Does HMB build muscle in trained adults?
What the Evidence Shows
We analyzed one assertion about HMB and muscle growth in trained adults, and what we’ve found so far suggests it may help under specific conditions. The evidence we’ve reviewed indicates that taking 3 grams of HMB daily might support muscle growth in resistance-trained individuals only when they’re under high training stress or not getting enough calories [1]. In people who are well-fed and training normally, HMB typically shows little to no effect on muscle growth [1].
This means HMB doesn’t appear to be a universal muscle-building tool for everyone who lifts weights. Its potential benefit seems tied to situations where the body is under extra strain or energy deficit — like during intense training blocks, dieting, or recovery from overtraining. For someone eating enough, resting well, and training consistently without added stress, HMB likely won’t make a noticeable difference in muscle size or strength.
We don’t have enough evidence to say whether HMB works for all trained adults, or if it’s only useful in narrow scenarios. The single assertion we reviewed doesn’t include studies comparing HMB to placebo in well-fed, non-stressed athletes, so we can’t fully rule out or confirm its value in most training environments.
If you’re a trained adult pushing hard with low calorie intake or recovering from a heavy training phase, HMB might be worth trying. But if you’re eating well and not overreaching, it’s unlikely to add much to your results.
Evidence from Studies
Update History
- May 25, 2026New topic created from assertion