This discount applies to 4 Gauge Preworkout, PowerPhase Creatine, and Premium Testosterone Support
Discount automatically applied at checkout.
This article is for educational purposes only and is not medical advice. It is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.
People have always looked for an edge in the bedroom, and sooner or later that search runs into the supplement shelf. Since pre-workouts are built around blood flow, energy, and focus, a fair question follows: is taking a pre-workout before sex actually a good idea — or a bad one?
The honest answer is "it depends on the formula." Some of the ingredients commonly found in pre-workouts overlap with the systems involved in sexual performance. Others — like heavy stimulant loads — can work against you. Below, we break down what the research says, where it's strong and where it's thin, and how to think about it without the hype.
Yes — certain pre-workout ingredients may support factors associated with sexual performance, including blood flow, energy, focus, confidence, and stress reduction. But not all pre-workouts are ideal before sex. Some formulas may cause jitters, anxiety, an elevated heart rate, digestive discomfort, or overstimulation. The ingredient list — and the dose — is what matters.
Looking for a cleaner pre-workout?
Shop 4 GaugeOriginal 4 Gauge video on this topic.
A pre-workout is a supplement taken roughly 20–30 minutes before training to sharpen the way you feel and perform in the gym. Most people reach for one to get four things: cleaner energy, better focus, stronger pumps (more blood flow into working muscles), and more endurance so the last sets feel like the first.
The effects come from the active ingredients. Caffeine drives alertness and output. Compounds like L-citrulline and dietary nitrate from beet root support nitric oxide production, which relaxes blood vessels and improves circulation. Amino acids such as L-theanine smooth the stimulant edge. The quality of a pre-workout comes down to which ingredients it uses, whether they're dosed at studied levels, and what it leaves out.
Sexual performance isn't governed by one switch. It's shaped by several systems working together: blood flow and vascular function, energy and endurance, stress and anxiety, confidence and focus, and the balance of your nervous system between "fight-or-flight" and "rest-and-arouse."
This is where the overlap with pre-workouts shows up. An erection is fundamentally a vascular event — it depends on nitric oxide signaling that relaxes blood vessels and increases blood flow. Several pre-workout ingredients act on that same nitric oxide pathway. Others influence stress, calm, and focus, which are well-recognized drivers of sexual response in both men and women.
Two caveats keep this honest. First, much of the research below studied isolated ingredients, sometimes at doses or in populations different from a typical pre-workout user — so it's ingredient evidence, not a claim about any finished product. Second, a pre-workout is a fitness supplement, not a treatment for any sexual health condition. With that framing set, here are the ingredients that actually matter.
L-citrulline is converted to L-arginine in the body, the raw material your cells use to produce nitric oxide. Nitric oxide relaxes the smooth muscle lining blood vessels, allowing them to widen and carry more blood — the same upstream pathway that underpins healthy circulation and pumps. In ingredient research, a randomized controlled trial in men with mild erectile dysfunction found that oral L-citrulline was associated with improved erection-hardness scores versus placebo, and other studies have linked lower arginine/citrulline levels to vascular-origin ED. That's research on the ingredient, not a claim about 4 Gauge. At 6,000 mg of Citrulline Malate, 4 Gauge delivers a dose in the range used in performance studies.
Beet root is rich in dietary nitrate, which the body converts along the nitrate → nitrite → nitric oxide pathway. Importantly, this route works independently of the enzyme pathway citrulline uses, so the two ingredients support nitric oxide through complementary mechanisms. The research PDF behind this article discusses early human work on L-citrulline combined with beet root extract that reported measurable improvements in nighttime erection quality. The evidence is promising but still emerging, and it studied specific supplement combinations rather than 4 Gauge itself.
Caffeine supports energy, alertness, and drive. On its own, though, a big stimulant hit can tip into jitters, anxiety, or a racing heart — none of which help in this context. Pairing caffeine with L-theanine, an amino acid from green tea, is the fix: L-theanine has been studied for promoting calm, focused attention and reducing anxiety without sedation, smoothing the stimulant's rough edges. This "smooth energy without the jitters" combination is central to how 4 Gauge is built.
Stress is one of the most common drains on sexual desire and performance — chronic stress elevates cortisol, which can suppress sex-hormone signaling and dampen arousal. Rhodiola rosea is an adaptogen that has been studied for stress resilience and burnout-related symptoms, with some clinical work measuring improvements in self-reported sexual function as a secondary outcome in stressed or burned-out patients. We're cautious here: this is best understood as support for stress-related factors, not a direct libido claim.
Acetyl L-carnitine (ALCAR) plays a role in cellular energy metabolism and has antioxidant properties relevant to vascular health. In the context of sexual performance its role is supporting rather than starring — L-carnitine-family compounds have been studied mostly at higher doses in specific clinical populations. In a balanced pre-workout, ALCAR contributes to the overall energy and vascular-support profile without being a primary driver.
Want smooth energy, better pumps, and no beta-alanine tingles?
Try 4 GaugePre-workout before sex isn't automatically a good idea. The same stimulants that drive a training session can backfire in the bedroom. Things to weigh:
This is exactly why formula design matters. A cleaner, smoother profile sidesteps most of the issues above.
4 Gauge was built as a premium, clean pre-workout for smooth energy, better pumps, and focus — without the chaos. Here's how it compares to a typical pre-workout on the points that matter most for this topic.
| Feature | 4 Gauge | Typical Pre-Workout |
|---|---|---|
| Citrulline Malate | 6 g | Often lower or underdosed |
| Beet Root | Yes | Often missing |
| L-Theanine | Yes | Often missing |
| Artificial Dyes | No | Common |
| Sucralose | No | Common |
| Beta-Alanine Tingles | No | Common |
| Energy Feel | Smooth | Can be overstimulating |
The takeaway: 4 Gauge leans on studied, properly dosed ingredients — and leaves out the dyes, sucralose, and tingle-inducing fillers that make many pre-workouts a poor fit for anything but the gym. See exactly what's inside 4 Gauge, or compare 4 Gauge vs C4.
Get our cited, peer-reviewed summary of how 4 Gauge's key ingredients relate to blood flow, energy, stress, and focus — the full PDF, sent straight to your inbox.
For most healthy adults, a moderate, clean pre-workout is generally well tolerated — but it depends on the formula and on you. High-stimulant products can cause jitters, anxiety, or an elevated heart rate that work against you. If you have any cardiovascular condition, high blood pressure, or take medication (including ED or blood-pressure medication), check with a qualified healthcare provider first. This isn't medical advice.
Some ingredients may support it. L-citrulline and dietary nitrate from beet root are studied for supporting nitric oxide production, which helps relax blood vessels and improve circulation. That's why these ingredients are associated with better "pumps" during training.
Citrulline has been studied for factors related to sexual performance. In one randomized controlled trial, oral L-citrulline was associated with improved erection hardness in men with mild erectile dysfunction. That's research on the ingredient — not a claim that any pre-workout treats a medical condition.
It can cut both ways. Caffeine may support energy, alertness, and drive, but too much can cause anxiety, jitters, or a racing heart. Pairing caffeine with L-theanine helps deliver alertness with a calmer, smoother feel.
Be wary of very high caffeine doses, large beta-alanine doses (which cause a tingling sensation and can upset the stomach), proprietary blends that hide dosages, and anything that reliably gives you jitters. Artificial dyes and sucralose are common in cheaper formulas and worth avoiding if you prefer a cleaner profile.
No. 4 Gauge is formulated as an athletic pre-workout. However, several ingredients in 4 Gauge — including L-citrulline, beet root, caffeine, L-theanine, and rhodiola — have been studied for factors related to sexual performance, including blood flow, stress, focus, and energy. It is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.
This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. The research cited examines individual ingredients at various doses and in specific populations; results may not generalize to everyone. 4 Gauge is formulated as an athletic pre-workout and is not a treatment for erectile dysfunction or any sexual health condition. If you have any health concerns, consult a qualified healthcare provider. These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.