The antioxidant category is getting a narrative refresh. As Nutraceuticals World noted, new scientific stories are breathing life into this mature market[6] — and few ingredients exemplify that shift better than green tea polyphenols. As a specialized green tea polyphenols supplier, we help B2B brands turn this clinically dense raw material into differentiated products. Here’s the data you need — no fluff.
1. What Are Tea Polyphenols? The Four Key Catechins
Tea polyphenols (TP) are the polyphenolic compounds concentrated in Camellia sinensis leaves, making up 20–35% of dry leaf weight[1]. The four major catechins — EGCG (~80% of total), EGC, ECG, and EC — are the powerhouses behind tea’s benefits[1]. So “Does Twinings green tea have polyphenols?” or “Which green tea contains polyphenols?” — all true green teas do. Concentration varies by variety, terroir, harvest, and processing. That’s why our sourcing focuses on China’s 25°–30°N golden belt (Section 3).
2. The Evidence: Five Research-Backed Bioactivities
Antioxidant activity. Tea polyphenols operate through four distinct pathways: direct radical scavenging, lipid peroxidation inhibition, metal-ion chelation, and endogenous antioxidant enzyme upregulation[1][2]. In a 2026 comparative study, green tea polyphenols hit a DPPH scavenging rate of 92.77% and outperformed vitamin C on Cu²⁺ reducing power and FRAP capacity[3].
Anti-aging. A study on SupplySide SJ found that specific polyphenols can slow biological aging[7]. The mechanism: EGCG activates the Nrf2/ARE pathway — the body’s master antioxidant switch — while suppressing the NF-κB cascade that drives cellular senescence[4]. Animal studies show extended lifespan and reduced oxidative damage; human cohort data link 6–8 g daily tea intake to measurably slower aging[4].
Metabolic & cardiovascular. For “Can green tea lower A1C?” — tea polyphenols improve insulin sensitivity and reduce fasting blood glucose in preclinical models[5]. They also protect vascular endothelial cells via the Notch pathway[5]. On the cognitive front, Nutritional Outlook examined the science of brain maintenance[9] and Nutraceuticals World covered an observational study linking tea consumption to neuroprotective benefits[8] — both spaces where tea polyphenols are a natural fit.
Antitumor & radioprotection. Preclinical evidence shows caspase-mediated apoptosis in cancer cells and DNA protection from radiation damage[1].
Nutraceuticals World also covered the tea-vs.-coffee conversation: moderate consumption of either may offer neuroprotective benefits[8]. But for formulators, green tea holds a clear edge — its catechin concentration far exceeds the total polyphenol load of a typical coffee brew[1].
Request Your Sample → full COA, HPLC catechin profile, and heavy-metal limits included.
3. Our 98% Extract: What the Spec Sheet Says
When sourcing the highest purified form available for green tea polyphenols, here’s what a genuine 98% extract delivers — directly from our batch records.
Sourcing & Raw Material
- Regions: Wuyishan (Fujian), West Lake Hangzhou (Zhejiang), Pu’er (Yunnan) — within 25°–30°N, the green tea golden belt.
- Terroir: Gardens above 800 m, mist-shrouded, selenium-rich soil, large-leaf cultivars — conditions proven to maximize catechin biosynthesis.
- Harvest: Once annually, March–May; one-bud-one-leaf at the pre-Qingming/Guyu spring peak — optimal polyphenol-to-amino-acid balance.
- Traceability: Contracted tea farmers and local processors; every batch traceable to its garden of origin.
Extraction, Purification & QC
- Extraction: Multi-function extraction tanks, continuous counter-current + enzyme-assisted technology.
- Purification: Macroporous resin adsorption + high-speed centrifugation — the gold standard for 98%[2]. Dedicated column-chromatography decaffeination keeps caffeine <0.5%.
- Finishing: Spray-drying towers / vacuum ovens; ultra-fine pulverizers + vibrating sieves to 80–200 mesh; Class 100,000 cleanroom packaging — no terminal irradiation.
- In-house lab: UV (Folin-Ciocalteu), HPLC (individual catechins), atomic absorption, GC, atomic fluorescence. Typical profile: total catechins 75%–85%, EGCG 45%–55%, caffeine <0.5%.
- Consistency: Total polyphenol variation within ±2%; HPLC fingerprint matched every shipment. Accelerated stability testing completed; two-year data show essentially no color change.
If you’re looking for a Green Tea Polyphenols 98% powder manufacturer that ships this level of detail on every COA, we’re ready to earn your business.
4. Safety & Side Effects
“What are the side effects of polyphenols in green tea?” At recommended inclusion levels, tea polyphenols have a well-established safety profile — non-toxic, bioavailable, consumed for millennia. We recommend established dosage ranges for your application, accelerated stability studies, and consulting our technical team for GRAS-aligned guidance. Full SDS, data sheets, and regulatory support ship with every order.
5. Applications Across Your Portfolio
- Dietary Supplements — capsules, softgels, effervescent tablets, powder sticks (antioxidant, healthy aging, metabolic wellness).
- Functional Foods & Beverages — RTD teas, energy drinks, protein bars, meal replacements. Nutritional Outlook recently covered TopGum’s beauty-from-within gummies[10] — a format where 98% tea polyphenols fit naturally.
- Cosmetics & Personal Care — anti-aging serums, UV-protective day creams, scalp-care formulations.
- Pharmaceutical Intermediates — research-grade EGCG-rich material for drug development.
References
- Zhang X M, Ni Y, Li X R. Advances in study on pharmacological effects of tea polyphenol [J]. Drug Evaluation Research, 2013, 36(2): 157-160.
- Yang X, Chen L, Lu H M, et al. Research progress on extraction and purification methods of tea polyphenols and its functional activities [J]. Science and Technology of Food Industry, 2019, 40(5): 322-328, 332.
- Li L D, Zhu L L, Zhao Y X, et al. Investigation on the in vitro antioxidant activity of tea polyphenols in tea leaves [J]. Guangdong Chemical Industry, 2026, 53(10): 27-31.
- Liu H, Tian X C, Yin Y Q, et al. Research progress on the anti-aging effects of major functional components in tea [J]. Journal of Tea Science, 2026.
- Chen Z Y, et al. Research progress on biological activity and mechanism of tea polyphenols [J].
- “New Scientific Narratives Breathe Life Into Antioxidants Market.” Nutraceuticals World.
- “Study finds specific polyphenols can help people age more slowly.” SupplySide SJ.
- “Moderate Coffee, Tea Drinking May Offer Neuroprotective Benefits: Observational Study.” Nutraceuticals World.
- “The science of brain maintenance: A neurologist’s perspective.” Nutritional Outlook.
- “TopGum introduces new gummy line for beauty-from-within support.” Nutritional Outlook.
- “Tailoring cognitive nutrition for proactive consumers [Interview].” Vitafoods Insights.
- “BioVivo Science Introduces U.S.-Made Caffeine Sourced from Green Tea.” Nutritional Outlook.