredient, other questions

Focused pages for common searches about Niacin. Each uses the same underlying evidence file with a different lens.

Explore further

A few hand-picked entry points around Niacin: categories, answers to narrow questions, and comparisons.