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A whole and halved bergamot citrus with leaves on cream linen, fresh citrus still-life.

Bergamot for Cholesterol: What the Research Shows

A Semaine Health education guide. Reviewed against the published research; sources linked throughout. Educational content, not medical advice.

The short answer

Bergamot, the citrus fruit best known for flavoring Earl Grey tea, contains a distinctive set of flavonoids that have been studied for supporting healthy cholesterol and lipid levels. The research is promising but still maturing: reviews report reductions in LDL ("bad") cholesterol and triglycerides in studies of bergamot extract, though the exact mechanism isn't fully pinned down. It's best thought of as daily nutritional support for cardiometabolic health, not a replacement for a statin or for medical care.

What bergamot is

Bergamot (Citrus bergamia) is a citrus grown mainly in southern Italy. What sets it apart is an unusually high concentration of specific flavonoids, and it's the standardized polyphenolic extract, not the essential oil or the tea flavoring, that's been studied for lipids.

What the research shows

According to a review of animal and human studies, bergamot may lead to effective lipid-lowering support, with its activity attributed to its distinctive flavonoids, and the authors frame it as a potential option alone or alongside other approaches for dyslipidemia and cardiometabolic risk, while noting the exact mechanisms remain to be clarified (Giglio et al., 2015, Phytomedicine; DOI). In plain terms: several studies point to lower LDL cholesterol and triglycerides with bergamot, but it's an evolving evidence base, and study quality varies.

Why cardiometabolic health matters in midlife

This is more than a cholesterol number. As estrogen declines through the menopause transition, women's cardiometabolic risk shifts: LDL and blood pressure often drift up, and cardiovascular risk rises. Supporting healthy lipids is part of caring for the whole system during this era, and it's why bergamot sits in Menopause Essentials alongside the other compounds chosen for the transition, helping support the cardiometabolic side of the shift. (Heart and brain health are linked too; the same vascular health that protects your heart supports your aging brain.)

Bergamot is not a statin

Worth saying plainly: bergamot is a nutritional support, not a drug, and it doesn't treat or cure high cholesterol or heart disease. If you have high cholesterol, cardiovascular disease, or you've been prescribed a statin, that's a conversation for your clinician, don't stop or skip prescribed medication in favor of a supplement. Bergamot can be part of a healthy-lifestyle approach to supporting normal lipid levels; it isn't a substitute for treatment.

When to see a clinician

Get your lipids checked if you haven't recently, especially around the menopause transition, and discuss any supplement with your clinician if you're on medication or have a heart condition. High cholesterol usually has no symptoms, so testing, not how you feel, is how you know where you stand.

Frequently asked questions

Does bergamot lower cholesterol?

Studies of standardized bergamot extract report reductions in LDL cholesterol and triglycerides, and reviews describe it as a promising lipid-lowering support, though the evidence is still maturing and the mechanism isn't fully clear (Giglio et al., 2015).

Is bergamot as good as a statin?

No. Bergamot is a nutritional support, not a medication, and it doesn't replace prescribed treatment. If you take a statin or have a heart condition, talk to your clinician before changing anything.

What kind of bergamot is studied for cholesterol?

The standardized polyphenolic extract from the fruit, not bergamot essential oil and not the tea flavoring in Earl Grey.

Why is bergamot in a menopause supplement?

Cardiometabolic risk, including LDL cholesterol, often shifts as estrogen declines in the menopause transition, so supporting healthy lipids is part of whole-system support during this era.

Is bergamot safe?

The extract is generally well tolerated, but if you're on medication (especially for cholesterol or blood pressure) or have a health condition, check with your clinician first.

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