Cinnamon Side Effects: Who Should Avoid It and Safe Use Guide

Woman carefully reading cinnamon label to check for Ceylon vs Cassia โ€” cinnamon safety guide
๐Ÿ“‹ Summary โ€” Key Takeaways

Cinnamon is safe in normal food amounts for most healthy adults. But consuming too much โ€” especially Cassia cinnamon โ€” or using it alongside certain medications can cause real side effects that are worth knowing about.

Cassia cinnamon contains high coumarin โ€” can stress the liver at large daily doses
Always use Ceylon cinnamon for daily therapeutic use โ€” very low coumarin content
May lower blood sugar too much when combined with diabetes medication
A 2025 study found cinnamon may affect how the body absorbs certain medications
Pregnant women, children, and people on long-term medication should exercise caution
Lead contamination has been found in some cinnamon brands โ€” buy from reputable sources

๐ŸŒฟ Introduction

Cinnamon is one of the safest and most widely used spices in the world. In normal cooking amounts โ€” a sprinkle on oatmeal, a pinch in a curry, or a cup of cinnamon tea โ€” it is well tolerated by most healthy adults and poses no meaningful risk.

But problems arise when cinnamon is used in large amounts every day, when the wrong type is used for therapeutic purposes, or when it is taken alongside certain medications. A 2025 study confirmed that high cinnamon intake can affect how the body processes some drugs. A 2025 ConsumerLab analysis also found lead contamination in some popular cinnamon brands โ€” a concern worth knowing about.

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This guide covers every important safety consideration for cinnamon โ€” the coumarin problem, 8 known side effects, drug interactions, lead contamination, and who should avoid it. For the full health benefits of cinnamon, see our pillar guide on cinnamon benefits, nutrition, and uses.

โš–๏ธ Cassia vs Ceylon โ€” Why It Matters for Safety

Understanding the difference between these two types of cinnamon is the single most important thing you can do for cinnamon safety. Most side effects associated with cinnamon relate specifically to Cassia cinnamon โ€” the type sold in most supermarkets worldwide.

Feature๐ŸŸค Cassia Cinnamon๐ŸŸก Ceylon Cinnamon
Botanical nameCinnamomum cassia / aromaticumCinnamomum verum
Coumarin levelHigh โ€” 1โ€“12mg per teaspoonVery low โ€” trace amounts only
Liver risk at high doses?โš ๏ธ Yes โ€” coumarin can stress the liverโœ… No โ€” safe for daily use
Most common in supermarkets?โœ… Yes โ€” most cinnamon sold is CassiaLess common โ€” specialty stores
Safe for daily therapeutic use?โš ๏ธ Limit to ยฝโ€“1 tsp per day maximumโœ… Yes โ€” safe for daily long-term use
How to identify on labelOften just says “cinnamon” or “Cinnamomum cassia”Look for Cinnamomum verum on label
โš ๏ธ Check your label. If your cinnamon just says “cinnamon” without a botanical name โ€” it is almost certainly Cassia. For cooking occasionally, this is fine. For daily therapeutic use โ€” supplements, cinnamon water, or large amounts added to food โ€” always switch to Ceylon (Cinnamomum verum).

๐Ÿ”ฌ The Coumarin Problem

Coumarin is a natural compound found in high amounts in Cassia cinnamon. At low levels it is harmless. At high daily doses it becomes a liver toxin.

SourceSafe Daily Coumarin Limit
European Food Safety Authority (EFSA)0.1mg per kg of body weight per day (~6mg for a 60kg adult)
ConsumerLab 2025 analysisAdults should not exceed 7mg of coumarin per day
US Department of Agriculture (USDA)Half a teaspoon of cinnamon per day or less is generally safe

๐Ÿ”ฌ How Much Coumarin Is in Cassia Cinnamon?

Cassia cinnamon contains approximately 1โ€“12mg of coumarin per teaspoon depending on the brand and variety. A 2025 ConsumerLab analysis found that one tested Cassia brand exceeded the adult coumarin limit in just half a teaspoon. Ceylon cinnamon contains only trace amounts โ€” well below any safety concern even at daily therapeutic doses.

For most people using a small pinch of Cassia in cooking occasionally, coumarin is not a concern. The problem arises when Cassia is used daily in large amounts โ€” in supplements, cinnamon water made with multiple teaspoons, or by people adding large quantities to food every day for health purposes.

โš ๏ธ 8 Side Effects of Too Much Cinnamon

These side effects are mainly associated with excessive daily amounts of cinnamon โ€” especially Cassia โ€” or with specific medical situations. Normal cooking amounts in a healthy adult are unlikely to cause any of these.

Side Effect 01

๐Ÿซ€ Liver Damage

This is the most serious risk with Cassia cinnamon at high daily doses. Coumarin โ€” found in large amounts in Cassia โ€” can cause liver inflammation and damage with sustained overconsumption. People with existing liver conditions are most vulnerable.

The risk is low at normal cooking amounts. It becomes relevant when taking Cassia cinnamon supplements or adding multiple teaspoons of Cassia to food or drinks daily over long periods.

Side Effect 02

๐Ÿฉธ Blood Sugar Too Low

Cinnamon lowers blood sugar โ€” which is beneficial for most people but dangerous when combined with diabetes medication. The combined effect may push blood sugar below safe levels, causing dizziness, shakiness, sweating, and sudden weakness.

This is one of the most clinically relevant side effects. Anyone on metformin, insulin, or other diabetes drugs must monitor their blood sugar carefully when adding cinnamon regularly.

Side Effect 03

๐Ÿ’Š Medication Interactions

A 2025 study published in Food Chemistry: Molecular Sciences found that cinnamaldehyde can activate receptors in the body that affect how certain medications are absorbed and processed. Affected drug categories include antibiotics, diabetes drugs, blood thinners, and some heart medications.

This does not mean cinnamon cannot be used alongside medication โ€” but it does mean you should inform your doctor if you use cinnamon regularly in therapeutic amounts.

Side Effect 04

๐Ÿฉธ Blood Thinning Effect

Cassia cinnamon contains coumarin โ€” a natural compound with mild anticoagulant (blood-thinning) properties. In normal cooking amounts this is harmless. But for people already taking blood-thinning medication like warfarin, the combined effect may increase bleeding risk.

Ceylon cinnamon has much lower coumarin and is a safer choice for people on anticoagulant therapy who want to use cinnamon regularly.

Side Effect 05

๐Ÿคง Mouth Sores and Irritation

Direct contact with large amounts of cinnamon โ€” particularly cinnamon oil, cinnamon-flavored gum, or cinnamon candies โ€” can irritate the lining of the mouth, causing sores, redness, or a burning feeling.

This is caused by cinnamaldehyde in high concentration. It is not typically an issue with cinnamon used in cooking or as a diluted water infusion, but can occur with cinnamon supplements or concentrated preparations.

Side Effect 06

๐Ÿ”ฅ Heartburn and Digestive Upset

Large amounts of cinnamon can irritate the digestive tract, causing heartburn, stomach pain, or nausea in some people. This is more common when cinnamon is consumed on an empty stomach or in concentrated supplement form.

If you experience heartburn from cinnamon water or supplements, try taking it with or after food, reduce the amount, or switch to the milder Ceylon variety if you are using Cassia.

Side Effect 07

๐Ÿ˜ฎ Breathing Problems (Inhaling Powder)

Inhaling cinnamon powder โ€” as seen in the dangerous “cinnamon challenge” trend โ€” can cause coughing, choking, and in rare serious cases lung damage. The fine powder can get into the airways and lungs, causing inflammation.

This is not a risk from normal eating or drinking of cinnamon โ€” only from deliberately inhaling dry powder. It is included here because it has led to hospitalizations and is worth being aware of.

Side Effect 08

๐Ÿงช Lead Contamination Risk

A 2025 ConsumerLab analysis of 14 cinnamon products found lead contamination concerns in some brands. While most tested brands had low levels, one Ceylon cinnamon spice contained enough lead to require a warning label in California.

This is not a reason to avoid cinnamon โ€” it is a reason to buy from reputable brands with quality certification, especially for products used daily. Look for brands with third-party testing.

๐Ÿšซ Who Should Avoid or Limit Cinnamon?

Cinnamon in normal food amounts is safe for most healthy adults. But these groups should be careful or check with their doctor first.

๐Ÿซ€ Liver conditions

Cassia cinnamon’s coumarin can stress the liver. People with existing liver disease, elevated liver enzymes, or liver conditions should avoid large daily Cassia amounts and use Ceylon only โ€” or avoid supplemental cinnamon entirely until cleared by a doctor.

๐Ÿ’‰ Diabetics on medication

Cinnamon lowers blood sugar. Combined with diabetes drugs, it may push levels too low. Monitor carefully and always inform your doctor before adding cinnamon regularly to your routine.

๐Ÿ’Š Blood thinner users

Cassia coumarin has mild anticoagulant properties. If you take warfarin, aspirin, or similar medication, discuss regular cinnamon use with your doctor. Switch to Ceylon for daily use.

๐Ÿคฐ Pregnant women

Normal food amounts are generally safe. But therapeutic doses โ€” supplements or large daily amounts โ€” have not been proven safe during pregnancy and are not recommended. Check with your doctor or midwife.

๐Ÿ‘ถ Children

Children should not take cinnamon supplements. Normal culinary amounts in food are generally fine, but therapeutic use in children lacks safety data and should only be done under medical guidance.

๐Ÿผ Breastfeeding women

Normal cooking amounts are generally considered safe. But medicinal doses while breastfeeding have not been adequately studied. Caution is advised with large daily amounts.

โœ‚๏ธ Pre-surgery patients

Cinnamon’s blood-thinning and blood sugar-lowering effects mean you should stop cinnamon supplements at least 2 weeks before any scheduled surgery. Inform your surgical team.

WhoRiskWhat to Do
Liver conditionsCassia coumarin may worsen liver stressUse Ceylon only; consult doctor
Diabetics on medicationAdditive blood sugar-lowering effectMonitor glucose; tell your doctor
Blood thinner usersCoumarin may compound anticoagulant effectUse Ceylon; inform doctor
Pregnant womenLarge doses not studied; possible uterine effectsFood amounts fine; avoid supplements
ChildrenNo safety data for therapeutic useFood amounts OK; no supplements
Pre-surgery patientsBlood-thinning and glucose effectsStop supplements 2 weeks before surgery

๐Ÿ’Š Drug Interactions

A 2025 study found that high cinnamon intake may affect how the body absorbs certain medications. Here are the most clinically relevant interactions.

๐ŸŒฟ Not sure if cinnamon is safe for you? Type it in our free Herb & Tea Benefit Finder โ€” get safety notes, dosage, and who should be careful instantly.

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Medication TypePossible InteractionWhat to Do
Diabetes drugs (metformin, insulin)Cinnamon lowers blood sugar โ€” combined effect may cause hypoglycemiaMonitor blood glucose closely; inform your doctor
Blood thinners (warfarin, aspirin)Cassia coumarin may compound anticoagulant effect โ€” increased bleeding riskUse Ceylon; discuss with doctor; monitor INR
Antibiotics2025 study found cinnamaldehyde may affect absorption of some antibioticsSeparate cinnamon intake from antibiotic doses by 2 hours
Heart medicationsPossible interaction with some cardiac drugs via drug-metabolizing enzymesInform your cardiologist if using cinnamon daily
Liver-processed medicationsCassia coumarin may affect liver enzyme activity โ€” changing how drugs are metabolizedUse Ceylon; tell your doctor about cinnamon use
Statin medicationsSome reports of interactions between cinnamon supplements and statinsInform your doctor; monitor liver function
Practical rule: If you take any prescription medication regularly and want to use cinnamon in therapeutic amounts (supplements, daily cinnamon water, or large food amounts), tell your doctor or pharmacist. This is especially important for diabetes, heart, and blood-thinning medications.

๐Ÿงช Lead Contamination โ€” What to Know

A 2025 ConsumerLab analysis of 14 cinnamon products โ€” including popular supermarket brands and supplements โ€” found lead contamination at varying levels. While most brands had low levels, one popular Ceylon cinnamon product contained enough lead to require a warning label under California’s Proposition 65 standards.

This is not a reason to stop using cinnamon. It is a reason to be selective about which brands you buy โ€” especially for daily use.

What to Look ForWhy It Matters
โœ… Third-party tested productsIndependent testing verifies lead levels, coumarin content, and label accuracy
โœ… Organic certificationGenerally associated with lower contamination risk
โœ… Reputable brands with published testingTransparent brands that share test results are safer choices
โŒ Unknown brands with no quality claimsHigher risk of contamination and mislabeling
โŒ Very cheap bulk cinnamon from unknown sourcesGreater risk of poor quality control and contamination

๐Ÿ’ก Practical Tip

For daily use โ€” especially in supplements or therapeutic amounts โ€” choose organic Ceylon cinnamon from brands that publish third-party lab test results. This protects against both coumarin overconsumption and lead contamination simultaneously.

โœ… How to Use Cinnamon Safely

Follow these simple rules and cinnamon is a safe, beneficial addition to most healthy adults’ diets.

Cooking (Cassia OK)
ยฝโ€“1
tsp per day maximum
Daily Therapeutic Use
Ceylon
only โ€” not Cassia
Supplement Dose
500โ€“1,000
mg Ceylon per day
Cassia Coumarin Limit
Max 7
mg coumarin per day
Safety RuleWhy It Matters
Use Ceylon for daily therapeutic useVery low coumarin โ€” safe for long-term daily consumption
Keep Cassia to ยฝโ€“1 tsp per day maximumLimits coumarin exposure to below the safe threshold
Take with food โ€” not on an empty stomachReduces risk of digestive irritation and heartburn
Buy from reputable third-party tested brandsReduces lead and coumarin contamination risk
Tell your doctor if you take medicationPrevents dangerous interactions with diabetes, blood thinner, and heart drugs
Pregnant or breastfeeding? Stick to food amountsTherapeutic doses not proven safe during pregnancy
Stop supplements 2 weeks before surgeryBlood-thinning and blood sugar effects need to clear first

โœ… Conclusion

Cinnamon is safe for most healthy adults when used sensibly. The vast majority of side effects occur from using the wrong type (Cassia instead of Ceylon), using too much, or combining it with medications without medical guidance.

The simple solution: use Ceylon cinnamon for any daily therapeutic use, keep amounts within the evidence-based range, buy from quality brands with third-party testing, and always inform your doctor if you take medication regularly.

For the full health benefits of cinnamon, see our complete cinnamon benefits guide. For blood sugar specifically, see cinnamon for diabetes. To understand the full Ceylon vs Cassia difference, see our detailed Ceylon vs Cassia cinnamon comparison.

๐ŸŒฟ

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Type cinnamon, turmeric, ginger, or any herb to instantly see its benefits, best time to use, preparation method, and who should be careful.

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โ“ Frequently Asked Questions

What are the side effects of too much cinnamon?โ€บ

Too much cinnamon โ€” especially Cassia โ€” can cause liver stress from coumarin buildup, blood sugar dropping too low in people on diabetes medication, heartburn and digestive irritation, mouth sores from concentrated cinnamon, and possible interactions with medications. Lead contamination is also a risk with some lower-quality brands. These effects are mostly associated with large daily amounts โ€” not with normal cooking use.

Is cinnamon bad for the liver?โ€บ

Cassia cinnamon can be bad for the liver at high daily doses due to its coumarin content. The European Food Safety Authority recommends not exceeding 0.1mg of coumarin per kg of body weight per day โ€” a limit that can be exceeded with just half a teaspoon of some Cassia brands. Ceylon cinnamon contains only trace coumarin and is safe for daily use. People with existing liver conditions should use Ceylon only and check with their doctor.

How much cinnamon is too much per day?โ€บ

For Cassia cinnamon, the USDA suggests limiting to about half a teaspoon per day for regular use. The European Food Safety Authority sets a safe coumarin limit that equates to approximately 0.5โ€“1 teaspoon of Cassia per day for most adults. For Ceylon cinnamon, 1โ€“3g per day is safe for most healthy adults with very low coumarin risk. In supplement form, 500โ€“1,000mg of Ceylon extract per day is the typical therapeutic range.

Can cinnamon interact with medications?โ€บ

Yes โ€” a 2025 study confirmed cinnamon can affect how the body processes certain medications. The most important interactions involve diabetes drugs (additive blood sugar-lowering), blood thinners like warfarin (additive anticoagulant effect from coumarin), some antibiotics (absorption affected by cinnamaldehyde), and liver-processed medications. Always tell your doctor or pharmacist if you take cinnamon regularly alongside any prescription medication.

Is cinnamon safe during pregnancy?โ€บ

Cinnamon in normal food amounts โ€” a pinch in cooking or baking โ€” is generally considered safe during pregnancy. But therapeutic doses from supplements or large daily amounts have not been proven safe and are not recommended. Some research suggests high doses of cinnamon may stimulate the uterus. Always check with your doctor or midwife before taking any herbal supplement during pregnancy.

Which is safer โ€” Ceylon or Cassia cinnamon?โ€บ

Ceylon cinnamon is significantly safer for daily therapeutic use. It contains only trace amounts of coumarin compared to the high levels in Cassia โ€” making it safe for long-term daily consumption without liver risk. For occasional cooking use, Cassia is perfectly fine. But for supplements, daily cinnamon water, or any therapeutic purpose, always choose Ceylon (Cinnamomum verum).

Can cinnamon cause allergic reactions?โ€บ

Yes โ€” though uncommon. Some people are sensitive to cinnamaldehyde, the main active compound in cinnamon. Reactions can include skin redness, hives, or a burning feeling in the mouth. More serious allergic reactions are rare. People with known sensitivity to cinnamon or its plant family should avoid it. If you develop any unusual symptoms after starting cinnamon supplements, stop use and consult a doctor.

Is there lead in cinnamon?โ€บ

Some cinnamon brands have been found to contain trace lead. A 2025 ConsumerLab analysis of 14 cinnamon products found that while most had low levels, one Ceylon cinnamon brand contained enough lead to require a warning label in California. The FDA has also reported lead contamination in some brands. The solution is to buy from reputable brands that conduct third-party testing and publish results โ€” especially for products used daily.

Is dalchini safe to eat every day?โ€บ

Dalchini โ€” the Hindi and Sanskrit name for cinnamon โ€” is safe to eat every day in moderate food amounts for most healthy adults. The key is the type and amount. Ceylon dalchini is safe for daily use. Cassia dalchini โ€” the most commonly sold type โ€” should be limited to about half a teaspoon per day for regular use due to its higher coumarin content. People on medication or with liver conditions should check with their doctor.

Disclaimer: This article is for general informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before making dietary changes, especially if you take medication, have a medical condition, or are pregnant or breastfeeding.
DailyHealthLeaf
โœ๏ธ Written by

Health Content Writer at DailyHealthLeaf โ€” specializing in natural remedies, herbal wellness, and evidence-based nutrition.

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