Best time to take collagen: morning vs evening
Best time to take collagen: morning vs evening
The best time to take collagen is one of the most-asked questions for anyone starting a daily supplement, and the short answer is the time you will actually stick to every day. Beyond that, there are real reasons to favour the morning over the evening, or vice versa, depending on your routine, training schedule and what you are hoping collagen will help with. Here is what the evidence says, what timing actually changes, and how to build a daily collagen habit that works for you.
When is the best time to take collagen?
The best time to take collagen is the slot in your day that you will never skip. Collagen peptides work on a cumulative basis. They circulate, get incorporated into the body's repair pathways, and gradually shift skin, hair, nail and joint markers over a 8 to 12 week window. Missing doses matters far more than the hour you take it. That said, the morning is the most popular slot because routines anchor easily to existing habits like coffee or breakfast. Evening works well if your mornings are rushed, and pairs with the overnight tissue repair cycle when growth hormone is naturally highest. Pre-workout, around 30 to 60 minutes before training, has its own evidence base for joint and tendon support. All three slots can work. The lever for results is daily consistency for at least 12 weeks, not the time on the clock.
Morning vs evening collagen: what the evidence says
Taking collagen in the morning
Morning is the most popular time to take collagen, and for good reason. Habits stick when you anchor them to something you already do every day. A liquid sachet takes ten seconds and pairs cleanly with vitamin C, which the body uses to convert proline and lysine into new collagen fibres. If you want a deeper read on the format itself, our complete guide to liquid marine collagen walks through dose, peptide size and what to look for on a label. Morning is also useful if you train before work, since taking collagen 30 to 60 minutes before activity has been studied for connective tissue support.
Taking collagen in the evening
Taking collagen at night has its own logic. Overnight is when the body does most of its tissue repair, when growth hormone peaks, and when blood flow shifts toward the skin. Some people find an evening routine easier to protect than a busy morning. If your mornings are chaotic, a sachet of Kollo Liquid Marine Collagen as part of a wind-down can be a reliable slot. There is no caffeine, no stimulant load and no reason it would interfere with sleep. The only watch-out is personal preference: liquid sachets contain a small amount of natural flavouring, which some people prefer not to taste right before bed.
Should I take collagen with food or on an empty stomach?
There is no strong evidence that an empty stomach changes how well your body absorbs hydrolysed marine collagen peptides. Hydrolysed collagen is already broken down into small di- and tri-peptides during manufacturing, so most of the digestive work has been done before you swallow it. Pair it with vitamin C if you can, since vitamin C is a cofactor in collagen synthesis. If you are also wondering when you should expect to see changes, our breakdown of how long collagen takes to work sets realistic expectations week by week.
Morning vs evening collagen at a glance
| Factor | Morning | Evening | Pre-workout |
|---|---|---|---|
| Routine fit | Easiest for most | Good if mornings are rushed | Training days only |
| Pairs naturally with | Coffee, breakfast, vitamin C | Wind-down, evening skincare | Hydration, warm-up |
| Best supports | Skin, hair, nails, daily habit | Overnight tissue repair | Joints, tendons, recovery |
| Watch out for | Skipping at weekends | Flavour right before sleep | Allow 30 to 60 minutes lead time |
How to choose the right time for you
- Pick the slot you will never skip, because consistency outweighs timing every time
- Anchor it to something you already do daily, like coffee, breakfast or bedtime routine
- Pair with vitamin C where possible to support collagen synthesis
- If you train hard, take it 30 to 60 minutes pre-workout for connective tissue support
- Commit to at least 12 weeks of daily intake before judging results
- Choose a clinical-dose, low-faff format so timing never becomes a barrier
The best time to take collagen is the one that becomes invisible in your routine, taken without thought, every day, for at least 12 weeks. Format matters as much as timing. Kollo Liquid Marine Collagen delivers a 10g clinical dose of Naticol marine collagen peptides in a single sachet, alongside vitamin C, biotin and the full B-complex, and is registered with Informed Sport so what is on the label is what is in the sachet. Whether you take it with your morning coffee or as part of a wind-down, the only lever that matters for results is showing up daily.
Kollo Health was co-founded by Jenni Falconer - TV presenter, Smooth Radio breakfast host, ten-time London Marathon runner and host of the RunPod podcast.
