This discount applies to 4 Gauge Preworkout, PowerPhase Creatine, and Premium Testosterone Support
Discount automatically applied at checkout.
Beet root is one of the richest dietary sources of nitrate — the raw material your body turns into nitric oxide. Decades of research link it to better endurance, greater oxygen efficiency, lower blood pressure, and faster recovery, which is why 4 Gauge pairs it with L-Citrulline for a dual nitric-oxide engine.
Beet root (Beta vulgaris) is a root vegetable that happens to be one of nature's most concentrated sources of dietary nitrate — the precursor your body uses to make nitric oxide.
On its own, beet root is rich in inorganic nitrate, with an average content around 1,400 mg per kilogram of fresh weight, alongside antioxidant pigments called betalains and a range of polyphenols.1 In sports nutrition it's most often used as beetroot juice, concentrate shots, crystals or a powdered extract. Its performance reputation rests almost entirely on its nitrate content and the nitric oxide it ultimately produces — the molecule that widens blood vessels, improves circulation, and lowers the oxygen cost of movement. 4 Gauge Pre-Workout includes 300 mg of concentrated Red Beet Root to complement its 6,000 mg of L-Citrulline.
Beet root feeds a completely different nitric-oxide pathway than amino acids like citrulline — which is exactly why the two work so well together.
Beet root works through the nitrate–nitrite–nitric oxide pathway. Dietary nitrate (NO3−) is absorbed, concentrated in saliva, and reduced to nitrite (NO2−) by friendly bacteria on the tongue. That nitrite is then converted into nitric oxide in the body's tissues — especially under the low-oxygen, low-pH conditions of hard exercise.1 Crucially, this route does not rely on the oxygen-dependent nitric oxide synthase (NOS) enzymes that amino-acid precursors use, so it can keep producing nitric oxide precisely when the enzymatic pathway is most limited.
The downstream effect is improved mitochondrial and muscular efficiency: dietary nitrate has been shown to reduce the oxygen cost of submaximal exercise and improve contractile function, meaning you can do the same work using less oxygen.2
Beet root is a food-derived nitric-oxide booster that works through a separate, oxygen-independent pathway — complementing the enzymatic route used by L-Citrulline.
Where the dietary-nitrate evidence is strongest. Select any card to jump to the full research.
Increases time-to-exhaustion and lowers the oxygen cost of exercise.
Read the research → StrongImproves repeated-sprint and intermittent high-intensity performance.
Read the research → StrongMeta-analyses show reduced systolic blood pressure from beetroot juice.
Read the research → ModerateMay attenuate muscle soreness and speed performance recovery.
Read the research → ModerateSupports endothelial function and healthy circulation.
Read the research → SynergyPairs with L-Citrulline to amplify nitric oxide two ways.
Read the research →Plain-language summaries of the strongest, most replicated findings on beet root and dietary nitrate.
Dietary nitrate from beet root reduces the oxygen cost of submaximal exercise — you produce the same output using less oxygen.2
An umbrella review of 20 systematic reviews concluded dietary nitrate provides a small but consistent ergogenic benefit, strongest for endurance and time-to-exhaustion.3
A 2026 review reported beetroot juice cut submaximal oxygen cost by 1.5–5.0%, raised time-to-exhaustion by ~15.7% in recreational athletes, and improved cycling power by 1.2–3.0%.4
Beet root nitrate improves high-intensity intermittent and repeated-sprint performance — relevant to team and stop-and-go sports.68
Meta-analyses of randomized trials show beetroot juice modestly lowers systolic blood pressure, supporting cardiovascular health beyond the gym.9
The signature effect of dietary nitrate is improved exercise economy. By lowering the oxygen cost of submaximal effort and improving mitochondrial efficiency, beet root lets you sustain a given pace with less physiological strain.2 An umbrella review pooling 20 systematic reviews found a small but consistent ergogenic effect, most reliable for endurance and time-to-exhaustion outcomes,3 while a 2026 review reported beetroot juice reduced submaximal oxygen cost by 1.5–5.0% and increased time-to-exhaustion by roughly 15.7% in recreational athletes.4 A meta-analysis in healthy adults similarly linked nitrate to improved power output, time-to-exhaustion and reduced VO2 during endurance exercise.5
Better oxygen economy means more output at the same effort — the difference between fading and finishing strong in the final reps or miles.
Beyond steady-state endurance, dietary nitrate benefits short, intense efforts by enhancing type II (fast-twitch) muscle fiber function. A systematic review and meta-analysis found nitrate improved performance during single and repeated bouts of short-duration high-intensity exercise,6 and a dedicated meta-analysis on high-intensity interval training reported beetroot ingestion benefited HIIT performance.7
In applied settings, a 2024 randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover study found an acute dose of beetroot crystals significantly improved high-intensity intermittent exercise performance,8 and a 2017 RCT in trained soccer players showed six days of nitrate-rich beetroot juice improved Yo-Yo intermittent recovery test performance — supporting its use in stop-and-go sports.12
The fast-twitch and repeated-sprint benefits make beet root relevant to lifters, team-sport athletes and HIIT — not just endurance specialists.
Because nitric oxide relaxes and widens blood vessels, beet root has been studied extensively for blood pressure. A foundational 2013 systematic review and meta-analysis found that inorganic nitrate and beetroot juice supplementation significantly reduced blood pressure in adults.10 A more recent meta-analysis evaluating beetroot juice against European Society of Hypertension criteria reported a meaningful reduction in clinical systolic blood pressure (mean difference around −5.3 mmHg) in hypertensive populations, with no sign of tolerance developing over time.9
Reductions are modest and most relevant as general cardiovascular support, not a substitute for medication. If you have high blood pressure or take cardiovascular drugs, speak with your doctor before supplementing.
Beet root's combination of nitrate-driven blood flow and antioxidant betalains has made it a candidate for recovery. A 2025 randomized, double-blind crossover trial found short-term beetroot juice supplementation enhanced strength, reduced fatigue and promoted recovery in physically active individuals.11 Earlier work by Clifford and colleagues reported that beetroot juice attenuated muscle soreness and the decline in countermovement-jump performance following muscle-damaging exercise.13 A mini-review also attributes beetroot's recovery edge over isolated nitrate salts to its broader phytonutrient content.1
Recovery evidence is promising but more mixed than the endurance and blood-pressure data — results vary with dose, timing and exercise type.
The reason 4 Gauge uses both: they raise nitric oxide through completely different, complementary routes.
| Beet RootDietary nitrate route | L-CitrullineEnzymatic (NOS) route |
|---|---|
| Supplies nitrate reduced to NO via oral bacteria & tissues | Raises arginine for NO synthase to produce NO |
| Works best in low-oxygen, low-pH conditions (hard effort) | Works through the oxygen-dependent enzymatic pathway |
| Strongest for oxygen efficiency & endurance | Strongest for pumps & muscular endurance |
Because beet root's nitrate–nitrite–NO pathway is independent of the NOS enzyme system that L-Citrulline feeds, combining them lets the body raise nitric oxide from two directions at once — the enzymatic route covering normal conditions and the dietary-nitrate route stepping up exactly when oxygen is scarce during intense effort.1 That complementary design is the rationale behind pairing 300 mg of Red Beet Root with 6,000 mg of L-Citrulline in 4 Gauge.
See the full evidence on the other half of this combination on our L-Citrulline Benefits research page.
Beet root is dosed by its nitrate content, not just grams of beet. These ranges reflect the protocols used in research.
| Goal | Nitrate dose | Rough equivalent | Timing |
|---|---|---|---|
| Acute performance | ~6–8 mmol (~400–500 mg nitrate) | 1 concentrated beet "shot" / 300–500 ml juice | 2–3 hours pre-exercise |
| Loading / chronic use | >8 mmol nitrate per day | Daily beet juice/concentrate | 3–7 days, then maintain |
| Blood pressure support | ~200–800 mg nitrate per day | Daily beet juice | Ongoing |
Nitrate peaks in the blood about 2–3 hours after intake, so timing matters more for beet root than for many pre-workout ingredients. Effects also build with several days of consistent use.4
Beet root is a food and is very well tolerated, with only minor and harmless quirks.
The most common "side effect" is beeturia — harmless pink or red urine and stool from beet pigments. Some people notice mild digestive upset with large juice volumes. One practical note from the science: because nitrate is converted to nitrite by bacteria on the tongue, using antibacterial mouthwash can blunt beet root's benefits by wiping out those bacteria. As with any nitric-oxide booster, anyone taking blood-pressure medication, nitrates or PDE5 inhibitors should consult a doctor first, since blood-pressure effects could be additive. Pregnant or breastfeeding individuals and anyone with a medical condition should speak with a healthcare provider before supplementing.
4 Gauge uses beet root as the second half of a dual nitric-oxide system, not as a standalone endurance dose.
Each serving of 4 Gauge Pre-Workout includes 300 mg of concentrated Red Beet Root alongside 6,000 mg of L-Citrulline DL-Malate. The beet root contributes dietary nitrate that the body converts to nitric oxide through the oral-bacteria pathway — an independent route from the enzymatic pathway citrulline drives. The goal is broader, more resilient nitric-oxide production for blood flow and pumps, rather than the very high single-dose nitrate loading used in dedicated endurance-juice protocols.1
Smooth, sustained energy and serious pumps — powered by red beet root nitrate plus a 6,000 mg citrulline dose working through complementary routes.
More evidence-based ingredient and topic deep dives from the 4 Gauge Research Hub.
The full formula: citrulline, beet root, caffeine, L-theanine and more.
Read the research → Nitric OxideNitric oxide, pumps, endurance and blood-pressure benefits.
Read the research → Energy & FocusClean, smooth energy and focus without the jitters or crash.
Read the research → PerformanceHow nitric-oxide and stress ingredients relate to sexual performance.
Read the research →Beet root's dietary nitrate boosts nitric oxide, which research links to improved endurance and stamina, lower oxygen cost of exercise, better high-intensity and repeated-sprint performance, modest reductions in blood pressure, and a possible edge in recovery and muscle soreness.
Blood nitrate and nitrite peak about 2–3 hours after intake, so beet root is best taken 2–3 hours before training or competition. Many of the benefits also strengthen with several consecutive days of daily use.
Meta-analyses of randomized trials show beetroot juice modestly reduces systolic blood pressure, especially in people with elevated blood pressure. The effect is meaningful for general cardiovascular support but is not a replacement for prescribed medication.
That's beeturia — a harmless reddish tint to urine or stool caused by beet pigments (betalains). It's completely normal and not a cause for concern.
Yes — whole beets, beet juice and concentrate shots all supply nitrate. The key is hitting an effective nitrate dose (roughly 6–8 mmol for performance) and timing it 2–3 hours pre-exercise. Concentrated forms make that easier to dose consistently. Also avoid antibacterial mouthwash, which can blunt the effect.
Grouped by topic. Systematic reviews, meta-analyses and human RCTs are weighted above mechanistic data.
This article is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for medical advice. These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. 4 Gauge products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease, including hypertension. Consult a qualified clinician before starting any supplement, especially if you have a medical condition or take medication. © 2026 4 Gauge. Researched in good faith. Reviewed periodically.