B-Complex (Methylated) vs Thiamine (Benfotiamine)

Side-by-side comparison of mechanisms, dosing, interactions, and stacking potential.

✅ Stacking Partners — These compounds are commonly used together and may have synergistic effects.
B-Complex (Methylated)Thiamine (Benfotiamine)
CategoryVitaminsVitamins
Standard Dose1 capsule daily of a comprehensive methylated B-complex150-300mg benfotiamine daily
TimingMorning with breakfast (B vitamins are energizing; PM dosing may disrupt sleep). Neon yellow urine is normal (riboflavin excretion).With meals. Divide higher doses.
Cycle Durationongoingongoing
Evidence Levelstrong_humanstrong_human

Mechanism

Methylated B-complex provides the bioactive coenzyme forms of all 8 B vitamins, bypassing genetic polymorphisms (particularly MTHFR) that impair activation. Key forms: methylfolate (5-MTHF) and methylcobalamin serve as methyl donors in the methylation cycle (homocysteine to methionine via methionine synthase), supporting DNA synthesis, epigenetic regulation, and neurotransmitter production. Riboflavin-5-phosphate (active B2) is a cofactor for MTHFR enzyme itself. P5P (active B6) is essential for >150 enzymatic reactions including GABA, serotonin, and dopamine synthesis. Benfotiamine (lipophilic B1) supports transketolase in the pentose phosphate pathway.

Standard Dosing

1 capsule daily of a comprehensive methylated B-complex

Timing

Morning with breakfast (B vitamins are energizing; PM dosing may disrupt sleep). Neon yellow urine is normal (riboflavin excretion).

Cycle Duration

ongoing

Side Effects

  • Neon yellow urine (riboflavin — harmless)
  • Nausea if taken on empty stomach
  • Anxiety/overstimulation in COMT slow metabolizers from excess methyl donors
  • Skin flushing (niacin component, if non-flush form not used)
  • Acne (B12 in some individuals)

Contraindications

  • Levodopa monotherapy (without carbidopa)
  • Active methotrexate therapy (discuss folate with oncologist)
  • COMT V158M homozygous (may not tolerate methyl donors well — see notes)

Best Stacking Partners

MagnesiumTMG (Betaine)CholineVitamin C

Mechanism

Benfotiamine is a lipophilic S-acyl derivative of thiamine with 5x greater bioavailability than water-soluble thiamine. Once absorbed, it is converted to thiamine pyrophosphate (TPP), the active coenzyme for pyruvate dehydrogenase (linking glycolysis to Krebs cycle), alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase (Krebs cycle), branched-chain alpha-ketoacid dehydrogenase (BCAA metabolism), and transketolase (pentose phosphate pathway). Benfotiamine specifically activates transketolase, shunting glucose metabolites away from damaging AGE (advanced glycation end-product) formation pathways, hexosamine pathway, and PKC activation — the three major pathways of hyperglycemic damage.

Standard Dosing

150-300mg benfotiamine daily

Timing

With meals. Divide higher doses.

Cycle Duration

ongoing

Side Effects

  • Generally very well tolerated
  • Mild GI upset (rare)
  • Skin rash (very rare)
  • Garlic-like body odor at very high doses

Contraindications

  • Rare thiamine allergy (more relevant to parenteral administration)

Best Stacking Partners

Alpha Lipoic AcidB-ComplexMagnesiumCoQ10

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