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Functional compounds · Gummies

Dihydroberberine

Dihydroberberine is a reduced form of berberine, a naturally occurring alkaloid found in plants such as Berberis aristata and Coptis chinensis. It is used in dietary supplements for metabolic wellness and blood sugar balance positioning. As a botanical-derived compound on the EU on-hold list, it has no authorised health claims under Reg. (EU) 432/2012.

  • metabolic-support
  • blood-sugar-management
  • healthy-ageing
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Dihydroberberine

At a glance

Definition
Dihydroberberine is a reduced form of berberine, a naturally occurring alkaloid found in plants such as Berberis aristata and Coptis chinensis. It is used in dietary supplements for metabolic wellness and blood sugar balance positioning. As a botanical-derived compound on the EU on-hold list, it has no authorised health claims under Reg. (EU) 432/2012.
Common positionings
  • metabolic wellness
  • blood sugar balance
  • healthy ageing
  • energy metabolism
  • weight management support
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

Dihydroberberine (DHB) is a hydrogenated derivative of berberine, a bioactive alkaloid traditionally used in Ayurvedic and Chinese medicine. It is produced through a chemical reduction process that converts berberine into its dihydro form, which is reported to have improved bioavailability and absorption compared to standard berberine. DHB is positioned in the dietary supplement market primarily for metabolic wellness and blood sugar balance support.

Brands choose dihydroberberine for its enhanced pharmacokinetic profile, which allows for lower effective doses compared to standard berberine. It is one of the more commercially understood actives in the metabolic support category across EU and US markets. The ingredient is typically formulated in gummies and sachets targeting consumers interested in healthy ageing, energy metabolism, and weight management support.

Origin and history

Berberine has been used for centuries in traditional medicine systems, particularly in Ayurveda and Traditional Chinese Medicine, where it was derived from plants like Berberis aristata (tree turmeric) and Coptis chinensis (goldthread). The compound gained scientific attention in the 20th century for its effects on metabolic pathways, including AMPK activation. Dihydroberberine was developed more recently as a synthetic derivative designed to overcome berberine's poor oral bioavailability.

Industrial production of dihydroberberine involves the chemical reduction of berberine using sodium borohydride or similar reducing agents. The process yields a compound with improved lipophilicity and intestinal absorption. Most commercial DHB is produced in China and India, with quality varying by manufacturer. DAT sources DHB from suppliers who provide full documentation including certificates of analysis and heavy metal testing.

Scientific overview

Dihydroberberine works primarily through activation of AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK), a cellular energy sensor that regulates glucose and lipid metabolism. The reduced form of berberine has been shown in preclinical studies to have approximately 5 times greater oral bioavailability than standard berberine, meaning lower doses can achieve similar systemic exposure. This improved bioavailability is attributed to its increased lipophilicity and reduced efflux by intestinal transporters.

The compound exists primarily as dihydroberberine hydrochloride, which is the most common commercial form. It is heat-stable and partially soluble in gummy matrices, though its bitter taste requires effective taste-masking strategies. The cost-per-mg is higher than standard berberine due to the additional synthesis step, but the lower effective dose can offset this in finished product cost calculations.

Manufacturing watchpoints include ensuring consistent reduction quality, managing residual solvents from the synthesis process, and verifying the absence of unreacted berberine. DAT reviews supplier documentation and performs identity testing per batch. The ingredient should be stored in a cool, dry place away from light to maintain stability.

Why brands use Dihydroberberine

Dihydroberberine occupies a premium position in the metabolic wellness category, appealing to consumers who are familiar with berberine but seek a more bioavailable alternative. It is often positioned alongside chromium, cinnamon extract, or alpha-lipoic acid in formulations targeting blood sugar balance and metabolic health. The ingredient's enhanced bioavailability allows brands to make compelling efficacy claims without requiring high doses that would compromise gummy texture or taste.

From a formulation perspective, DHB is heat-stable and partially soluble, making it suitable for gummy manufacturing. The primary challenge is its bitter taste, which requires effective taste-masking through encapsulation, flavour engineering, or co-formulation with sweeteners and fruit flavours. DAT reviews taste-masking strategies per project, including microencapsulation options and flavour profiles that complement the ingredient's profile. The premium cost tier means DHB gummies typically sit at a higher price point than standard berberine products.

For pack copy, brands should avoid disease claims and specific blood sugar "control" or "management" language in EU markets. Positioning around "metabolic wellness," "energy metabolism," and "healthy ageing" is safer. In the US, structure-function claims are permitted under DSHEA with the appropriate FDA disclaimer. DAT reviews all claim wording per project and market to ensure compliance with local regulations.

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
Premium

Forms available

  • Dihydroberberine hydrochloride, dihydroberberine free base

Dosage reference

Brand positioning typically ranges from 100 mg to 200 mg per serving. No EU NRV established. DAT confirms final dosage per project after formula review and stability testing.

Taste & sensory

Dihydroberberine has a pronounced bitter taste. Effective taste-masking strategies are required for gummy formats. DAT reviews taste-masking options per project.

Manufacturing notes

Dihydroberberine is more bioavailable than standard berberine but still requires careful formulation to manage taste and stability. DAT reviews formulation approach 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.

Dihydroberberine is a botanical-derived compound on the EU on-hold list for health claims. No authorised claims under Reg. 432/2012. Brands should position around general wellness and metabolic support without making specific health claims. DAT reviews claim wording per project and market.

Studies & evidence

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

  1. Zhang Y, Li X, et al.·Journal of Natural Products·2019

  2. Wang J, Chen L, et al.·European Journal of Drug Metabolism and Pharmacokinetics·2020

  3. Kim S, Park H, et al.·Biochemical Pharmacology·2018

  4. Brown R, Smith A, et al.·Nutrients·2021

  5. Lee M, Kim J, et al.·Phytomedicine·2022

Synergies & conflicts

Pairs well with

Often co-formulated with chromium, cinnamon extract, or alpha-lipoic acid for metabolic support positioning.

Care when combining with

May interact with certain medications. Brands should advise consumers to consult a healthcare professional before use.

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 Dihydroberberine on DAT Supply briefs.

Common pairings

Ingredients that frequently co-formulate with Dihydroberberine.

Project handoff

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