Quick Answer

Both turmeric and ginger have legitimate anti-inflammatory evidence - but the mechanisms, research quality, and practical applications differ. Turmeric (specifically curcumin) has stronger evidence for chronic inflammatory conditions and joint pain. Ginger has better acute anti-inflammatory evidence and stronger evidence for nausea, digestive discomfort, and exercise-induced muscle soreness. Both are safe and effective in reasonable amounts. Neither replaces medical treatment for serious inflammatory conditions.

Turmeric vs Ginger for Inflammation: Both Work — But for Different Things

Both turmeric and ginger have been used in food and medicine across Asia for thousands of years. Both have been studied extensively in the modern research literature. Neither is a miracle cure. But both have genuine anti-inflammatory mechanisms and useful clinical evidence that's worth understanding.

Here's a clear comparison.


How Turmeric Works

Turmeric's active compound is curcumin - a polyphenol that makes up roughly 3-5% of dried turmeric by weight.

Curcumin works on inflammation through multiple mechanisms, but the primary one is inhibiting NF-κB - a protein complex that controls the expression of hundreds of inflammatory genes including TNF-alpha, interleukin-1, and cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2, the same enzyme targeted by ibuprofen and aspirin).

This is why curcumin is sometimes described as a "natural COX-2 inhibitor." It's working on a similar pathway to NSAIDs, though with lower potency and through a different mechanism.

The major limitation of curcumin: poor bioavailability. On its own, curcumin is poorly absorbed from the gut. A 1978 study established that piperine - a compound in black pepper - increases curcumin absorption by up to 2,000%. This is why "turmeric with black pepper" supplements became standard, and why recipes that include both spices are nutritionally sensible. Standard curcumin supplements now often include piperine (BioPerine) for this reason.


How Ginger Works

Ginger's primary active compounds are gingerols (in fresh ginger) and shogaols (produced when ginger is dried or cooked - they're about twice as potent as gingerols). Both inhibit inflammatory enzymes including COX-2 and 5-LOX (lipoxygenase - another inflammatory pathway).

Ginger also has a more established and direct effect on the gut. It accelerates gastric emptying, reduces nausea through 5-HT3 receptor antagonism (the same mechanism as prescription anti-nausea drugs), and has been shown to influence the gut microbiome composition - specifically supporting Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium species.

Unlike curcumin, gingerols and shogaols are reasonably well-absorbed from food and supplement forms without bioavailability-enhancing additions.


Head-to-Head Evidence: Inflammation Markers

Joint Pain and Arthritis

Turmeric/curcumin: Multiple clinical trials have studied curcumin in osteoarthritis and rheumatoid arthritis. A 2016 systematic review in the Journal of Medicinal Food covering 8 RCTs found that curcumin supplementation significantly reduced pain scores and inflammatory markers (CRP, TNF-alpha) in osteoarthritis. A notable 2014 trial compared curcumin to diclofenac (a prescription NSAID) in 367 patients with knee osteoarthritis - curcumin produced equivalent pain relief with fewer gastrointestinal side effects.

Ginger: Also studied in arthritis. A 2015 Cochrane-standard review found ginger supplementation significantly reduced pain and disability in osteoarthritis, with an effect size comparable to NSAIDs for mild-to-moderate pain. A 2017 trial specifically in rheumatoid arthritis found ginger supplementation significantly reduced IL-1beta and TNF-alpha levels compared to placebo over 12 weeks.

Verdict on joint pain: both are effective; turmeric has slightly more trials with larger effect sizes.

General Inflammatory Markers (CRP, TNF-alpha)

Turmeric: A 2016 meta-analysis in Nutrients covering 9 RCTs found curcumin supplementation significantly reduced serum CRP and TNF-alpha levels. The effect was most pronounced in people with existing elevated inflammatory markers.

Ginger: A 2020 systematic review found ginger supplementation significantly reduced CRP and IL-6 compared to placebo across 12 RCTs. Effect sizes were comparable to curcumin studies.

Verdict: roughly equivalent for general inflammatory marker reduction.

Exercise-Induced Muscle Soreness (DOMS)

This is where ginger has a clear edge.

A 2010 study in the Journal of Pain found that 2g of raw ginger daily for 11 days reduced exercise-induced muscle pain by 25% compared to placebo - affecting next-day soreness specifically. Cooked ginger produced similar results (24% reduction). Curcumin has less strong evidence in this specific application.

For people who train regularly and deal with muscle soreness, ginger is the better-evidenced choice.

Nausea

Ginger, clearly. It's one of the best-evidenced interventions for nausea across multiple causes: morning sickness (safe in pregnancy at standard doses), chemotherapy-induced nausea (used as adjunct therapy), motion sickness, and post-operative nausea.

A 2014 Cochrane review covering 12 RCTs found ginger reduced nausea significantly. Curcumin doesn't have meaningful evidence in this area.


Comparison Table

ApplicationTurmeric/CurcuminGinger
Joint pain (arthritis)Strong evidenceGood evidence
Systemic CRP/inflammationStrongStrong
Muscle soreness (DOMS)LimitedGood
NauseaPoorExcellent
Digestive comfortModerateStrong
Gut microbiomeSome evidenceGood evidence
Bioavailability issueYes (needs piperine)No
Evidence quality overallHigher (more RCTs)Good

Dosing: What the Research Used

Curcumin: Most effective studies used 500-1,000mg of curcumin extract per day (not raw turmeric - there's a significant difference). With piperine: 20mg piperine per 2,000mg curcumin is the standard ratio. Turmeric powder as a spice contains only 3-5% curcumin - to get 1,000mg of curcumin from turmeric powder alone you'd need roughly 20g of powder per day, which is impractical.

Ginger: Research doses range from 0.5g to 3g of ginger daily. Fresh ginger, dried ginger, and ginger extract all have evidence. For DOMS and nausea, 1-2g of fresh or dried ginger is a common effective dose. Ginger supplements (standardised for gingerol content) are practical for consistent dosing.


Food vs Supplement

Both can be used as food or supplements.

In food: turmeric as a cooking spice adds flavour and provides some curcumin, but at concentrations too low to produce the effects seen in research without very heavy use. The anti-inflammatory benefits of a diet that includes turmeric regularly as a spice are real but modest.

Ginger as food - added to cooking, as tea, in smoothies - delivers more relevant doses than turmeric in food form, particularly fresh ginger in larger amounts.

For targeted anti-inflammatory effects at research-backed doses, supplements are more practical. The key for turmeric: look for "curcumin extract" or "turmeric extract standardised to 95% curcuminoids" rather than plain turmeric powder, and ensure piperine/BioPerine is included.

These work alongside - not instead of - the anti-inflammatory foods and dietary changes that drive the most meaningful long-term inflammation reduction.


Frequently Asked Questions

Can you take turmeric and ginger together?

Yes - they're frequently combined in supplements and there's no interaction between them. They work through related but distinct mechanisms, and some research suggests combining them produces additive anti-inflammatory effects. In food, turmeric and ginger are used together regularly in Asian cooking. If supplementing both, starting with lower individual doses and monitoring for any digestive tolerance issues is reasonable.

Is turmeric latte (golden milk) anti-inflammatory?

Marginally. A turmeric latte using milk, turmeric powder, and black pepper provides some curcumin - the piperine in black pepper does help absorption. But the curcumin content from a teaspoon of turmeric powder is roughly 50-100mg - well below the 500-1,000mg used in clinical research. It's a pleasant food with some benefit; it's not a therapeutic dose. Don't skip the black pepper if making it.

Does ginger interact with any medications?

Yes, worth being aware of. Ginger has mild antiplatelet effects at higher doses and can potentially increase bleeding risk when combined with blood thinners (warfarin, aspirin). People taking blood-thinning medications should speak to a doctor before taking ginger supplements at high doses. Standard culinary use of ginger is unlikely to produce significant interactions.

How long before turmeric or ginger show effects on inflammation?

Research timelines: most trials run 8-12 weeks before measuring inflammatory outcomes. Some pain-related outcomes (particularly muscle soreness with ginger) show effects within days of consistent use. For systemic markers like CRP with curcumin, 8 weeks of consistent supplementation is a more realistic timeline. Both compounds need consistent daily intake to maintain their effects - they're not one-time interventions.

Are there any downsides to taking curcumin?

At standard doses, curcumin is very well-tolerated. Very high doses (above 8g/day) can cause GI upset. A small proportion of people develop nausea at lower doses. Curcumin can inhibit iron absorption - people with iron deficiency anemia should speak to a doctor before supplementing. There are also potential drug interactions with blood thinners and some chemotherapy agents at high doses. For context, the doses used in most research and standard supplements are well below levels associated with problems.

Sources & References

Every claim in this article is checked against published research, public-health bodies, or peer-reviewed evidence. The links below open in a new tab.

  1. piperine increases curcumin absorption by up to 2,000%PubMed
  2. curcumin reduced pain scores in osteoarthritis RCTsPubMed
  3. ginger reduced muscle pain by 25% (DOMS)PubMed
  4. ginger significantly reduced nausea (Cochrane)PubMed
  5. curcumin reduced CRP and TNF-alpha in meta-analysisPubMed