Quick Comparison

GABAPhenibut
Half-Life30 minutes to 1 hour (plasma)5-6 hours
Typical DosageStandard: 250-750 mg daily. PharmaGABA: 100-200 mg. Take 30-60 minutes before bed for sleep, or as needed for anxiety. Higher doses do not necessarily mean better results due to BBB limitations.Standard: 250-1000 mg on an empty stomach, no more than 1-2 times per week. NEVER use daily — tolerance and dependence develop within 3-5 days of consecutive use. Onset: 2-4 hours (slow). Do not exceed 2000 mg per occasion.
AdministrationOral (capsules, powder). PharmaGABA or synthetic. Sublingual may improve absorption slightly.Oral (powder, capsules). Take on an empty stomach — food significantly reduces absorption. Slow onset (2-4 hours).
Research Papers10 papers10 papers
Categories

Mechanism of Action

GABA

GABA binds to GABA-A receptors (ligand-gated Cl- channels with alpha1-6, beta1-3, gamma1-3 subunits) and GABA-B receptors (G-protein coupled, Gi/o mediated), reducing neuronal excitability through hyperpolarization. However, supplemental GABA has limited blood-brain barrier penetration due to absence of a dedicated transporter and rapid metabolism by GABA-transaminase and succinate semialdehyde dehydrogenase in periphery. The calming effects may be mediated through: (1) GABA-A and GABA-B receptors in the enteric nervous system (gut-brain axis) — vagal afferents project to the nucleus tractus solitarius and influence limbic regions; (2) small amounts crossing the BBB via paracellular leakage or in individuals with compromised barrier integrity; (3) peripheral effects reducing systemic stress markers (cortisol, heart rate variability). PharmaGABA (Lactobacillus fermentation product) may have better absorption via peptide-like transport or different pharmacokinetics.

Phenibut

Phenibut is a structural analog of GABA with a phenyl ring that confers lipophilicity and allows blood-brain barrier penetration (unlike GABA itself). It acts as a GABA-B receptor agonist, binding to the GABAB1/GABAB2 heterodimer and activating Gi/o-coupled signaling (similar to baclofen), producing anxiolytic, muscle relaxant, and sedative effects through inhibition of adenylyl cyclase and modulation of potassium and calcium channels. Phenibut also blocks the alpha-2-delta-1 and alpha-2-delta-2 subunits of voltage-gated calcium channels, reducing presynaptic calcium influx and neurotransmitter release (similar to gabapentin/pregabalin). The dual mechanism—GABA-B agonism dampening inhibitory interneurons and calcium channel blockade reducing excitatory transmission—produces potent anti-anxiety and sleep-promoting effects. Rapid tolerance develops due to receptor downregulation.

Risks & Safety

GABA

Common

Drowsiness, tingling/numbness, shortness of breath (transient).

Serious

None documented.

Rare

Headache, muscle weakness.

Phenibut

Common

Drowsiness, dizziness, nausea, tolerance with repeated use.

Serious

Physical dependence develops rapidly with daily use. Withdrawal can be severe and dangerous (anxiety, insomnia, psychosis, seizures). Respiratory depression when combined with alcohol or other CNS depressants.

Rare

Hallucinations, severe rebound anxiety, suicidal ideation during withdrawal.

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