How Many Drops of Methylene Blue Should You Take?
Written by: Sam Carlson
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Published on March 19, 2026
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Time to read 9 min
Key Takeaways
Liquid methylene blue dosing is not as simple as counting drops. Concentration, dropper variability, and format all determine how much you are actually taking — and with a hormetic compound, that math matters.
- Concentration determines everything. A 1% solution contains 10mg/mL — so one standard drop delivers roughly 0.5mg. The same drop count from a 0.5% or 2.0% solution delivers a very different amount. Always check the label first.
- Methylene blue is hormetic; more is not better. Low doses support the mitochondrial electron transport chain. High doses can inhibit it. Precise dosing is not optional; it is the whole point.
- Drop volume is inherently variable. Dropper design, squeeze pressure, viscosity, and angle all affect drop size. Capsules eliminate every one of those variables with a fixed, pre-measured amount per serving.
Important: Methylene blue has documented interactions with serotonergic medications including SSRIs and MAOIs. Review the full adverse medications list before use.
What Is a 1% Solution and How Many Drops Should You Take?
A 1% methylene blue solution contains 10mg per milliliter. A standard dropper delivers roughly 0.05 mL per drop, which means one drop ≈ 0.5mg of methylene blue. Most users working with a 1% solution land somewhere between 10 and 24 drops per serving — that is 5mg to 12mg.
| Drops (1% Solution) | Approx. Volume | Approx. Methylene Blue |
|---|---|---|
| 1 drop | 0.05 mL | ~0.5 mg |
| 5 drops | 0.25 mL | ~2.5 mg |
| 10 drops | 0.50 mL | ~5 mg |
| 20 drops | 1.00 mL | ~10 mg |
| 24 drops | 1.20 mL | ~12 mg (equivalent to 1 Blue Boost capsule) |
These values are approximations. Actual drop volume varies based on dropper design, liquid viscosity, squeeze pressure, and temperature.
Why Getting the Amount Right Actually Matters
Methylene blue does not follow a linear dose-response. It follows a hormetic curve, meaning a small amount produces a beneficial effect, but too much flips the result entirely. This is not a safety warning about extreme overdose. It is a fundamental property of how the compound works at the cellular level.
Think of it like oxygen. The right amount keeps you alive and performing at your best. Too little and you suffocate. Too much — as in pure oxygen under pressure — becomes toxic. Methylene blue works the same way at the mitochondrial level. At low doses it donates electrons to the electron transport chain and supports ATP production. At high doses it competes with the same pathway it was supporting and begins to inhibit it.
This is why counting drops accurately is not just a precision exercise. It directly determines whether you are in the beneficial range or past it.
Why Drop Size Can Vary
Not every dropper delivers the same volume per drop. This is a bigger variable than most people realize. Several factors influence how much liquid comes out each time you squeeze.
Dropper design. Glass pipette droppers, rubber bulb droppers, and built-in dropper tips all produce different drop sizes. A glass pipette with a narrow tip delivers smaller drops than a wide-mouth squeeze dropper.
Squeeze pressure. Gentle squeezing produces smaller drops. Harder squeezing can create larger drops or cause multiple drops to merge.
Liquid viscosity. Thicker solutions form larger drops. Thinner solutions form smaller ones. Different methylene blue products may use different solvents or bases that affect viscosity.
Temperature. Warmer liquids are less viscous, which can slightly reduce drop size compared to a cold solution.
Note: This variability is one of the primary reasons some users prefer capsules. A capsule delivers the same amount every time regardless of technique, temperature, or dropper type.
Why Concentration Matters More Than Drop Count
Before counting drops, confirm the concentration of your product. This is the single most important variable in liquid methylene blue dosing.
The two most common concentrations sold for supplemental use are 1% and 2%. They look identical in the bottle but deliver very different amounts per drop.
| Concentration | MB per mL | MB per Drop (~0.05 mL) | Drops to Reach ~10 mg |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1% | 10 mg/mL | ~0.5 mg | ~20 drops |
| 2% | 20 mg/mL | ~1 mg | ~10 drops |
Critical: The same 10 drops from a 1% solution delivers 5mg. From a 2% solution, those same 10 drops deliver 10mg — double the amount from identical drop count. Always check concentration first.
Low Dose vs. High Dose: What's Right for You?
Methylene blue is not a compound where more is better. It follows what researchers call a hormetic dose-response curve. The relationship between dose and effect is not linear. A little does a lot. Too much undoes it.
| Feature | Low Dose | High Dose |
|---|---|---|
| Range | 0.5 to 4 mg/kg body weight | Above 10 mg/kg body weight |
| Effect on ETC | Donates electrons to cytochrome c and supports ATP production | Pulls electrons away from the chain and inhibits cytochrome c oxidase |
| Oxidative Role | Acts as an antioxidant and reduces oxidative stress | Acts as a pro-oxidant and increases oxidative stress |
| ATP Output | Increases | Decreases |
Think of it like a car engine and fuel. The right amount makes the engine run cleanly. Too much floods it. Methylene blue works the same way inside your cells. There is an optimal range, and going past it does not give you more of the same benefit. It gives you the opposite.
Starting Out
Start low. With a 1% solution, that is 2 to 5 drops (1 to 2.5mg). With a 2% solution, that is 1 to 3 drops (1 to 3mg). Give your body a chance to respond before increasing. Many first-time users notice effects at this range before ever reaching double digits.
Regular Use
Most consistent users land in the 5 to 12mg range. With a 1% solution that is 10 to 24 drops. With a 2% solution that is 5 to 12 drops. This is where the most studied low-dose benefits sit, and 24 drops of a 1% solution is the liquid equivalent of one Blue Boost capsule.
Experienced Use
Some experienced users work above 12mg, typically with practitioner guidance. If you switch between a 1% and a 2% solution, the same number of drops delivers twice the amount. Always recalculate when switching products. The hormetic curve applies regardless of how long you have been using methylene blue. The difference between a supportive dose and a counterproductive one can come down to a few extra drops.
Drops vs. Capsules: Which Format Is More Consistent?
Liquid methylene blue gives you flexibility. You can adjust the number of drops in small increments. For users who want to start very low and increase gradually, that flexibility is useful.
But that flexibility comes with trade-offs. Drop volume is variable. Concentration must be confirmed before every calculation. And liquid methylene blue stains everything it touches including teeth, countertops, skin, and clothing. Capsules eliminate all of those variables. Each capsule contains a fixed, pre-measured amount. No dropper variability, no concentration math, no staining.
| Feature | Liquid Drops | Capsules |
|---|---|---|
| Dose Consistency | Variable per drop | Fixed per capsule |
| Staining | High (teeth, skin, surfaces) | None |
| Dose Flexibility | Very high (sub-milligram adjustments) | Fixed increments |
| Cofactor Support | None (MB only) | Depends on formula (some include Vitamin C Ester, cacao, and other cofactors) |
| Gut Absorption | Absorbed in mouth and stomach | Absorbed in gut after capsule dissolves |
Liquid is worth considering if you are in an early experimentation phase and want sub-milligram control. But for most people, capsules are the better long-term format. The dose is fixed, the math is done, there is nothing to stain, and a quality formula can include cofactors that liquid simply cannot. Consistency matters more than flexibility once you know what works for you. That is not a knock on liquid. It is just an honest look at what most people actually need from a daily supplement.
Who Methylene Blue Is Not For
Regardless of whether you use drops or capsules, methylene blue has documented interactions with several classes of medication and is contraindicated for certain individuals.
Do not take methylene blue if you are currently using:
- SSRIs or MAOIs (risk of serotonin syndrome)
- Blood pressure medications
- St. John's Wort, 5-HTP, or CoQ10
- Any serotonergic medication
Not for use by pregnant or nursing women.
Review the full adverse medications list and consult your healthcare provider before starting methylene blue in any form.
Which Nutricel Product Is Right for You
Every Nutricel product uses USP-grade methylene blue, is manufactured in an NSF-certified cGMP facility in the United States, and is independently tested through Eurofins. The difference between them is what they are built to support alongside the methylene blue itself.
Blue Boost is Nutricel's core formula. If your focus is methylene blue itself and you want a clean, research-backed capsule built around absorption and cellular energy, this is it.
Blue Immune combines methylene blue with copper, NAC, grass-fed beef liver, and vitamins A, C, and E for cellular and immune function support.
Blue Shroom pairs methylene blue with six organic mushroom extracts including lion's mane, reishi, cordyceps, chaga, shiitake, and turkey tail.
Blue Renew is built around GlyNAC (glycine and N-acetyl cysteine), studied for supporting glutathione levels and brain function in aging populations.
Blue Remove combines zeolite, curcumin, and nattokinase based on the spike protein detoxification protocol developed by Dr. Peter McCullough.
Blue Liquid delivers USP-grade methylene blue in a precise dropper bottle for those who prefer liquid format and flexible dosing.
The Bottom Line
When using a 1% methylene blue solution, a typical drop contains roughly half a milligram. That is the starting point for calculating how many drops deliver a specific amount. But drop size varies, concentration varies between products, and methylene blue follows a dose-response pattern where more is not better.
Always confirm the concentration of your product before calculating drops. Always use a consistent technique with the same dropper. And remember that for a compound that operates at the mitochondrial electron transport chain level, precision matters more than it does for most supplements.
For users who want consistency without the math, capsules provide a fixed amount per serving with no variability in technique, dropper, or concentration. That is the thinking behind Blue Boost.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many drops of 1% methylene blue equal 10mg?
Approximately 20 drops using a standard dropper. A 1% solution contains 10mg per mL, and a standard drop is roughly 0.05 mL, which equals about 0.5mg per drop. However, actual drop volume varies by dropper, so these are estimates.
What does "hormetic" mean for methylene blue?
Hormesis means the dose-response curve is not linear. Low doses of methylene blue support mitochondrial electron transport and energy production. High doses reverse those effects and can become counterproductive. The goal is to stay within the low-dose supportive range, not to maximize intake.
Will methylene blue stain my teeth?
Liquid methylene blue can temporarily stain teeth, tongue, lips, and anything else it contacts. This is one of the most common complaints from liquid users. Capsules avoid this entirely because the methylene blue is enclosed and does not contact the mouth.
How many drops equal one Nutricel Blue Boost capsule?
Each Blue Boost capsule contains 12mg of USP-grade methylene blue. Using a 1% solution with a standard dropper, that is approximately 24 drops. The capsule also includes Vitamin C Ester and organic cacao powder, which are not present in a plain liquid solution.
Why does my urine turn blue?
Blue or blue-green urine is a normal and expected side effect of methylene blue. It indicates your body is processing and excreting the compound. The intensity of the color can vary based on the amount taken and individual metabolism. This is not harmful.
Are there medications I should check before taking methylene blue?
Yes. Methylene blue has documented interactions with serotonergic medications including SSRIs and MAOIs. Review the full Adverse Medications List before starting and consult your healthcare provider.