CHAMGAP
APPROVEDReviewed and approved by the Chamgap Editorial Team (2026-07-11). The draft was written by AI, the existence of all 3 cited sources was verified at the original page, and the verdict passed blind grading and adversarial audit. Methodology v0.6.
Verdict No. 216 · Search date 2026-07-11 · Methodology v0.6

Apple cider vinegar,
does it really help with Improvement of postprandial glucose, HbA1c, and body weight?

30-Second Summary
C
Evidence Grade C · 47 · Safety caution
There are limited glycemic-marker signals, but interpretation of weight evidence and safety is constrained
What the
research shows
A meta-analysis reported signals of FPG -7.97 mg/dL and HbA1c -0.50%, but these are surrogate markers and heterogeneity was high. Kondo 2009 described the intervention only as 'vinegar,' so it does not establish an apple-cider-vinegar-specific effect. A paper reporting a large weight effect was retracted after its analyses could not be reproduced and is excluded from confirmatory evidence.
What the
ads claim
Gummies, tablets, and liquids may be described as blocking glucose spikes and reducing weight together. Whether gummies or tablets provide the same acetic-acid exposure as liquid-vinegar trials varies by product.
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Useful facts when choosing a product

  • Liquid trials commonly used 15-30 mL/day.
  • Main outcomes were surrogate markers such as postprandial glucose, FPG, and HbA1c.
  • Acidic liquids may erode teeth or irritate the esophagus.
  • Delayed gastric emptying may be relevant in gastroparesis.
Gap Measurement · Verdict 216 · C 47
What advertising claims
What independent, higher-quality research supports
△ GAP
01

What the research actually shows

The Hadi 2021 meta-analysis reported FPG -7.97 mg/dL and HbA1c -0.50% across nine studies, but the outcomes were surrogate markers and heterogeneity was high. Kondo 2009 reported a small weight reduction with 15-30 mL/day of 'vinegar' in 175 participants, and the authors were employed by Mizkan. Because the vinegar type was not identified as apple cider vinegar, the result does not establish an ACV-specific effect. A 2024 paper reporting a large weight effect was retracted in 2025 after its analyses could not be reproduced and data concerns remained; it is excluded from confirmatory evidence.

02

Why this is classified as C (47)

FPG and HbA1c signals are surrogate and highly heterogeneous. Kondo 2009 studied unspecified vinegar, so its result cannot be attributed specifically to apple cider vinegar, and the large-effect weight paper was retracted and excluded. Together these limitations support C with 47 points.

Counterpoint. Small short-term glycemic and weight changes remain possible. The large weight-loss values from the retracted paper were excluded.

Rejudgment record. New judgment — FPG and HbA1c signals are surrogate and highly heterogeneous; unspecified-vinegar results cannot be attributed specifically to apple cider vinegar, and the large-effect weight paper was retracted, supporting C with 47 points.

Sub-claim grades by effect

This ingredient is marketed for several effects. A single overall grade blends strong and weak claims together, so each effect is graded separately here. The overall grade reflects the strongest disconfirming or core claim.

Effect (sub-claim)GradeBasis
Postprandial-glucose improvementCRepeated in small acute trials, but it is a surrogate marker.
HbA1c improvementCMeta-analyses were positive, but heterogeneity was 91-99%.
Body-weight improvementCKondo 2009 reported only 'vinegar,' not an ACV-specific intervention, and the large-effect paper was retracted after its analyses could not be reproduced.

Cross-check — Codex and Claude

This verdict was drafted by Codex through literature review and source-existence checks, cross-checked through blind grading and adversarial audit, and settled by reapplying the methodology boundary rules. Cases with split grades were resolved through rejudgment.
03

Evidence Table

StudyDesignSampleFundingEndpointResultWeight
Hadi A et al. 2021Systematic review and meta-analysis of RCTs10UnknownFPG and HbA1cFPG -7.97 mg/dL and HbA1c -0.50%, with high heterogeneity.Key
Kondo T et al. 2009Double-blind placebo-controlled trial175Mizkan GroupBody weight, fat mass, and TGAbout 1-2 kg of weight reduction was reported at 12 weeks, but the intervention was identified only as 'vinegar' and cannot be attributed specifically to ACV.Supportive
BMJ Group 2025Retraction notice120Not applicableReliability of a weight trialRetracted because analyses could not be reproduced and data concerns remained.Key
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Receipt — 3 References

All 3 cited sources were verified for existence at the original page (as of 2026-07-11).

Hadi A, Pourmasoumi M, Kafeshani M, Karimian J, Maracy MR, Entezari MH. 2021. The effect of apple cider vinegar on lipid profiles and glycemic parameters: a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized clinical trials. PMID: 34187442. DOI: 10.1186/s12937-021-00725-7.
checked
Kondo T, Kishi M, Fushimi T, Ugajin S, Kaga T. 2009. Vinegar intake reduces body weight, body fat mass, and serum triglyceride levels in obese Japanese subjects. PMID: 19661687. DOI: 10.1271/bbb.90231.
checked
BMJ Group. 2025. Retraction: Apple cider vinegar for weight management in Lebanese adolescents and young adults with overweight and obesity: a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled study. PMID: 41789013. DOI: 10.1136/bmjnph-2023-000823ret.
checked
Draft and rewrite: Codex (AI) · Verification: Codex blind grading and adversarial audit · Final adjudication: Claude
Reviewed and approved: Chamgap Editorial Team · Approval date: 2026-07-11 · Corrections: none

Cite this verdict

Apple cider vinegar x Improvement of postprandial glucose, HbA1c, and body weight Evidence Grade C card
[Chamgap] Apple cider vinegar x Improvement of postprandial glucose, HbA1c, and body weight — Evidence Grade C·47. 3 cited sources checked. Source: https://health-receipt.pages.dev/en/verdicts/blood-sugar/apple-cider-vinegar-glucose-hba1c-weight/ · CC BY 4.0

CC BY 4.0 — free to use with attribution; do not distort grades, numbers, or verdict meaning.

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What this document does and does not do

Chamgap is an information source. It reports what research has and has not confirmed; it does not tell readers what to take or buy. That decision belongs to readers and, when needed, medical or legal professionals. This verdict reflects literature available up to the search date and may change as new research appears. Nothing here is medical advice.