Nootropics & Focus
by Cibdol
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Shilajit is a mineral-rich resin that seeps from high-altitude rock formations in the Himalayas, Altai, and Caucasus mountains — the result of centuries of plant matter slowly decomposing under geological pressure. Cibdol captures this dark, tar-like substance in a clean 500 mg capsule, which means you skip the sticky fingers and pungent taste that come with raw shilajit resin. If you've been curious about this Ayurvedic staple but didn't fancy scraping it off a spoon, this is where to start.
Each capsule delivers a concentrated blend of fulvic acid, humic acid, selenium, and over 80 trace minerals and amino acids. Fulvic acid is the standout compound here — a small organic molecule that acts as a natural carrier, and research suggests it may support the bioavailability of other nutrients you consume alongside it. Cibdol sources and purifies the raw material to remove heavy metals and contaminants, which matters more than you'd think: unprocessed shilajit can contain arsenic, lead, and mercury according to safety reviews. With Cibdol's pharmaceutical-grade approach, you're getting the good stuff without the worry.
Shilajit has been used in Ayurvedic medicine for centuries, traditionally valued as a rasayana — a rejuvenating tonic. Modern science is catching up, and while the evidence base is still growing, several studies point in interesting directions.
According to a clinical evaluation published on PubMed, purified shilajit was assessed in healthy male volunteers aged 45–55 for its effects on testosterone levels (PubMed 26395129). According to a study in the Journal of Medicinal Food, 8 weeks of shilajit supplementation at 500 mg daily was examined for its effects on fatigue-related biomarkers (PMC 6364418). And a review in the International Journal of Alzheimer's Disease describes shilajit as a "natural phytocomplex with potential procognitive activity," noting that preclinical investigations indicate potential uses across several areas including antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties (PMC 3296184).
Research also suggests shilajit may support the body's response to high-altitude stress. According to a review in the International Journal of Ayurveda Research, shilajit has traditionally been described as a remedy for altitude-related symptoms including fatigue and low energy (PMC 2876922).
None of this means shilajit is a miracle pill — it isn't. But the mineral profile alone is genuinely impressive, and the early clinical data gives a reasonable basis for trying it yourself.
Cibdol packs 500 mg of purified shilajit into each capsule. According to Examine.com, clinical studies have used doses ranging from 200 to 2,000 mg daily, with 500 mg being the most commonly used regimen (Examine). That means one capsule per day puts you right in the sweet spot of what researchers have actually tested.
At one capsule per day, the 60-capsule jar gives you a full two months of use — enough time to genuinely assess whether shilajit works for you.
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Brand | Cibdol |
| Format | Capsules |
| Capsules per jar | 60 |
| Shilajit per capsule | 500 mg |
| Key actives | Fulvic acid, humic acid, selenium, 85+ trace minerals, amino acids |
| Recommended dose | 1 capsule daily (500 mg) |
| Supply duration | 60 days (at 1 capsule/day) |
| Category | Nootropics |
We've stocked various shilajit products over the years, and the number one complaint with resin-format shilajit is always the same: it's messy, it tastes like burnt rubber mixed with earth, and getting a consistent dose is guesswork. Cibdol's capsule format solves all three problems. You get a precise 500 mg dose, zero taste, and nothing stuck under your fingernails. It's not the cheapest shilajit on the market, but Cibdol's purification process is what you're paying for — and given that unpurified shilajit can contain heavy metals, that's not a corner worth cutting.
The honest limitation? Capsules mean you can't microdose below 500 mg. If you wanted to start at 250 mg, you'd need to open the capsule and split the powder — doable but fiddly. For most people taking the standard 500 mg dose, though, this is the most convenient format available.
Compared to raw resin, you also lose the ritual aspect. Some people genuinely enjoy dissolving a pea-sized blob of shilajit in warm water and sipping it like a bitter tea. If that's your thing, fair enough — but if you just want the minerals and actives without the ceremony, capsules win every time.
Shilajit sits in our nootropics category for good reason. The combination of fulvic acid, trace minerals, and amino acids makes it a broad-spectrum supplement rather than a single-target nootropic. It's traditionally been used by people looking to support energy, mental clarity, and general vitality — and the modern research, while still developing, broadly aligns with those traditional uses.
This particular product works best if you want a standardised, no-fuss daily supplement from a brand with proper quality controls. Cibdol is a Swiss-based company with a strong reputation in the CBD and supplement space — they test for heavy metals, microbial contamination, and active compound levels. That matters with shilajit more than most supplements, because the raw material literally comes from mountain rocks and the quality variance between sources is enormous.
One thing to flag: shilajit may interact with hormonal medications and blood-thinning drugs. If you're on medication, talk to your doctor before adding this to your routine. And if you're pregnant or breastfeeding, skip it — there's not enough safety data for those populations.
Building a nootropics stack? Shilajit pairs well with lion's mane mushroom capsules for cognitive support, or with ashwagandha if you're focused on stress resilience and energy. Both are available in our nootropics section and complement shilajit's mineral-rich profile without overlapping mechanisms.
| Feature | Cibdol Shilajit Capsules | Raw Shilajit Resin |
|---|---|---|
| Dose accuracy | Precise 500 mg per capsule | Approximate — measured by eye |
| Taste | None (swallow whole) | Intense, bitter, earthy |
| Convenience | Take anywhere, no prep | Needs warm water, spoon, patience |
| Purity testing | Cibdol lab-tested for heavy metals | Varies wildly by source |
| Flexibility | Fixed 500 mg increments | Adjustable dose size |
| Shelf life | Long, stable in capsule form | Can dry out or degrade if stored poorly |
Nothing. The capsule shell means you bypass the famously intense, tar-like bitterness of raw shilajit resin entirely. Swallow with water and you won't taste a thing.
Most clinical studies ran for 8–12 weeks before measuring outcomes. Don't expect overnight results — give it at least 4 weeks of consistent daily use at 500 mg before drawing conclusions.
Generally yes. Shilajit's fulvic acid content may actually support the absorption of other minerals and nutrients. However, if you're taking iron supplements or hormonal medications, consult your doctor first as interactions are possible.
At 500 mg daily, side effects are uncommon but can include mild nausea, especially on an empty stomach. Taking the capsule with food usually sorts this out. Unpurified shilajit carries a risk of heavy metal contamination — Cibdol's lab-tested capsules address this concern directly.
According to Examine.com, 500 mg daily is the most commonly used dose in clinical research. Most sources consider up to 500–600 mg per day safe for healthy adults. Cibdol's one-capsule-per-day recommendation sits comfortably within this range.
Last updated: April 2026
Medical disclaimer. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Consult a qualified healthcare provider before use of any substance.