Ingredient Transparency · B12 Science
Why Focus First Uses Methylcobalamin B12 — Not the Cheaper Cyanocobalamin Form
Most energy formulas use cyanocobalamin because it costs less. Here is the biochemistry behind why that choice matters — and why we didn't make it.
Flip over almost any energy drink powder, pre-workout, or B-complex supplement and you will find cyanocobalamin listed next to the B12 entry. It is the dominant form of B12 in the supplement market by a significant margin — not because it is the best form, but because it is the cheapest to manufacture. The price difference is real. The biological difference is real too.
Focus First uses methylcobalamin. The decision was deliberate, and the reason is specific: methylcobalamin is the form of B12 that the nervous system and energy metabolism actually use. Cyanocobalamin is not. Before cyanocobalamin can do anything useful in the body, it has to be converted into methylcobalamin — a multi-step enzymatic process that requires additional cofactors, generates a cyanide byproduct that must be cleared, and fails entirely in a meaningful subset of the population due to genetic variation in a single enzyme.*
This post explains the biochemistry of both forms, why the conversion step matters in the context of an energy and focus formula, and who specifically benefits most from the methylcobalamin choice.*
Focus First — Methylcobalamin B12 + Alpha GPC 300mg + L-Theanine 100mg + 200mg Natural Caffeine from Green Tea. Three flavors. 20 servings per container. $26.96.*
Vitamin B12 exists in four forms in nature: methylcobalamin, adenosylcobalamin, hydroxocobalamin, and cyanocobalamin. Of these, only methylcobalamin and adenosylcobalamin are the biologically active cofactor forms — the ones that actually bind to B12-dependent enzymes and enable them to function. Methylcobalamin is the form used in cytoplasmic methionine synthase (the enzyme governing the methylation cycle). Adenosylcobalamin is the form used in mitochondrial methylmalonyl-CoA mutase (the enzyme feeding propionate into the citric acid cycle for ATP production).*1
Cyanocobalamin is not found in meaningful quantities in food or in the human body under normal conditions. It is a synthetic form created specifically for supplement manufacturing — stable, cheap, and effective in most people at raising serum B12 levels. The word "effective" here deserves scrutiny: it raises serum B12 levels because the body converts it. The conversion works. The question is how efficiently, what it costs metabolically, and whether that efficiency holds for everyone.*
"Cyanocobalamin raises serum B12 levels because the body converts it. The question is how efficiently — and whether that efficiency holds for the roughly 40% of people who carry MTHFR polymorphisms that reduce the conversion enzymes needed to complete the process."2,3
The energy-B12 connection is indirect but real. B12 does not produce energy the way caffeine or carbohydrates do — it does not directly stimulate the CNS or provide caloric substrate. What it does is keep the enzymatic machinery of cellular energy metabolism running correctly. Methylmalonyl-CoA mutase requires adenosylcobalamin (which methylcobalamin converts to more readily than cyanocobalamin) to prevent the buildup of methylmalonic acid — a marker of B12 functional deficiency that correlates with mitochondrial dysfunction and neurological symptoms.*4
The second energy-relevant mechanism is neurological. Methylcobalamin is required for myelin synthesis — the fatty sheath around nerve fibers that determines neural transmission speed. B12 insufficiency produces demyelination that presents as fatigue, brain fog, and reduced cognitive performance well before overt anemia appears. A neurologically healthy brain that transmits signals efficiently is the physical substrate that any cognitive-energy formula is designed to support. Skimping on B12 form in this context is a meaningful formulation decision.*5
Head to Head
Methylcobalamin vs Cyanocobalamin — Every Dimension
| Property | Methylcobalamin | Cyanocobalamin |
|---|---|---|
| Bioactive form | Yes — used directly by enzymes | No — must be converted first |
| Cyanide byproduct | None | CN⁻ released during processing — cleared by liver at supplement doses |
| MTHFR gene dependency | None — bypasses conversion pathway | Significant — C677T and A1298C variants reduce conversion efficiency |
| Conversion steps required | Zero | Multiple enzymatic steps (MTHFR, MTR, MTRR) |
| Half-life in tissue | Longer — retained in tissue more effectively | Shorter tissue retention |
| Neural and myelin support | Directly supports myelin synthesis | Indirect — via conversion to active forms |
| Serum B12 elevation | Effective | Effective (in those who convert) |
| Manufacturing cost | Higher | Lower — dominant form in commodity supplements |
| Used in Focus First | Yes | No |
The MTHFR polymorphism angle is the most clinically significant. MTHFR (methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase) is the enzyme responsible for reducing 5,10-methylenetetrahydrofolate to 5-methyltetrahydrofolate — a step in the methylation cycle that is also required for recycling cobalamin into active forms. The C677T polymorphism reduces MTHFR activity by approximately 35% in heterozygotes and up to 70% in homozygotes. With that enzyme running slower, converting cyanocobalamin into active methylcobalamin takes more time and produces less active B12 per dose.*2,3
Someone with the C677T homozygous variant who takes cyanocobalamin and someone without the variant who takes the same dose will end up with meaningfully different levels of active B12 available for neurotransmitter synthesis and methylation. The former may remain functionally B12 insufficient despite blood levels that look adequate on a standard serum B12 test — which measures total B12, not active methylcobalamin specifically. Methylcobalamin bypasses this entire issue by arriving already in the active form.*3
~40–60% of the population
MTHFR C677T or A1298C variants reduce the efficiency of the enzyme pathway needed to convert cyanocobalamin into active methylcobalamin. Methylcobalamin bypasses this conversion entirely — it's already in the form the body uses.*2,3
Highest-risk group for B12 depletion
B12 is essentially absent from plant foods. Vegans and vegetarians rely entirely on supplementation and have the highest rates of B12 insufficiency. Using the most bioavailable, immediately active form makes the most of every dose.*1
Declining gastric acid, reduced absorption
Gastric acid production falls with age, reducing the release of B12 from food and the production of intrinsic factor needed for absorption. Less B12 gets absorbed overall — using the active form ensures what does get through is immediately usable.*5
Myelin, neurotransmitters, brain fog
Methylcobalamin is the form most directly studied for neurological function — it supports myelin synthesis, participates in neurotransmitter production, and has the most documented role in the cognitive deficits associated with B12 insufficiency.*5,6
Medication that reduces B12 absorption
Metformin (a common diabetes and PCOS medication) reduces B12 absorption in the ileum by decreasing calcium-dependent ileal membrane activity. Users are at significantly elevated risk of B12 depletion and may benefit from the most bioavailable form available.*
Reduced gastric acid = reduced B12 release
Proton pump inhibitors and H2 blockers reduce gastric acid, which is needed to free protein-bound B12 from food. Long-term PPI use is consistently associated with lower B12 status. Active methylcobalamin is the more efficient supplemental choice for this group.*
Why It Matters in This Formula Specifically
Methylcobalamin Is One of Seven Active Ingredients — Here Is What It's Working Alongside
The B12 form choice doesn't exist in isolation. Focus First is a cognitive energy formula, and the reason methylcobalamin is the right choice here is that it is working alongside a stack of other cognitively active ingredients — particularly Alpha GPC. Acetylcholine synthesis (which Alpha GPC supports) requires an adequately methylated cellular environment. Methylation — which methylcobalamin directly enables through methionine synthase — is foundational to neurotransmitter production. The two ingredients are biochemically complementary in a way that cyanocobalamin's conversion-dependent activity makes less reliable.*
Three Flavors · One Formula
Focus First — Same Active Stack in Every Flavor
All three flavors deliver the same active formula: 200mg natural caffeine, Alpha GPC 300mg, L-Theanine 100mg, L-Arginine 1,000mg, Inositol 600mg, Asian Ginseng, and the full B-vitamin complex with Methylcobalamin B12. Every dose disclosed on the label. No proprietary blends.*
How to Use Focus First
Mixing, Timing, and Getting the Most From the Formula
Scientific References
Sources Cited in This Article
People Also Ask
Common Questions About B12 Forms
The Bottom Line
The Form of B12 Is a Formulation Decision — We Made It Deliberately
Cyanocobalamin is not a bad ingredient. It works for a large majority of people and has decades of clinical use. The case for methylcobalamin is not that cyanocobalamin is dangerous — it is that methylcobalamin is more precise. It is the form the body uses. It requires no enzymatic conversion. It has no cyanide byproduct to clear. It is not dependent on MTHFR enzyme efficiency. And in a formula designed specifically for cognitive energy support — where B12's role in neurotransmitter synthesis, myelin maintenance, and the methylation cycle that alpha GPC works within is the relevant mechanism — the more bioavailable, immediately active form is the more honest formulation choice.*
Halea Life charges more for methylcobalamin. It costs more. We think the people using Focus First deserve to know they're getting the form that works without caveats.
No subscriptions. No promo codes. The price you see is the price, year-round.
Shop Focus First
Methylcobalamin B12 · Alpha GPC 300mg · L-Theanine · 200mg Natural Caffeine. Three flavors. $26.96.*
* These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Contains 200mg natural caffeine from green tea per serving. Not for use by persons under 18, pregnant or nursing individuals, or those sensitive to caffeine or stimulants. Do not exceed one serving per day. Consult your healthcare provider before use if you have a cardiovascular condition, high blood pressure, anxiety disorder, or take prescription medications including MAOIs. Do not combine with other caffeine-containing products without accounting for total daily intake. MTHFR testing is a clinical genetic test — consult a healthcare provider if you have questions about your methylation status. Keep out of reach of children. Store in a cool, dry place.