Phosphatidylserine is a brain supplement that works on a completely different principle from the choline-based ones. It isn’t a neurotransmitter precursor — it’s a structural phospholipid, one of the fatty molecules that makes up the membranes of your brain cells. The pitch is twofold: support memory as you age, and possibly blunt the cortisol spike from stress. One of those claims has decent evidence; the other is more promising than proven.

This guide covers what phosphatidylserine actually does, where the research is solid and where it’s shaky, how it compares to the cholinergic supplements, and how to dose it (most studies use 100 mg three times a day).
Quick answer
- What it is: a phospholipid concentrated in cell membranes, especially in the brain
- Mechanism: supports neuronal membrane structure and signaling; may dampen the cortisol stress response
- Typical dose: 100 mg three times daily (300 mg/day total)
- Best evidence for: memory and cognition in older adults with age-related decline
- Weaker evidence for: cortisol blunting, mood, and cognitive gains in healthy young people
- Timeline: memory effects build over weeks to a few months
- Safety: well tolerated; modern soy- and sunflower-derived versions have a clean profile
How phosphatidylserine works
Every cell in your body is wrapped in a membrane built from phospholipids, and phosphatidylserine is one of the key players — it’s especially concentrated in the inner layer of brain-cell membranes. There it influences how cells signal, how receptors function, and how neurons stay healthy as they age.
The theory behind supplementing is straightforward: membrane phospholipid composition can shift with age, and topping up phosphatidylserine may help maintain the membrane environment that brain cells depend on. Healthy membranes matter because that’s where receptors sit, where neurotransmitters dock, and where the electrical signaling between neurons actually happens. This is a structural mechanism, not a stimulant or neurotransmitter one — which is why phosphatidylserine feels like nothing acutely and works gradually if it works at all. You can’t notice membrane maintenance the way you’d notice a cup of coffee, and that’s the whole point of how it operates.

Phosphatidylserine and memory
This is the supplement’s strongest claim. According to PubMed, a double-blind randomized controlled trial gave soybean-derived phosphatidylserine to older Japanese adults with memory complaints and found improvements in memory function, particularly delayed verbal recall, in those who started with lower baseline scores.1 A separate pilot study using 300 mg/day of soybean-derived phosphatidylserine for 12 weeks in elderly people with subjective memory complaints reported improvements in cognitive performance, including memory recall.2
The pattern here mirrors a lot of brain-supplement research: the benefit is clearest in older adults with some age-related decline, and most pronounced in those who started off worse. For healthy young people, the memory evidence is thin — assume any benefit is small and unproven.
Worth a historical note: much of the early enthusiasm came from studies using bovine-cortex-derived phosphatidylserine, which is no longer used over contamination concerns. Modern supplements are soy- or sunflower-derived, and the evidence base for these plant-derived forms is more modest than the old animal-derived data suggested. Keep that in mind when you see strong marketing claims.
For everyday memory strategies that complement any supplement, see ways to improve memory, and if cloudy thinking is your concern, what is brain fog is worth a read.
Suggested read: Supplements to Lower Cortisol: What Actually Works
Phosphatidylserine and cortisol
Here’s the claim that gets phosphatidylserine into pre-workout and stress-support products: it may blunt the cortisol response to stress. Cortisol is your main stress hormone, and chronically elevated levels are linked to all sorts of problems, so a supplement that takes the edge off sounds appealing.
The evidence is genuinely mixed. Some early studies suggested phosphatidylserine dampened the cortisol response to physical or psychological stress, but a randomized trial examining soybean-derived phosphatidylserine and markers of oxidative stress and muscle damage after intermittent running found limited effects on the stress markers it measured.3 So the cortisol story is plausible and partly supported, but not nailed down — especially for the plant-derived forms most supplements now use.
If managing stress is your real goal, the most reliable tools aren’t in a bottle. Our guide to breathing techniques covers methods that genuinely shift your nervous system out of fight-or-flight, no supplement required.
How to dose phosphatidylserine
| Goal | Dose | Timing | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Memory / cognition | 100 mg x 3 (300 mg/day) | With meals | The most-studied protocol |
| Maintenance | 100–200 mg/day | With a meal | Lower end after an initial period |
| Stress / cortisol | 200–400 mg/day | Split, with food | Evidence is mixed; effect uncertain |
Practical points:
- Take it with food. As a phospholipid, it’s absorbed better alongside dietary fat.
- Split the dose. The classic protocol is 100 mg three times a day rather than one big dose.
- Be patient. Memory benefits in the trials emerged over weeks to months, not days.
How it compares to other brain supplements
Phosphatidylserine is the structural outlier among popular cognitive supplements:
- Citicoline and alpha-GPC are choline sources that feed acetylcholine — a neurotransmitter mechanism
- Phosphatidylserine works on membrane structure and possibly cortisol — a different lever entirely
- Bacopa monnieri is an herb that supports memory over months through its own pathways
Because the mechanism is different, some people stack phosphatidylserine with a cholinergic supplement. For the full landscape, our nootropics overview and nootropic brain supplements guide put everything in context.
Suggested read: Creatine and Cognition: Memory, Brain, Honest Evidence
What to expect, realistically
Phosphatidylserine is a slow, subtle supplement, not an acute booster. Honest expectations:
- You won’t feel anything the first day — there’s no stimulant effect
- If you’re an older adult with age-related memory complaints, the trial evidence is on your side
- If you’re young and healthy, the cognitive benefit is uncertain at best
- The cortisol-blunting effect, if you get one, is modest and not guaranteed
And the foundations still outrank any supplement. A brain-friendly diet does more long-term work than phosphatidylserine ever will — our brain foods guide covers the pattern that matters.
Safety and side effects
Modern soy- and sunflower-derived phosphatidylserine is well tolerated. The main side effects are mild:
- GI upset or nausea
- Insomnia, mostly if higher doses are taken late in the day
Cautions:
- Blood thinners and antiplatelet drugs. Phosphatidylserine may have mild effects on clotting; check with your doctor if you take these.
- Cholinergic and Alzheimer’s medications. Discuss with your prescriber before combining.
- Pregnancy and breastfeeding. Not well studied — best avoided unless your provider advises otherwise.
- Soy allergy. Choose a sunflower-derived version if soy is a problem for you.
Bottom line
Phosphatidylserine is a membrane phospholipid that works differently from the choline-based brain supplements — it supports the structure of brain-cell membranes rather than feeding a neurotransmitter. Its best evidence is for memory in older adults with age-related decline, where trials using 100 mg three times daily have shown improvements, especially in people who started off worse. The cortisol-blunting claim is plausible but only partly supported, and weaker for the plant-derived forms used today. Dose 300 mg/day with food, give it weeks to months, and keep expectations modest if you’re young and healthy. For a neurotransmitter-based approach instead, look at citicoline or alpha-GPC; for stress specifically, breathing techniques outperform any pill.
Kato-Kataoka A, Sakai M, Ebina R, Nonaka C, Asano T, Miyamori T. Soybean-derived phosphatidylserine improves memory function of the elderly Japanese subjects with memory complaints. Journal of Clinical Biochemistry and Nutrition. 2010;47(3):246-55. PubMed | DOI ↩︎
Richter Y, Herzog Y, Lifshitz Y, Hayun R, Zchut S. The effect of soybean-derived phosphatidylserine on cognitive performance in elderly with subjective memory complaints: a pilot study. Clinical Interventions in Aging. 2013;8:557-63. PubMed | DOI ↩︎
Kingsley MI, Wadsworth D, Kilduff LP, McEneny J, Benton D. Effects of phosphatidylserine on oxidative stress following intermittent running. Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise. 2005;37(8):1300-6. PubMed | DOI ↩︎





