Health & Fitness
Edward-Elmhurst Health: Is too much caffeine bad for you?
Too much caffeine can lead to side effects beyond alertness.

It’s rare to find someone who doesn’t rely on a cup of caffeinated coffee to help them wake up in the morning.
It’s also not unusual to have a second or third cup throughout the day, while working or meeting a friend for a break.
“Caffeine is a natural drug that promotes alertness,” says Denise Valero, M.D., an internal medicine physician with Edward Medical Group. “It typically takes about 30 minutes to affect someone’s state of mind, but it stays in your body for hours. It can take about 10 hours to eliminate the caffeine from the body.”
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How much is too much caffeine?
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) says adults can safely consume 400 milligrams of caffeine each day — about the amount in 4 or 5 cups of coffee.
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Caffeine affects people differently. For some, it takes several cups to perk up. For others, one cup of coffee and they’re jolted into action for hours.
Regardless of personal sensitivity, the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics recommends limiting caffeine intake in children and avoiding it altogether for kids age 5 and younger. Kids can have trouble sleeping, anxiety, and higher blood pressure and heart rate when they consume too much caffeine.
“In general, pregnant women and those trying to conceive should avoid caffeine, since all the effects of caffeine during pregnancy are not known,” says Dr. Valero.
It helps to be aware of how much caffeine your favorite beverage contains. The Academy lists the caffeine content of several common beverages:
- Energy drinks: 8 fluid (fl.) ounces (oz.): 47-163 mg
- Coffee: 8 fl. oz.: 96
- Espresso: 1 fl. oz.: 64
- Black tea: 1 cup: 48
- Cola: 12 fl. oz.: 33
- Candy, semi-sweet chocolate: 1 oz.: 18
- Hot chocolate: 8 fl. oz.: 8
Many packaged foods and beverages include the amount of caffeine per serving on the nutrition label.
While you aren’t likely to experience a toxic level of caffeine from too much coffee, the FDA estimates toxic effects, like seizures, can occur with “rapid consumption” of around 1,200 milligrams of caffeine or 0.15 tablespoons of pure caffeine.
Drinking too much caffeine can also lead to side effects, such as:
- Insomnia
- Jitters
- Anxiousness
- Fast heart rate
- Upset stomach
- Nausea
- Headache
- A feeling of unhappiness (dysphoria)
Get more information at EEHealth.org/hereforit.