Key Takeaways
- The highest dose tested in a published human clinical trial is 10,800 FU per day for 12 months, with no serious adverse events reported in 1,062 participants
- The standard evidence-backed daily dose range is 2,000-7,000 FU, with safety data supporting up to 3 years of continuous use at this range
- Animal toxicity studies found the maximum tolerated oral dose exceeds 480,000 FU/kg with no mortality — suggesting a very wide safety margin, though animal data does not directly translate to human recommendations
- Side effects appear dose-dependent: higher doses increase bleeding risk, especially when combined with anticoagulant medications
- No officially established "maximum dose" exists from any regulatory agency — the concept of a hard ceiling does not exist for nattokinase
- Anyone on blood thinners, scheduled for surgery, or with bleeding disorders should not increase dosage without medical supervision
You have probably read that the standard nattokinase dose is 2,000 FU per day. But then you found a study using 10,800 FU, and forum threads where people report taking even more. So what is actually the nattokinase maximum dosage you can safely take?
The honest answer is more nuanced than a single number. Unlike prescription drugs, nattokinase has no regulatory-agency-established maximum dose. No government body — not the FDA, not Japan's Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare (MHLW), not the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) — has issued a "do not exceed" limit for nattokinase. What we do have is a growing body of clinical trial data, toxicity research, and case reports that together paint a reasonably clear picture of where the evidence-based safety boundaries lie.
This guide synthesizes human clinical trials (including the largest nattokinase study ever published), animal toxicity research, and dose-dependent risk data to help you understand what "maximum dosage" actually means for a dietary supplement — and to give you the evidence you need for a productive conversation with your healthcare provider about whether a higher dose is appropriate for you.
What "Maximum Dosage" Actually Means for Supplements
Why There Is No Official Upper Limit for Nattokinase
Prescription drugs go through formal dose-finding studies (Phase I/II trials) where researchers deliberately test increasing doses to identify the point where side effects outweigh benefits. Dietary supplements do not undergo this process. The FDA does not set maximum doses for nattokinase. Neither does Japan's MHLW nor the EFSA [10].
What this means in practice: the concept of a "maximum dose" for nattokinase is entirely derived from clinical trial evidence — specifically, the highest dose that has been tested with documented safety outcomes. The Japan Nattokinase Association (JNKA) recommends 2,000 FU per day as the standard intake, but this is a recommended dose, not an upper limit [22].
Tested vs. Safe: An Important Distinction
This is a critical distinction that most guides miss. The highest dose tested is not the same as the confirmed safe maximum. When researchers test 10,800 FU per day and find no problems, it means that specific dose was studied and no adverse events were detected in that specific population over that specific time frame. It does not mean that 10,801 FU is unsafe. It also does not guarantee that 10,800 FU is safe for everyone — it was safe in the population that was studied.
The absence of evidence of harm is not evidence of safety at higher doses. Keeping this distinction in mind will help you interpret every dosage number in this guide accurately.
Clinical Trial Dose Ranges: What Has Been Studied in Humans
Standard Dose Studies (2,000-4,000 FU): Strong Evidence
The 2,000 FU daily dose is the most extensively studied. A systematic review and meta-analysis of 6 randomized controlled trials (546 participants) found that nattokinase at this dose range significantly reduced systolic blood pressure by 3.40 mmHg (p=0.02) and diastolic blood pressure by 1.71 mmHg (p<0.001) [1].
The longest safety dataset comes from the NAPS trial (Nattokinase Atherothrombotic Prevention Study) — a randomized controlled trial that administered 2,000 FU daily for 3 years with no significant adverse events reported [3].
A real-life safety study of 153 patients with vascular diseases confirmed the safety of 2,000-4,000 FU daily over 30 days, including patients who had recently been on the anticoagulant enoxaparin. No adverse reactions were observed [7].
Moderate-to-High Dose Studies (4,000-7,000 FU): Moderate Evidence
Evidence at the 4,000-7,000 FU range comes from several sources. A nattokinase-Monascus combination study at comparable dose equivalents ran for 4 months with no significant adverse events in patients with stable coronary artery disease who were already on heart medications [4]. An observational study using nattokinase combined with hydroxytyrosol at 3,000-4,000 FU showed safety comparable to aspirin/clopidogrel control groups over 6-12 months, with improved lipid profiles [7].
The meta-analysis by Li et al. noted that "relatively low total dosage of nattokinase had a negative effect" on cardiovascular risk factors, suggesting that dose-dependent benefits may favor higher doses within the studied range [1].
Comparison Table: Dose Ranges Across Published Studies
| Study | Dose (FU/day) | Duration | Sample Size | Key Outcome | Safety Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NAPS trial (RCT) | 2,000 | 3 years | 265 | Atherothrombotic prevention | No significant adverse events |
| Li et al. meta-analysis (6 RCTs) | 2,000 (pooled) | 4-52 weeks | 546 | SBP -3.40, DBP -1.71 mmHg | Well-tolerated across all trials |
| Gallelli et al. (observational) | 2,000-4,000 | 30 days | 153 | Real-life vascular safety | No adverse events, incl. post-anticoagulant patients |
| Liu et al. (RCT) | ~4,000 equivalent | 4 months | N/A | NK + red yeast rice in CAD | No significant adverse events |
| Chen et al. (open-label) | 10,800 | 12 months | 1,062 | Atherosclerosis + hyperlipidemia | No serious adverse events |
The 10,800 FU Study: Highest Human Dose Tested
The single most relevant study for understanding nattokinase maximum dosage is the Chen et al. study published in Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine. Here are the key details [6]:
- Design: Open-label, dose-comparison study
- Participants: 1,062 subjects with subclinical atherosclerosis
- Dose: 10,800 FU per day — 5.4 times the standard 2,000 FU dose
- Comparison group: 3,600 FU per day
- Duration: 12 months of continuous daily use
- Primary outcomes: Atherosclerosis progression (measured by carotid intima-media thickness) and hyperlipidemia management
- Safety result: No serious adverse events attributed to nattokinase at either dose
This is the largest nattokinase clinical study ever published and the highest dose tested in humans with documented safety outcomes. The study found that the 10,800 FU dose effectively managed atherosclerosis progression and hyperlipidemia.
Important caveats: This was an open-label study, not a double-blind randomized controlled trial. Open-label designs are more susceptible to bias. The study was conducted in China with Chinese participants, which introduces generalizability considerations. And critically, the study did not test doses above 10,800 FU — so this figure represents the current ceiling of human evidence, not a proven safe maximum.
What we can say with reasonable confidence: 10,800 FU per day was administered to over 1,000 people for 12 months without serious adverse events. What we cannot say: that this dose is safe for all populations or that higher doses would also be safe.
Toxicity Research: Animal Studies and Safety Margins
Animal toxicity studies provide a different lens on nattokinase safety — one that complements human trial data by testing extreme doses that would be unethical to study in humans.
Acute Toxicity: The 480,000 FU/kg Finding
A comprehensive toxicological assessment published in Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology found that the maximum tolerated oral dose of nattokinase in mice exceeds 480,000 FU per kilogram of body weight — with no mortality and no signs of toxicological effect at this extreme dose [9].
To put this in perspective: for a 70 kg human, the theoretical equivalent would be approximately 33.6 million FU — over 3,000 times the highest clinical dose of 10,800 FU. This suggests an extraordinarily wide safety margin between therapeutic doses and acutely toxic doses.
However, animal-to-human dose extrapolation is inherently limited. Metabolic rates, absorption pathways, and body composition differ significantly between mice and humans. This data is best understood as evidence that nattokinase is not acutely toxic at normal dosage ranges — not as a green light for extreme doses in humans.
Subchronic and Genotoxicity Testing
A GLP-compliant (Good Laboratory Practice) toxicological assessment in rodents found no evidence of genotoxicity across three standard assays: bacterial reverse mutation (Ames test), chromosomal aberration, and micronucleus tests. A 90-day subchronic oral toxicity study in rats established a No Observed Adverse Effect Level (NOAEL) consistent with long-term safe human use [8].
The EFSA, when evaluating NSK-SD (a purified nattokinase form) as a novel food, established a NOAEL of 1,000 mg/kg body weight per day from subchronic toxicity studies. Applying a standard 100-fold safety factor to this NOAEL yields approximately 700 mg per day for a 70 kg human — roughly equivalent to 14,000 FU. This is well above standard supplementation doses [10].
Hemorrhagic Safety Comparison
One study compared the anti-thrombotic activity and hemorrhagic adverse effects of nattokinase versus tissue-type plasminogen activator (tPA), a pharmaceutical thrombolytic drug. The findings showed that nattokinase maintains an approximately 3-fold better hemorrhagic safety margin compared to tPA [16]. This is relevant context: nattokinase's blood-thinning mechanism operates with a significantly wider safety buffer than its pharmaceutical equivalents.
Dose-Dependent Side Effects and Risks
At Standard Doses (2,000-4,000 FU): Minimal Side Effects
Clinical trials consistently report minimal side effects at standard doses. In the 153-patient real-life safety study, zero adverse reactions were observed at 2,000-4,000 FU per day over 30 days — even in patients with existing vascular conditions who had recently been on anticoagulant therapy [7].
A single dose of 2,000 FU measurably increases fibrinolytic activity within 4 hours. After 2 months of daily use at this dose, measurable decreases in fibrinogen and coagulation factors VII and VIII have been documented [13]. These changes reflect the mechanism of action rather than adverse effects, but they illustrate that nattokinase has measurable anticoagulant activity even at standard doses.
At Higher Doses: Dose-Dependent Risks Emerge
The relationship between nattokinase dose and fibrinolytic activity is dose-dependent — confirmed across multiple studies [1][16]. A recent review confirmed a dose-dependent thrombolytic effect on both fresh and aged blood clots, accompanied by a "modest, dose-dependent increase in bleeding risk" [17].
Case reports illustrate what can go wrong at higher doses when risk factors are present:
- A patient taking approximately 8,000 FU per day of nattokinase combined with aspirin experienced acute cerebellar hemorrhage. The patient also had pre-existing cerebral microbleeds — a significant confounding factor [13][17]
- One documented fatal internal bleeding case involved an elderly patient on over-the-counter nattokinase alone [20]
- A case of clot dislodgement requiring valve replacement occurred in a patient who self-substituted nattokinase for prescribed warfarin [20]
The pattern in serious adverse events is consistent: they involve either combination with anticoagulant/antiplatelet drugs, pre-existing bleeding risk factors, or unsupervised substitution for prescribed medications.
Drug Interaction Risks That Scale With Dose
| Medication Class | Interaction Type | Clinical Evidence | Risk Level |
|---|---|---|---|
| Warfarin | Additive anticoagulation (pharmacodynamic) | Case reports of hemorrhage | HIGH |
| Heparin/enoxaparin | Additive fibrinolysis | Sequential use safe at 2,000 FU; combined use dose-dependent | MODERATE-HIGH |
| Aspirin | Additive antiplatelet effect | Case report: cerebellar hemorrhage at ~8,000 FU | HIGH |
| Clopidogrel | Additive antiplatelet effect | Theoretical based on mechanism | HIGH |
| Antihypertensives | Potentiation (additive BP lowering) | Meta-analysis: NK lowers SBP ~3.40 mmHg | MODERATE |
| NSAIDs | Additive bleeding via mucosal damage | Theoretical; clinical evidence limited | MODERATE |
The critical takeaway: higher nattokinase doses amplify all of these interaction risks. The dose-dependent increase in fibrinolytic activity means that every drug interaction listed above becomes more significant as you move from 2,000 FU toward 10,000+ FU.
Who Should Never Take High-Dose Nattokinase
Based on the available evidence, the following populations should avoid higher-dose nattokinase entirely — or use it only under direct medical supervision:
- People on anticoagulant therapy (warfarin, heparin, direct oral anticoagulants) — additive anticoagulation risk is well-documented [20]
- People taking antiplatelet drugs (aspirin, clopidogrel) — case report evidence of hemorrhage at ~8,000 FU combined with aspirin
- Anyone with active bleeding or bleeding disorders — nattokinase's fibrinolytic mechanism directly increases bleeding risk
- People with mechanical heart valves — requires precise anticoagulation management
- Pre-surgical patients — discontinue nattokinase 7-14 days before any scheduled surgery
- People with a history of hemorrhagic stroke or cerebral microbleeds — the cerebellar hemorrhage case report involved pre-existing microbleeds
- People with thrombocytopenia (platelet count below 50,000/mcL) — reduced clotting capacity compounded by fibrinolysis
- People with soy or natto allergies — nattokinase is derived from fermented soybeans
- Pregnant or nursing women — no clinical trial safety data exists for these populations
Safety Considerations
Overall Safety Profile
At standard doses (2,000-4,000 FU), nattokinase has a strong safety record across multiple clinical trials. At the highest dose tested (10,800 FU), 1,062 participants used nattokinase daily for 12 months without serious adverse events [6]. The safety data spans up to 3 years at the standard dose range [3][19].
Common Side Effects
Mild gastrointestinal symptoms are the most commonly reported side effects in clinical trials — and even these are rare. At standard doses, most trials report no significant difference in adverse event rates between nattokinase and placebo groups.
Perioperative Guidance
No standardized guideline exists for nattokinase discontinuation before surgery. Based on nattokinase's pharmacokinetic profile (peak activity half-life of approximately 8-13 hours) and analogous protocols for anticoagulant/antiplatelet medications, discontinuing nattokinase 7-14 days before any scheduled surgery is a reasonable precaution [20].
Pregnancy and Nursing
No clinical trials have evaluated nattokinase in pregnant or nursing women. Given the measurable anticoagulant activity even at standard doses, the precautionary recommendation is to avoid nattokinase during pregnancy and nursing — or to consult with a healthcare provider before use.
Realistic Expectations
Nattokinase is not a replacement for prescribed anticoagulant or antiplatelet medications. Its effects, while measurable, are modest compared to pharmaceutical agents. "Natural" does not mean "risk-free" at any dose. Individual response varies based on baseline cardiovascular health, genetics, diet, and concurrent medications.
Inside the Research: What Japanese and International Studies Reveal About Nattokinase Limits
From Natto to Capsule: The Japanese Origins of Dosing Standards
Nattokinase was discovered in 1987 by Dr. Hiroyuki Sumi at Okayama University while researching the mechanisms behind blood clot dissolution in natto — a traditional Japanese fermented soybean food [21]. The JNKA's recommended daily intake of 2,000 FU is not arbitrary — it is based on the nattokinase content of approximately one to two packs of natto (50-100g), reflecting how much nattokinase Japanese people have traditionally consumed through diet [22].
Why this matters: The Japanese standard dose is rooted in decades of dietary exposure data, not just clinical trials. This gives it a different kind of safety validation — population-level, long-term, real-world consumption patterns.
The Vitamin K2 Problem That Japanese Manufacturers Solved First
Natto naturally contains significant amounts of vitamin K2 — a nutrient that promotes blood clotting and directly counteracts warfarin therapy. This creates a paradox for nattokinase supplements: the nattokinase itself has anticoagulant properties, but residual vitamin K2 could undermine anticoagulant medications.
Japanese manufacturers developed NSK-SD, a purified nattokinase form with vitamin K2 specifically removed. This product has its own registered safety trial (UMIN000017512) — a 4-week excessive intake study in healthy adults aged 20-64 that confirmed safety [11]. Japan's Food Safety Commission (食品安全委員会) has an independent safety assessment for NSK-SD on file [24].
Why this matters: If you take warfarin or other vitamin K-sensitive medications, the vitamin K2 content of your nattokinase supplement matters as much as the FU dose. Products using NSK-SD technology specifically address this concern.
Conservative vs. Exploratory: Two Approaches to Dosing
Japanese nattokinase products are typically formulated at the traditional 2,000 FU per day dose, anchored to dietary equivalence and JNKA standards. Kobayashi Pharmaceutical, one of Japan's leading supplement manufacturers, markets its nattokinase as a functional food (機能性表示食品) with Consumer Affairs Agency (消費者庁) notification — at the standard 2,000 FU daily dose [23].
International research, meanwhile, has pushed higher — culminating in the 10,800 FU Chen et al. study from China. The EFSA's evaluation placed the derived safe threshold at roughly 14,000 FU based on animal NOAEL data [10].
Why this matters: These are not contradictory positions. The Japanese standard establishes a well-validated safety floor based on traditional consumption, while international clinical research maps the higher-dose territory. For most people, the conservative Japanese standard is sufficient. For those considering higher doses for specific therapeutic goals, the clinical evidence exists — but with the caveat that it comes from less rigorous study designs.
A Regulatory Framework More Structured Than You Might Expect
Unlike the US where nattokinase falls under the broad "dietary supplement" category with minimal pre-market regulation, Japan has a more structured framework. The functional food notification system (機能性表示食品) requires manufacturers to submit safety evidence and notify the Consumer Affairs Agency before making specific health claims. This means Japanese nattokinase products with this designation have undergone a formal safety review process that their US counterparts have not.
Why this matters: When selecting a nattokinase product — especially if you are considering higher doses — the regulatory scrutiny behind the formulation is a meaningful quality signal. JNKA certification, NSK-SD quality marks, and functional food status represent layers of safety validation.
Our Recommendations
Nattokinase EX by Kobayashi Pharmaceutical
Why We Selected This: Kobayashi Pharmaceutical is one of Japan's most trusted pharmaceutical companies, with a functional food designation for their nattokinase line. We chose this product for customers who want standardized nattokinase with pharmaceutical-grade quality control, because Kobayashi's nattokinase products carry Consumer Affairs Agency (消費者庁) notification and are formulated with DHA and EPA for complementary cardiovascular support.
For readers focused on understanding nattokinase maximum dosage, the Kobayashi formulation is particularly relevant because it adheres to the well-validated JNKA standard dosing protocol — giving you a reliable baseline from which to discuss any adjustments with your healthcare provider.
Also Worth Considering
For those seeking a simpler nattokinase-only formulation, the Noguchi Nattokinase HQ from Noguchi Medical Research Institute provides a focused nattokinase supplement without additional ingredients.
For those who prefer a multi-ingredient cardiovascular support formula with higher nattokinase activity units, the ORIHIRO Japanese Nattokinase 4000 combines nattokinase with vitamin E, DHA, and EPA.
View Japanese Nattokinase 4000 →
| Product | Brand | Key Features | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nattokinase EX | Kobayashi Pharmaceutical | Functional food designation, DHA + EPA | Those wanting pharmaceutical-grade quality assurance |
| Noguchi Nattokinase HQ | Noguchi Medical Research Institute | Pure nattokinase focus | Those wanting a simple, single-ingredient supplement |
| Japanese Nattokinase 4000 | ORIHIRO | Higher activity units, vitamin E + DHA + EPA | Those wanting a multi-ingredient cardiovascular formula |
Conclusion
The question "what is the nattokinase maximum dosage?" does not have a single definitive answer — because no regulatory agency has established one. What the evidence tells us is this: the standard dose range of 2,000-4,000 FU per day has the strongest and longest safety record, supported by randomized controlled trials spanning up to 3 years. The highest dose tested in humans — 10,800 FU per day — showed no serious adverse events in over 1,000 participants across 12 months, though the study design was less rigorous. Animal toxicity data suggests a safety margin thousands of times wider than therapeutic doses.
For most healthy adults, 2,000-4,000 FU per day remains the evidence-backed starting point. Higher doses have shown promise in clinical settings but come with increased bleeding risk, especially for those on medications or with pre-existing conditions. The safest approach to nattokinase dosing is the same as with any supplement: start conservative, monitor your response, and make any dose changes in consultation with a healthcare provider who knows your full medical history.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Consult a healthcare professional before starting any new health regimen, especially if you have existing health conditions or take medications. Statements about dietary supplements have not been evaluated by the FDA and are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Nattokinase supplementation and cardiovascular risk factors: a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials
- Nattokinase: a promising alternative in prevention and treatment of cardiovascular diseases
- Nattokinase atherothrombotic prevention study: A randomized controlled trial
- Effects of nattokinase combined with red yeast rice in patients with stable coronary artery disease
- The effect of Nattokinase-Monascus supplements on dyslipidemia: a four-month randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial
- Effective management of atherosclerosis progress and hyperlipidemia with nattokinase: A clinical study
- Data recorded in real life support the safety of nattokinase in patients with vascular diseases
- Toxicological assessment of nattokinase derived from Bacillus subtilis var. natto
- Acute toxicity and genotoxicity evaluations of Nattokinase
- Safety of fermented soybean extract NSK-SD as a novel food
- MHLW registered clinical trial: NSK-SD excessive intake safety study
- Nattokinase: an oral antithrombotic agent for the prevention of cardiovascular disease
- Nattokinase as an adjuvant therapeutic strategy for non-communicable diseases
- Comparative cardioprotective effectiveness: NOACs vs. Nattokinase
- Research progress of nattokinase in reducing blood lipid
- Comparative anti-thrombotic activity and haemorrhagic adverse effect of nattokinase and tissue-type plasminogen activator
- Navigating the Effects of Anti-Atherosclerotic Supplements and Acknowledging Associated Bleeding Risks
- Nattokinase-heparin exhibits beneficial efficacy and safety
- Nattokinase - Uses, Side Effects, and More


