What are Omega-3s?
Omega-3s are a family of essential fatty acids your body cannot make on its own. The three that matter are ALA (from plants), and the two long-chain forms that do almost all the work in humans: EPA and DHA, found in oily fish and algae.
The modern diet is heavily skewed toward omega-6 fats from processed oils, pushing the omega-6:omega-3 ratio to an estimated 15:1 or higher when something closer to 4:1 is thought to be ideal. Most people who don't eat oily fish several times a week sit well below an optimal EPA/DHA intake.
Why athletes should care
- Hard training elevates systemic inflammation — omega-3s help resolve it
- Joint and tendon loads are high; EPA/DHA support connective-tissue comfort
- Cardiovascular health underpins every endurance adaptation
- Plant ALA converts to EPA/DHA at only ~5–10%, so diet alone often falls short
How It Works
EPA and DHA get incorporated into your cell membranes, where they change how cells signal. Four mechanisms matter most for active people:
The recovery evidence
Several controlled trials report reduced markers of exercise-induced muscle damage and lower delayed-onset muscle soreness with omega-3 supplementation. The effect is most reliable in untrained or older subjects; in well-trained athletes it is smaller, but the broader health benefits make a consistent intake worthwhile regardless of the recovery angle.
Dosage, Timing & Forms
Read the label correctly
A capsule labelled "1000mg fish oil" often contains only 300mg of actual EPA+DHA. Always add up the EPA and DHA figures — that combined number is the dose that matters.1
Triglyceride vs ethyl ester
- Triglyceride (rTG) form — the natural structure, absorbed roughly 1.7× better and more oxidation-stable. Our preferred form.3
- Ethyl ester (EE) form — cheaper and concentrated, but absorbed less efficiently and slightly more prone to oxidation. Fine at adequate doses with food.
- Algae oil — a vegan-friendly source of DHA (and increasingly EPA) for those who don't eat fish.
Best Omega-3 Supplements
We prioritise: combined EPA+DHA per serving, triglyceride form where possible, third-party-tested purity and freshness, and no unnecessary fillers.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I get enough omega-3 from food?
If you eat two or more servings of oily fish (salmon, sardines, mackerel, herring) per week, you may meet baseline needs. Most people in Western countries eat far less, and plant sources like flax and chia provide ALA, which converts to active EPA and DHA at only around 5–10%. For a reliable EPA/DHA intake, oily fish or a fish/algae oil supplement is the practical route.
What's the difference between EPA and DHA?
Both are long-chain omega-3 fatty acids. EPA is most associated with anti-inflammatory and mood effects, while DHA is a structural component of the brain, eyes and cell membranes. Most quality supplements contain both — look at the combined EPA+DHA figure rather than the total fish oil amount.
Triglyceride or ethyl ester form — which is better?
The triglyceride (rTG) form is absorbed roughly 1.7× better than the ethyl ester (EE) form in several studies and tends to be more oxidation-stable. Ethyl ester products are cheaper and still effective at adequate doses, but if you want the best absorption per dollar of EPA/DHA, choose a triglyceride-form fish oil.
Does fish oil help with muscle recovery?
There's reasonable evidence that omega-3s reduce markers of exercise-induced inflammation and muscle soreness, and may modestly support muscle protein synthesis in older adults. The effect in trained younger athletes is smaller and less consistent, but the cardiovascular and joint benefits make it worthwhile regardless.
How do I avoid rancid or low-quality fish oil?
Rancid fish oil tastes and smells strongly fishy and can cause "fish burps." Choose products with a third-party-tested oxidation (TOTOX) value, buy from reputable brands, store in a cool dark place or the fridge, and check the EPA+DHA per serving rather than the total oil weight. IFOS-certified products publish independent purity and freshness data.
References
This guide is built from peer-reviewed research. Key sources:
- National Institutes of Health, Office of Dietary Supplements. Omega-3 Fatty Acids — Health Professional Fact Sheet. Full text
- Smith GI, Atherton P, Reeds DN, et al. Dietary omega-3 fatty acid supplementation increases the rate of muscle protein synthesis in older adults: a randomized controlled trial. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. 2011;93(2):402–412. PubMed
- Dyerberg J, Madsen P, Møller JM, Aardestrup I, Schmidt EB. Bioavailability of marine n-3 fatty acid formulations. Prostaglandins, Leukotrienes and Essential Fatty Acids. 2010;83(3):137–141. PubMed