In a few words
Large scale long-term Harvard studies link daily olive oil intake to lower risk of death from major causes including heart disease, cancer and dementia, with benefits seen at just 7-15g a day. The strongest effects appear when it replaces butter and processed fats rather than being added on top of an unchanged diet. Quality matters too, with early-harvest extra virgin olive oil showing the highest levels of the compounds linked to these benefits.
There’s a question that comes up a lot when people start looking seriously at olive oil for longevity…
Does it actually help you live longer, or is that just Mediterranean diet mythology doing the rounds?
It's a fair question. And the honest answer is that the evidence is stronger than most people realise - but it comes with a catch that most articles about olive oil fail to mention.
What the research actually says
We've already looked in detail at what olive oil does for heart health, diabetes, joint inflammation, and women's health - and those benefits are all backed by a solid body of research. But whether it can help people live longer is a separate question, and one that researchers have spent decades trying to answer.
This is where the science becomes less straightforward, but arguably more interesting.
The most significant data here comes from two papers out of Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, both drawing on the same long-term study group of over 92000 adults tracked across 28 years.
The first, published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology (JACC) in 2022, found that people consuming more than half a tablespoon of olive oil a day had a 19% lower risk of dying from any cause - across heart disease, cancer, neurodegenerative conditions, and respiratory illness - compared with those who rarely or never used it.
The second paper, published in JAMA Network Open in 2024, looked specifically at olive oil and brain health. It found that the same daily habit (around 7 grams of olive oil) was associated with a 28% lower risk of dying from dementia-related causes, regardless of how good or bad the rest of their diet was.
That makes the link between olive oil, longevity and brain health difficult to ignore, especially when the habit is small, consistent and easy to build into everyday meals.
The health benefits of olive oil for men are worth flagging specifically here - cardiovascular disease and cognitive decline both tend to surface earlier in men, and the JACC data draws on both male and female participants with consistent results across both.
Why does olive oil do this?
The Harvard team pointed to three things: the oleic acid supporting healthy cholesterol balance; the polyphenols calming chronic inflammation and protecting brain cells from oxidative stress; and crucially, what olive oil replaces.
The risk reduction was sharpest when people were swapping out butter, margarine, and processed fats - not just adding olive oil on top of an unchanged diet. Which, as it happens, is exactly how it gets used in a Greek kitchen.
That swap effect matters a lot for UK eating habits, which still lean heavily on salad dressings, spread fats, and butter on everything.
How much do you actually need?
Good news: you don't need to chug it. Most of the olive oil's benefits for longevity in the Harvard studies appeared at just half a tablespoon to one tablespoon per day - 7 to 15 grams. The key is consistency over time, not volume in a single sitting.
In practice, that's easy to hit without thinking about it too hard:
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Dress a salad with olive oil and lemon instead of a bottled dressing.
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Finish roasted veg with a drizzle instead of butter.
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Dunk bread in it, Greek-style.
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Make a 30-second dressing (a couple of tablespoons of good EVOO, juice of half a lemon, a pinch of salt, shaken in a jar), and you're there.
It’s a small daily habit, with a meaningful long-term upside.
The catch - and why it matters
Here's the part worth understanding before you reach for whatever's nearest on the shelf.
Extra virgin olive oil is not like wine. It doesn’t “improve with age” - it loses flavour and polyphenols every week it sits in the wrong conditions. The studies above weren't measuring standard supermarket EVOO; they were drawing on populations who have consumed fresh, high-polyphenol olive oil as a daily staple for generations.
In Crete, where our olives are grown, good oil is a basic rather than a “health product” - it goes into almost everything, and the early harvest olive oil benefits are baked into how it's always been made.
Olives picked in October and November, while still green, naturally produce oil with significantly higher levels of the polyphenol compounds the research keeps pointing to. Leave the harvest later and you get more oil per olive, but fewer of the compounds that matter.
Those compounds are sensitive. They break down over time and with exposure to light and heat. That means an oil can be correctly labelled “extra virgin” while still containing only a fraction of the polyphenols found in a properly made, early-harvest EVOO.
If you’d like to dig a little further into polyphenols, including how they’re measured and how to make sense of the numbers, we’ve covered it all in our Ultimate Guide to High Polyphenol Olive Oil in the UK.
What to look for
Three things do most of the work when you're choosing extra virgin olive oil for longevity rather than just everyday cooking:
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A published mg/kg polyphenol figure. Without it, you're buying without knowing what's actually in the bottle. The EU's threshold for an olive oil to carry a polyphenol health claim is 250 mg/kg (in simple terms, 250 milligrams of polyphenols per kilogram of oil), but that’s the minimum standard rather than a quality target.
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A harvest date, not just a best-before date. Best-before is calculated from bottling, and oils can sit in storage for months before that. What matters is when the olives were pressed - ideally an early harvest from October or November.
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The taste. A peppery finish at the back of the throat is the simplest sign that the polyphenols are still present. Mild and neutral usually means fewer of those compounds made it through, whatever the label says
The 5 golden storage rules to protect your oil’s nutrients
If you’re buying beautiful extra virgin olive oil and then leaving it next to the hob, open to light and heat… that’s like buying organic strawberries and storing them on a radiator.
Here’s how to keep those polyphenols intact:
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Keep it in the dark.
Light breaks down antioxidants. Choose dark glass or tins, and store it in a cupboard — not on a sunny worktop. -
Keep it cool (but not the fridge).
Aim for 14–18°C. Too much heat accelerates oxidation. The fridge can make good oil go cloudy and dull the aroma, so cool pantry > fridge. -
Minimise oxygen.
Air = oxidation. Once opened, close the cap tightly. Don’t decant into open pourers that sit out all month. -
Buy the right size.
A smaller bottle you finish fast will beat a big bottle you nurse all winter. -
Check the harvest date.
Serious producers proudly print the harvest date.
MasWorth oils are curated with harvest transparency and careful storage so you’re buying high-phenolic oil that’s actually worth your money — not just something labelled “extra virgin.”
Where MasWorth comes in
Both MasWorth Family Groves EVOO (965 mg/kg - certified) and November Polyphenols EVOO (1200+ mg/kg - certified) are early-harvest, cold-pressed oils from Crete, independently lab-tested by the World Olive Centre for Health in Athens. Their polyphenol figures are published and the harvest dates are clearly shown on the bottle, with both oils also stored in dark glass to help protect quality.
If you're using olive oil for longevity and brain health benefits, the oil you choose should actually reflect what the research is based on - polyphenol-rich, consistently consumed, and used in place of less healthy fats. That's the standard we follow from grove to bottle.
As we say in Greece: το καλό λάδι φαίνεται - good olive oil speaks for itself.
Olive Oil Longevity FAQs
What are the main olive oil benefits for longevity?
The main olive oil benefits for longevity are linked to heart health, brain health and inflammation. Research suggests that regular olive oil intake may support long-term health, especially when it replaces butter, margarine or heavily processed fats.
Is extra virgin olive oil better for longevity?
Yes, extra virgin olive oil’s longevity benefits are usually stronger because good EVOO is less processed and can contain more polyphenols. For the best results, look for a fresh, early-harvest oil with a published polyphenol figure and a clear harvest date.
How much olive oil should I take daily for longevity?
Most research on olive oil’s longevity benefits points to a small daily amount. Around half a tablespoon to one tablespoon per day, or roughly 7 to 15 grams, has been linked with positive long-term health outcomes.
Is olive oil good for brain health?
Yes, research into olive oil and brain health has linked daily olive oil intake with a lower risk of dementia-related death. This may be partly because extra virgin olive oil contains polyphenols, which help protect brain cells from oxidative stress.