Caffeine dependence begins for many people at doses that feel entirely normal: roughly two to four standard cups of coffee a day, consumed consistently. At that intake, laboratory tests can already detect tolerance, withdrawal symptoms, and changes in brain signaling, even when drinkers describe their habit as just a mild daily boost.
The key mechanism sits in adenosine receptors, which regulate sleep pressure and neuronal excitability. Caffeine blocks these receptors; in response, the brain gradually increases receptor density and adjusts synaptic transmission. This neuroadaptation shifts the baseline, so alertness with caffeine simply returns performance toward a new normal, rather than adding extra cognitive capacity. When intake stops, that adapted system overshoots into headache, fatigue, and reduced psychomotor vigilance, classic markers of physical dependence.
Yet many users never feel "addicted" in the way they associate with nicotine or opioids. Caffeine does not strongly drive dopamine surges in reward circuits, so compulsive drug-seeking is muted. Daily use is also socially endorsed and integrated into routines, which masks negative reinforcement: the morning cup quietly moves from enhancing mood to merely preventing withdrawal. At common daily doses, the brain has already remodeled itself around coffee, but the experience is framed as lifestyle, not addiction.