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Botanicals · Gummies

Ceylon Cinnamon

Ceylon Cinnamon (Cinnamomum verum) is a botanical ingredient derived from the inner bark of the cinnamon tree, native to Sri Lanka. It is one of the most familiar and commercially understood gummy actives across EU and US markets. No EFSA-authorised health claims exist for this botanical under Reg. (EU) 432/2012.

  • Botanical
  • Traditional use
  • Metabolic wellness
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Ceylon Cinnamon

At a glance

Definition
Ceylon Cinnamon (Cinnamomum verum) is a botanical ingredient derived from the inner bark of the cinnamon tree, native to Sri Lanka. It is one of the most familiar and commercially understood gummy actives across EU and US markets. No EFSA-authorised health claims exist for this botanical under Reg. (EU) 432/2012.
Common positionings
  • Metabolic wellness
  • Blood sugar management support
  • Traditional herbal support
  • Antioxidant support
  • Culinary-inspired wellness
Format suitability
Reviewed for gummies and sachets — confirmed per project.
Format & category fit

Where this ingredient fits in the DAT Supply catalogue

Every format chip links through to its manufacturing hub and to the private-label catalogue for that format. The category chip routes to the matching vertical hub on the categories index.

Positioning

What it is

Ceylon Cinnamon, also known as true cinnamon, is the dried inner bark of Cinnamomum verum trees. It has been used for centuries in traditional wellness systems and culinary applications. Unlike Cassia cinnamon, Ceylon contains negligible levels of coumarin, making it the preferred variety for daily supplementation.

Brands choose Ceylon Cinnamon for its strong consumer recognition and association with metabolic wellness. It is one of the most familiar and commercially understood gummy actives across EU and US markets. The ingredient works well in gummy formats, offering a warm, sweet flavour profile that complements fruit bases.

Origin and history

Ceylon Cinnamon originates from Sri Lanka (formerly Ceylon), where it has been cultivated for over 2,000 years. It was one of the most valuable spices in ancient trade routes, prized by Egyptians, Romans, and later European traders. The Dutch and British established plantations in Sri Lanka during colonial periods, shaping the global cinnamon trade.

Today, Ceylon Cinnamon is produced primarily in Sri Lanka, with smaller cultivation in Madagascar, Seychelles, and India. The bark is harvested from young shoots, peeled, and dried into quills. Industrial production involves grinding the dried bark into powder or extracting active compounds for standardised extracts used in supplements.

Scientific overview

Ceylon Cinnamon contains cinnamaldehyde, eugenol, and proanthocyanidins as its primary bioactive compounds. These compounds are associated with various metabolic pathways, including glucose metabolism and insulin sensitivity. The mechanism of action involves modulation of enzyme activity and cellular signalling pathways related to carbohydrate metabolism.

Bioavailability of cinnamon compounds varies by form. Powdered bark provides the full spectrum of compounds but requires higher doses. Standardised extracts concentrate specific actives, allowing lower serving sizes. The cinnamaldehyde content is typically higher in Cassia than Ceylon, but Ceylon's coumarin content is negligible, making it safer for long-term use.

Manufacturing watchpoints include particle size consistency for powdered forms, which affects gummy texture. Standardised extracts reduce volume and improve handling in gummy production. Heat stability is good, and the flavour profile is generally compatible with gummy bases. Cost-per-mg is higher for Ceylon than Cassia due to lower yields and more labour-intensive harvesting.

Why brands use Ceylon Cinnamon

Ceylon Cinnamon occupies a strong position in the metabolic wellness category, alongside ingredients like chromium and berberine. Consumer awareness is high, and the ingredient is perceived as natural and traditional. Gummies offer a convenient format for daily supplementation, particularly for consumers who dislike swallowing capsules or tablets. The warm, sweet flavour of cinnamon translates well into gummy products, especially when paired with apple, pear, or berry flavours.

From a formulation perspective, Ceylon Cinnamon is heat-stable and compatible with standard gummy manufacturing processes. Powdered forms may affect clarity and texture, but standardised extracts mitigate these issues. The ingredient has good solubility in gummy bases when properly processed. DAT reviews formulation per project to optimise dosage, flavour, and texture.

Pack copy must be carefully managed. No EFSA-authorised health claims exist for Ceylon Cinnamon under Reg. (EU) 432/2012. Claims should be limited to general wellness, traditional use, or structure-function statements where permitted. DAT reviews all pack copy per project to ensure compliance with EU food law and national regulations. Certification status (vegan, kosher, halal) and shelf-life claims are confirmed per project and batch documentation.

Supported formats

Formats this ingredient is reviewed for

DAT Supply covers gummy, capsule, softgel, tablet, powder, oral strip, liquid drop, shot, jelly and pet formats. The list below reflects every format this ingredient is reviewed for — chips link through to the manufacturing hub for each format. Final compatibility, dose and matrix are confirmed per project.

Formulation notes

Verified formulation reference across the formats this ingredient is reviewed for — the Supported formats section lists every product format this active is approved for, and the per-format Considerations section below covers matrix-specific guidance. Final formulation, dose and on-pack copy are confirmed per project.

Gummy fit
Good
Heat stable
Yes
Cost tier
Medium

Forms available

  • Powdered bark extract
  • Standardised extract (e.g. 10:1)

Dosage reference

Brand positioning typically ranges from 500 mg to 2000 mg per serving. No NRV established under EU regulation. DAT confirms final dosage per project based on target market and claim strategy.

Taste & sensory

Warm, sweet, woody flavour profile. Works well in fruit-forward gummy bases. May require masking at higher doses.

Manufacturing notes

Powdered forms may affect gummy texture and clarity. Standardised extracts reduce volume and improve handling. DAT reviews formulation per project.

Format considerations

Per-format formulation notes

Safe-baseline considerations for each format this ingredient is reviewed for. Final formulation, dose and on-pack copy are confirmed per project.

Gummies

  • Taste masking and aroma load against the cooked-base flavour — confirmed per project.
  • Heat exposure during cooking; coated or encapsulated forms may be required — confirmed per project.
  • Matrix choice (pectin vs gelatin) and its effect on ingredient stability — confirmed per project.
  • Per-gummy dose and serving count needed to hit the label claim — confirmed per project.

Develop in gummies →

Sachets

  • Powder flow and dose accuracy at single-serve sachet weights — confirmed per project.
  • Barrier requirements (oxygen, moisture) for the active — confirmed per project.
  • Reconstitution behaviour when the sachet is dosed into water — confirmed per project.

EU-authorised health claims

EU-authorised wording for this ingredient is reviewed per project against Reg. 1924/2006 and the authorised list under Reg. 432/2012. No final claim wording is implied by this page.

Authorised at ≥15% NRV per daily serving. Claim wording must appear verbatim on consumer packaging. DAT reviews final pack copy per project against EU 1924/2006 and the authorised list under EU 432/2012.

Ceylon Cinnamon is a traditional herbal ingredient. No EFSA-authorised health claims exist for this botanical. Claims must be limited to general wellness, traditional use, or structure-function statements where permitted. DAT reviews all pack copy per project to ensure compliance with EU food law and national regulations.

Studies & evidence

External peer-reviewed sources and regulatory opinions. Citations only — DAT does not endorse the publishers.

  1. Allen RW, Schwartzman E, Baker WL, Coleman CI, Phung OJ·Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine·2013

  2. Namazi N, Khodamoradi K, Larijani B, Ayati MH·Journal of Diabetes & Metabolic Disorders·2019

  3. Mollazadeh H, Hosseinzadeh H·Phytotherapy Research·2016

  4. Ranasinghe P, Jayawardena R, Pigera S, et al.·BMC Complementary and Alternative Medicine·2017

  5. Blahová J, Svobodová Z·Czech Journal of Food Sciences·2012

Catalogue match

Product concepts featuring Ceylon Cinnamon

Private-label product concepts where Ceylon Cinnamon appears in the formula. Each opens to a product brief and quote route.

Synergies & conflicts

Pairs well with

Often co-formulated with chromium, berberine, or other botanicals for metabolic wellness positioning.

Care when combining with

No known conflicts with common gummy ingredients. Coumarin content is negligible in Ceylon cinnamon compared to Cassia cinnamon.

Similar ingredients

Ingredients that frequently sit alongside this one in private-label supplement briefs.

Adjacent reading

Pairings, resource guides and blog notes most often associated with Ceylon Cinnamon on DAT Supply briefs.

Common pairings

Ingredients that frequently co-formulate with Ceylon Cinnamon.

Project handoff

Develop a formula featuring Ceylon Cinnamon

A ready white-label formula exists — open a product brief, or talk to our team to align the launch plan.

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Quick context request

Get manufacturing context

Drop your work email and a member of the DAT team will follow up with the right context for this concept. Project documents, certificates and pricing are released through the project workspace in the DAT portal.

You will receive a short confirmation email. Project documents (specification, batch-specific COA, packaging documents) are released through the project workspace in the DAT portal once a brief is in place.