Diet for ED

Conveniently located to serve the areas of San Francisco, CA

For borderline erectile dysfunction (early or mild ED), diet and supplements
can meaningfully improve vascular function, nitric-oxide signaling, testosterone balance, and metabolic health.

The optimal strategy differs somewhat for normal-weight, underweight, and overweight men, because the underlying causes often differ (vascular health, hormonal status, or metabolic syndrome).

Best diet & supplements for borderline Erectile Dysfunction

The best overall dietary pattern

The Mediterranean-style diet is one of the best-studied dietary patterns for supporting erectile function.

This is not a strict or mandatory diet, but rather a guideline for the type and balance of foods that promote vascular and overall health. It is a suggestion of an excellent dietary pattern, not a requirement.

You do not have to eat “Mediterranean food” specifically. Whether your preference is Thai, traditional American, or another cuisine, you can still follow this approach—as long as you maintain the right proportions and quality of fats, proteins, and carbohydrates.

In general, this means:

  • Emphasizing healthy fats (such as olive oil, nuts, and fish)
  • Choosing lean, high-quality protein sources
  • Favoring complex, unprocessed carbohydrates (vegetables, fruits, whole grains)
  • Limiting processed foods, excess sugar, and unhealthy fats

The key principle is not the cuisine itself, but the nutritional composition of what you eat. When structured properly, this type of diet supports cardiovascular health—and because erections depend heavily on blood flow, it also supports better erectile dysfunction.

Why it works

  • Improves endothelial function
  • Increases nitric oxide availability
  • Reduces inflammation
  • Improves glucose and lipid metabolism

These mechanisms directly affect penile blood flow.

Evidence

Large population studies show men with the highest Mediterranean diet
scores have significantly lower risk of ED.

Key foods

Eat more of:

Vegetables

  • Spinach
  • Arugula
  • Beets
  • Broccoli

Healthy fats

  • Olive oil
  • Avocado
  • Nuts (especially walnuts and almonds)

Proteins

  • Fish (salmon, sardines)
  • Eggs
  • Poultry
  • Legumes

Nitric oxide foods

  • Beets
  • Pomegranate
  • Watermelon
  • Leafy greens

Whole grains

  • Oats
  • Quinoa
  • Whole wheat

Limit

  • Sugar
  • Ultra-processed foods
  • Trans fats
  • Excess alcohol

Supplements with the best evidence

L-Arginine

Mechanism

  • Precursor to nitric oxide improves penile blood flow.→

Evidence
Clinical trials show improvement in erectile function through increased nitric oxide production.

Typical dose

  • 1,500–5,000 mg/day

Best for

  • Mild vascular ED
  • Endothelial dysfunction
  • Early ED

L-Citrulline

Converts to arginine in the body.

Evidence:
Clinical trials show improved erection hardness in men with mild ED.

Dose

  • 1.5–3 g/day

Often better tolerated than arginine.

Panax (Korean red) ginseng

One of the most studied herbal options.

Effects

  • Improves nitric oxide signaling
  • May improve libido and erection quality.

Evidence
Multiple studies show improvement in erectile function scores.

Dose

  • 1,000 mg 2–3 times daily

Vitamin D (if deficient)

Low vitamin D is associated with increased risk of ED and lower testosterone.

Dose

  • Usually 1000–2000 IU/day
  • Ideally guided by blood levels.

Zinc (especially if testosterone borderline)

Important for:

  • Testosterone synthesis
  • Spermatogenesis
  • Libido

Dose

  • 15–30 mg/day

Diet strategy by body type

Normal-weight men with borderline ED

Most common causes

  • Stress
  • Early vascular changes
  • Mild testosterone decline

Diet focus

  • Mediterranean diet
  • Nitric-oxide foods

Recommended supplements

  • Citrulline or arginine
  • Vitamin D
  • Ginseng

Lifestyle

  • Resistance training
  • Good sleep
  • Reduce alcohol

Underweight men

Common causes

  • Low testosterone
  • Low energy availability
  • Nutritional deficiencies

Diet focus

Increase:

Healthy calories

  • Olive oil
  • Nuts
  • Whole eggs
  • Fatty fish

Protein

  • 1.2–1.5 g/kg/day

Carbohydrates

  • Whole grains
  • Sweet potatoes
  • fruit

Key supplements

  • Zinc
  • Vitamin D
  • Creatine (supports testosterone and muscle)

Avoid

  • Excessive cardio
  • Low-fat diets

Overweight men

Common causes

  • Insulin resistance
  • Low testosterone
  • vascular disease

Weight loss improves ED significantly.
Even 5–10% weight loss can improve erectile function.

Diet focus

  • Mediterranean or low-carb Mediterranean

Reduce

  • sugar
  • refined carbs
  • alcohol

Key supplements

  • Citrulline
  • Omega-3
  • Vitamin D
  • Magnesium

Lifestyle

  • 150 min/week cardio
  • strength training

A simple daily protocol

Example for borderline ED patient:

Morning

  • Vitamin D 2000 IU
  • Zinc 20 mg
  • Citrulline 1500 mg

Evening

  • Citrulline 1500 mg
  • Korean ginseng 1000 mg

Diet

  • Mediterranean style

Exercise

  • 30 minutes cardio
  • strength training 3x/week

Sleep

  • 7–8 hours

Foods that directly improve Erectile physiology

Highest nitric-oxide foods

  • Spinach
  • Arugula
  • Beets
  • Watermelon
  • Pomegranate

Testosterone-supporting foods

  • Eggs
  • Oysters
  • Red meat (moderate)
  • Pumpkin seeds

Vascular foods

  • Olive oil
  • dark chocolate
  • berries
  • walnuts

Important clinical insight

Borderline ED is often the earliest sign of vascular disease. The penile arteries are small, so endothelial dysfunction appears there before coronary arteries. Many experts consider ED a cardiovascular warning sign.