The difference between a microdose that enhances your day and one that leaves you foggy or anxious often comes down to a few micrograms. Finding your ideal microdose requires understanding how dose, sensitivity, and body weight interact in your unique physiology. Most guides offer a single number and call it universal advice, which explains why so many people either feel nothing or feel too much on their first attempts. Your optimal dose exists at the intersection of your metabolism, your neurochemistry, and your lifestyle factors. Someone weighing 130 pounds with high receptor sensitivity will have a dramatically different experience than someone at 200 pounds who’s been taking SSRIs. This isn’t about finding the “right” dose from a chart. It’s about understanding your body well enough to dial in what works specifically for you.
A true microdose sits below the threshold of conscious perception. You shouldn’t feel “high,” see visual disturbances, or experience significant alterations in your thinking patterns. The goal is subtle enhancement: slightly improved mood, marginally better focus, or a gentle increase in creative thinking. For psilocybin, this typically falls between 50mg and 300mg of dried mushrooms. For LSD, most people land somewhere between 5mcg and 20mcg. These ranges seem narrow until you realize that the difference between 100mg and 200mg of psilocybin can mean the difference between noticing nothing and feeling distinctly altered.
Generic dosing recommendations assume an average person with average metabolism and average sensitivity. That person doesn’t exist. Research on psilocybin metabolism shows up to 10-fold variation in how quickly different people process the same compound. Your gut microbiome, liver enzyme activity, and even recent meals all influence absorption rates. Two people taking identical doses from the same batch can have completely different experiences. This variability isn’t a flaw in the substance: it’s human biology being human biology.
Body weight matters, but not in the straightforward way most people assume. A larger body does dilute substances across more tissue, which is why weight-based dosing exists in medicine. However, psychoactive compounds don’t distribute evenly throughout body mass. They concentrate in fatty tissue and cross the blood-brain barrier at rates independent of your weight. Someone with 25% body fat processes psilocybin differently than someone at 15% body fat, even at identical weights. The relationship between mass and effect is real but nonlinear.
Your baseline metabolic rate influences how long effects persist more than how intensely you feel them. People with faster metabolisms often report shorter duration of effects and may need to dose more frequently within their protocol. Those with slower metabolisms sometimes find effects lingering longer than expected, which can complicate scheduling. If you’re highly active or have a naturally fast metabolism, you might process a morning microdose by early afternoon. Someone more sedentary might still feel subtle effects into the evening.
Your 5-HT2A receptor density largely determines your baseline sensitivity to classical psychedelics. This density varies significantly between individuals and is partially genetic. Some people are simply “hard heads” who need higher doses to achieve any effect, while others are exquisitely sensitive. There’s no reliable way to know which category you fall into without careful experimentation. Family history can offer clues: if a sibling or parent reports high sensitivity to psychedelics, you may share that trait.
What you eat matters more than most people realize. MAO inhibitors found in aged cheeses, fermented foods, and certain medications can dramatically potentiate psilocybin’s effects. Grapefruit juice inhibits liver enzymes that metabolize many compounds, potentially extending duration and intensity. Your sleep quality in the days preceding a microdose affects baseline neurochemistry and can shift your sensitivity in either direction. Chronic stress elevates cortisol, which interacts with serotonin systems in complex ways.
SSRIs and SNRIs significantly blunt psychedelic effects through receptor competition. Someone on sertraline might need substantially higher doses to feel anything, while someone tapering off these medications may experience heightened sensitivity. Lithium creates dangerous interactions and represents an absolute contraindication. Benzodiazepines can reduce anxiety-related effects but also diminish therapeutic benefits. If you take any psychiatric medication, research interactions thoroughly before experimenting.
Begin at the lowest end of established ranges: 50mg for psilocybin mushrooms, 5mcg for LSD. This dose will likely produce no noticeable effects for most people, which is exactly the point. You’re establishing a floor, not seeking immediate results. Take this baseline dose on a day with minimal obligations and no driving requirements. Note how you feel at one hour, two hours, and four hours post-dose. Even if you notice nothing, you’ve gathered useful data.
Increase by approximately 25% per attempt, with at least three days between doses to avoid tolerance buildup. From a 50mg psilocybin baseline, your progression might look like 50mg, 65mg, 80mg, 100mg, 125mg. At each step, you’re looking for the first hint of perceptible effect. Once you notice something, you’ve found your threshold. Your optimal microdose typically sits just below this point. Resist the urge to jump in larger increments: you might overshoot your sweet spot and spend weeks recalibrating.
A simple journal transforms vague impressions into actionable patterns. Record the date, dose, time taken, what you ate beforehand, sleep quality the night before, and hourly notes on mood, focus, and energy. Rate each parameter on a 1-10 scale for easy comparison across entries. After 8-10 doses, patterns emerge that pure memory would never capture. You might discover that doses taken after coffee feel stronger, or that poor sleep the night before amplifies anxiety.
An overdose in microdosing terms doesn’t mean medical emergency: it means you’ve exceeded the sub-perceptual threshold. Signs include visual brightness or pattern recognition, difficulty concentrating on mundane tasks, emotional sensitivity, or feeling “off” in social situations. An underdose simply produces no noticeable benefit. Many people underdose for months, assuming microdosing doesn’t work for them. If you’ve completed a full protocol cycle with zero perceived benefit, you likely need to increase your dose incrementally.
Sustainable microdosing requires periodic reassessment. Your optimal dose can shift based on life circumstances, stress levels, dietary changes, or simply neurological adaptation over time. Most practitioners recommend taking breaks of at least two weeks every two to three months. These breaks prevent tolerance accumulation and allow you to reassess baseline functioning without the microdose influence.
Track any concerning patterns: persistent anxiety, sleep disruption, or emotional instability warrant immediate cessation and evaluation. While serious adverse effects from microdosing remain rare in healthy individuals, they’re not impossible. Anyone with personal or family history of psychotic disorders should approach microdosing with extreme caution or avoid it entirely.
The process of finding your ideal microdose is inherently personal and requires patience. Expect the calibration phase to take four to eight weeks of careful experimentation. The investment pays dividends: once you’ve identified your sweet spot, you have reliable, reproducible results. Keep your journal even after finding your optimal dose, as it becomes invaluable reference material if circumstances change.
Your body weight provides a starting reference point, your sensitivity determines the actual effective range, and your lifestyle factors create the context in which everything operates. None of these elements exists in isolation. The person who successfully microdoses long-term is the one who treats this as an ongoing relationship with their own physiology rather than a one-time calculation.