Ginger shot vs tea vs capsule: which form delivers the most benefit?
Ginger is available in many forms. But not all deliver the same bioactive compounds. Here's an objective comparison.
Form comparison
| Form | Gingerol content | Absorption | Convenience | Cost/dose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Concentrated shot (INTI) | High | Fast (liquid) | Very high | ~€0.97 |
| Fresh ginger tea | Moderate | Moderate | Low (prep time) | ~€0.30 |
| Dried ginger capsule | Variable | Slower (solid) | High | ~€0.20-0.50 |
| Ginger powder | Moderate-High | Moderate | Moderate | ~€0.15 |
| Sugary concentrate | Moderate | Fast but sugar-compromised | Moderate (dilute) | ~€0.50 |
Key differentiators
- Liquid vs solid: Liquid forms (shots, tea) are absorbed faster than capsules
- Fresh vs dried: Fresh ginger has more gingerols; dried has more shogaols (both active)
- Added ingredients: Only shots can include turmeric + piperine in one convenient dose
- Sugar content: The biggest variable — from 0g to 34g/100ml
Our verdict
A concentrated liquid shot with ginger + turmeric + black pepper and zero sugar delivers the most bioactives in the most convenient format. INTI fits this profile exactly.