Formulations · Churna

Trikatu

त्रिकटु
Classical churna · three pungents in equal parts

The fire-kindler of Ayurveda — three warming spices, in equal measure, that wake a sluggish digestion, burn away toxins, and clear excess Kapha. Where Triphala cleanses and Chyawanprash builds, Trikatu lights the flame.

Reading time · ~13 min Reviewed by OmAyurved Vaidya Board Updated 1 Jun 2026

At a glance

TypeChurna (powder) · polyherbal
SanskritTrikatu त्रिकटु · “three pungents / three acrids”
TraditionClassical — Sharangadhara, Ashtanga Hridaya, Bhaishajya Ratnavali
Also known asTrikatu churna, the three pungents
IngredientsDried ginger, black pepper, long pepper (equal parts)
Rasa · tastePungent (katu)
Virya · potencyHeating (ushna) — strongly warming
Vipaka · after-effectPungent (katu)
Qualities · gunaLight, dry, sharp & penetrating
Effect on dosha↓ Kapha↓ Vata↑ Pitta
Key actionsKindles digestion · burns ama · clears Kapha · carrier
Traditionally forWeak digestion, ama, sluggish metabolism, colds & congestion

The fire-kindlerत्रिकटु

Trikatu — literally “three pungents” — is the great digestive kindler of Ayurveda: a simple powder of three warming spices in equal measure, taken for centuries to wake a sluggish appetite, burn away toxins, and clear the heaviness of excess Kapha.

It is a churna (powder), the simplest of the classical preparations, built from three of the most everyday spices: dried ginger, black pepper, and long pepper. What unites them is katu — the pungent, acrid taste — and what they share is heat. Together they are pure stimulation: a small pinch that stirs the digestive fire (agni) to life.

Trikatu is the counter-current to the gentler classics. Where Triphala cleanses and Chyawanprash nourishes, Trikatu kindles — and it has a second, quieter genius: it is a famous yogavahi, a “carrier” that helps drive other remedies and foods deeper into the body. So it is taken both for its own sake and as the spark added to many other formulas.

The three pungentsत्रि-कटु

Each ingredient is a warming, pungent spice, and the three are combined in equal parts. They are not interchangeable — each works on a slightly different part of the digestive tract, so together they kindle the fire from mouth to colon.

The synergyThree spices, three reaches: ginger warms and settles the stomach, black pepper darts sharp and quick through the whole tract, and pippali acts more deeply — touching the lungs and lower digestion, and prized for being warming without being merely depleting. In equal parts they make a single, complete kindling fire, far more rounded than any one pepper alone.

How Ayurveda reads itरस · वीर्य · विपाक

Read as a whole, Trikatu’s energetics are unusually single-minded — everything points toward heat and movement:

  • Rasa (taste): pungent (katu) throughout — the hot, acrid taste that stimulates digestion and stirs circulation.
  • Virya (potency): heating (ushna) and strongly so — this is the warmest of the everyday classical powders.
  • Vipaka (post-digestive effect): pungent (katu) — its action continues to be stimulating and drying even after digestion (see Agni & vipaka).
  • Guna (qualities): light, dry, and sharp/penetrating (tikshna) — the opposite of heavy and unctuous; it scrapes and clears (see the gunas).

Its effect on the doshas is to reduce Kapha (its heat and dryness clear cold, heavy, mucousy excess) and Vata (its warmth eases cold, gas, and bloating) — while it clearly increases Pitta, since it is hot and sharp. Its defining gift — its prabhava — is to be a deepana-pachana par excellence: it both kindles the appetite and digests ama, the sticky residue of weak digestion, and as a carrier it amplifies whatever it is taken with.

Traditional actions & usesकर्म

The classics give Trikatu a tight cluster of warming, clearing actions:

Deepana दीपनPachana पाचनKaphahara कफहरLekhana लेखनYogavahi योगवाही

In traditional practice, it is turned to above all to:

  • Kindle weak digestion (deepana) — waking a dull appetite and a slow, heavy agni;
  • Burn away ama (pachana) — digesting the sticky, undigested residue that Ayurveda sees behind so much ill health (see ama);
  • Clear excess Kapha (kaphahara) — lifting heaviness, lethargy, and mucus, including from the chest in colds and coughs;
  • Support fat metabolism & healthy weight (lekhana) — its scraping, drying quality traditionally used to lighten the tissues;
  • Carry other remedies deeper (yogavahi) — added in a pinch to other formulas to improve how well they are taken up and put to work.
Its essential characterTrikatu is fire in a spoon. It does not nourish or soothe — it stimulates. That makes it invaluable when digestion is cold, slow, and clogged, and exactly the wrong choice when the system already runs hot. Knowing when to use it is the whole art.

What it’s used forcommon concerns

Trikatu is most often turned to for a handful of related concerns — each of which will have its own full guide in this encyclopedia:

  • Weak digestion & appetite — its signature use, for a slow, dull, heavy digestion.
  • Ama & sluggish metabolism — clearing ama and lifting a heavy, congested feeling.
  • Colds, cough & congestion — clearing Kapha from the chest and the sinuses.
  • Healthy weight & fat metabolism — its traditional lightening, scraping action.
  • As an adjuvant — the pinch added to other remedies to help them work.

Full concern guides — with the doshic picture and the range of supporting herbs and practices — are on their way to this section.

A note on modern researchan honest view

What the science does & doesn’t say

Trikatu is best known to modern science for one of its components: piperine, the compound in black and long pepper, which has been studied as a bioavailability enhancer — it appears to increase how much of certain other substances the body absorbs. There is also work on digestion, metabolism, and antioxidant activity.

As ever, the evidence is still developing — and much of the bioavailability research is on isolated piperine rather than the whole three-spice powder, and many studies are small or preliminary. Importantly, the same property that helps absorption can also alter how the body handles medicines (see Safety). Traditional use and emerging research are interesting, but neither replaces personalised advice from a qualified professional.

OmAyurved’s view is to honour the depth of the classical tradition while describing modern findings honestly — neither overstating them nor dismissing them.

How to take itअनुपान

Trikatu is taken in a few traditional and modern forms:

  • The classical powder (churna) — the traditional form, a small pinch taken with a carrier;
  • Tablets — convenient and easy to dose, which matters for so potent a powder;
  • As an adjuvant — a pinch stirred into another remedy, or into food, as a carrier.

The traditional way

Most classically, a small pinch is taken just before or with the first bites of a meal, to kindle the appetite and digestion. The vehicle (anupana) tunes its action: honey is the classic pairing for clearing Kapha and for the chest; warm water for general digestive kindling; a little jaggery softens its dryness for a Vata constitution. It is taken in cool, damp weather far more comfortably than in summer heat.

On dosageTrikatu is hot and sharp — it is measured by the pinch, not the spoonful. Start with the smallest amount and notice how you feel; if you sense heat, acidity, or burning, stop. Reduce or avoid it in hot weather, and follow the guidance on a quality product or, better, a qualified practitioner.

Safety & cautionsimportant

Please read before use
  • Heat, acidity & Pitta: being hot and sharp, it can aggravate acidity, heartburn, gastritis, and ulcers — avoid it, or use only the smallest amount, if you run hot, have acid reflux, or have an inflamed or ulcerated gut.
  • Medication interactions (important): the piperine in black and long pepper can change how the body absorbs and breaks down many medicines, potentially raising or altering their levels — if you take any prescription drug, check with your doctor before using Trikatu.
  • Pregnancy & nursing: strongly heating, pungent remedies are traditionally used with caution — avoid therapeutic doses in pregnancy unless advised by a practitioner.
  • Bleeding & blood thinners: pungent, blood-moving spices warrant caution if you have a bleeding tendency or take anticoagulants.
  • Dryness & Vata: its drying sharpness can aggravate a dry, depleted Vata state if overused — pair it with a softening carrier and keep the amount small.

This is general guidance, not a complete list. Always consult a qualified practitioner or doctor before starting any remedy, especially if you take medication, have acidity or an ulcer, or are pregnant or nursing.

Bring it homefrom knowledge to remedy

When you’re ready to bring Trikatu into your kitchen and your routine, it will be offered in the forms it has taken for centuries — prepared, sourced, and tested to a standard worthy of the tradition.

The OmAyurved standard
Single-origin & ethically sourcedWhole spices traced to their growers and gathered at full pungency — never spent, dust-grade material.
Prepared by classical methodTrue equal parts of the three pungents, milled fresh so the oils — and the heat — stay alive.
Independently testedEvery batch verified for purity, potency, and freedom from contaminants.
Nothing added, nothing hiddenThree spices and only three spices — no fillers, no anti-caking agents, an honest label.
Coming soon
Trikatu Churna
Three-pungent powder · single-origin

The classical powder — equal parts of the three spices, milled fresh so the heat stays alive, for the traditional pinch before meals.

  • True equal-parts ratio
  • Whole spices, milled fresh
  • Lab-tested for purity
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Coming soon
Trikatu Tablets
Measured · easy to dose

The same three spices in a measured tablet — a simple, consistent dose for so potent a powder, easy to carry and to time with meals.

  • Consistent measured dose
  • Plant-based binder
  • Third-party tested
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Coming soon
Shunthi (Dried Ginger)
The gentlest pungent, on its own

The mildest of the three, as a simple single-herb powder — “the universal medicine,” a gentler way to warm digestion when full Trikatu is too much.

  • Whole rhizome, sun-dried
  • Stone-milled fresh
  • Lab-tested for purity
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Pairs well with

Classical sources

  • Sharangadhara Samhita & Bhaishajya Ratnavali — the pharmacy texts giving the equal-parts formula and its preparations.
  • Ashtanga Hridaya & Charaka Samhita — Trikatu and the three pungents as deepana-pachana (digestive-kindling) and as adjuvants to other medicines.
  • Bhavaprakasha Nighantu — the properties of the three spices: Shunthi (ginger), Maricha (black pepper), and Pippali (long pepper).

The classical ratio is equal parts of the three pungents, though some traditions adjust the proportions or the carrier for a given purpose. OmAyurved presents the widely taught consensus. Modern research is summarised in general terms and is not a clinical endorsement.

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