Raspberry ketone,
does it really help with Body fat and dieting?
research showsHuman RCT evidence that raspberry ketone alone reduces body fat is essentially insufficient. What is cited as human research involves multi-ingredient products containing caffeine, capsaicin, garlic, ginger, vitamins, and other ingredients, so the effect of raspberry ketone alone cannot be isolated.
ads claimAdvertisements mention "fat breakdown," "body-fat burning," and "diet ketone." The name ketone is the chemical name of a raspberry aroma compound and does not mean the same thing as low-carbohydrate ketone bodies.
Useful facts when choosing a product
- Commercial doses are difficult to compare directly with exposures used in preclinical studies.
- When included with stimulant combinations such as caffeine and synephrine, heart rate, blood pressure, and insomnia issues can occur.
- Pregnancy, lactation, cardiovascular disease, hypertension, and concomitant stimulant use require separate caution.
- Use as a food flavoring and use as a high-content supplement are different exposures.
What the research actually shows
Preclinical studies such as Morimoto 2005 suggested the possibility that raspberry ketone affects fat-metabolism markers in animal models. Lopez 2013 evaluated a multi-ingredient product containing raspberry ketone together with a diet and exercise program for 8 weeks and reported body-composition improvement, but because ingredients such as caffeine, capsaicin, garlic, ginger, and Citrus aurantium were included together, the effect of raspberry ketone alone cannot be isolated. The NIH ODS weight-loss supplement material also points out the lack of human evidence for raspberry ketone alone.
Why this is classified as D (24)
Because single-ingredient human RCTs are insufficient and the evidence consists only of preclinical and combination-product evidence, this is D at 24 points.
Counterpoint. Weight changes in combination-product studies are not evidence for raspberry ketone alone.
Rejudgment record. Draft — No human RCTs of the single ingredient; evidence centers on preclinical and combination-product data
Cross-check — Codex and Claude
Evidence Table
| Study | Design | Sample | Funding | Endpoint | Result | Weight |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lopez HL et al. 2013 | Randomized placebo-controlled trial | 45 | Product/industry-related | Weight, body fat, and waist circumference | A multi-ingredient product reported body-composition improvement, but the effect of raspberry ketone alone cannot be isolated. | Excluded/supporting |
| Morimoto C et al. 2005 | Animal and cell study | Academic/possible industry | Fat metabolism and weight | Reported preclinical fat-metabolism signals. | Preclinical | |
| NIH ODS Weight Loss Fact Sheet | Public evidence summary | Public | Weight-loss supplement evidence and safety | Summarizes the lack of single-ingredient human evidence for raspberry ketone and the problem of combination products. | Core |
Receipt — 3 References
Every cited source was opened and checked against the live page on 2026-07-10.
Reviewed and approved: Chamgap Editorial Team · Approval date: 2026-07-10 · Corrections: none
Cite this verdict
[Chamgap] Raspberry ketone x body fat and dieting — Evidence Grade D·24. 3 cited sources checked. Source: https://health-receipt.pages.dev/en/verdicts/weight/raspberry-ketone-fat-loss/ · CC BY 4.0CC BY 4.0 — free to use with attribution; do not distort grades, numbers, or verdict meaning.
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.