Supplements

Magnesium Glycinate

The mineral most people are quietly deficient in. Magnesium glycinate is the best-absorbed, gentlest form — especially good for sleep, muscle cramps, and stress.

Strong evidence 200–400 mg elemental/day Sleep, muscles & stress 3 min read

Magnesium is involved in over 300 enzymatic reactions in your body — from energy production to muscle relaxation to DNA repair. About 50–80% of people don't get enough from food alone. Magnesium glycinate pairs it with glycine (a calming amino acid), making it the best form for sleep and relaxation with the least stomach issues.

How much
200–400 mg elemental, evening
Helps with
Sleep, cramps, stress, blood pressure
When you'll feel it
1–2 weeks for sleep; 4–8 wks for labs
Safety
Very safe; gentle on stomach

Good for you if: You have trouble sleeping, get muscle cramps or twitches, feel stressed or anxious, take vitamin D3 (magnesium is needed to activate it), or just want to cover the most common nutritional gap.

Dive deeper into the research

Common side effects

  • Loose stools or mild diarrhea — much less common with glycinate than other forms
  • Drowsiness — it's calming by design, so take it in the evening
  • Caution with kidney disease — impaired kidneys can't clear excess magnesium
See all side effects

What does magnesium glycinate do?

Magnesium is involved in over 300 enzymatic reactions in your body. It helps your muscles relax after contraction, regulates your nervous system (calming overactive neurons), supports energy production in every cell, activates vitamin D (you can't use D3 without adequate magnesium), and plays a role in DNA repair and protein synthesis.

The glycinate form means the magnesium is bonded to glycine — an amino acid that's calming on its own. Glycine helps with sleep by lowering core body temperature and acts as an inhibitory neurotransmitter. So you get the benefits of both magnesium and glycine in one supplement.

What can you expect?

How to take it

Simple protocol

200–400 mg of elemental magnesium, taken in the evening — ideally 30–60 minutes before bed. Start with 200 mg and increase after a week if needed. Take with or without food; glycinate absorbs well either way.

Important: check your label for elemental magnesium content. A "500 mg magnesium glycinate" capsule typically contains only ~70 mg elemental magnesium. You may need 3–5 capsules to reach your target dose.

Pair with vitamin D3: Magnesium is required to convert vitamin D3 to its active form. If you're supplementing D3 without magnesium, you may not be getting the full benefit.

Which form to buy?

FormBest forNotes
GlycinateSleep, anxiety, generalBest absorbed, gentlest. Top pick for most people
ThreonateBrain, cognitionCrosses blood-brain barrier; expensive
CitrateConstipationGood absorption, but has laxative effect
TaurateHeart healthCombined with taurine; good for blood pressure
OxideBudget optionPoorly absorbed (~4%); causes GI issues

Cost in India: ₹400–1200/month for quality magnesium glycinate. Widely available from domestic brands.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Why glycinate specifically? What about other forms?

Magnesium glycinate is bound to glycine, an amino acid that's calming on its own. This makes it the best form for sleep and relaxation. It's also one of the most bioavailable forms and the gentlest on your stomach. Magnesium citrate is good for constipation, magnesium threonate targets the brain, and magnesium oxide is cheap but poorly absorbed.

How much magnesium glycinate should I take?

200–400 mg of elemental magnesium per day, taken in the evening. Note: a "500 mg magnesium glycinate" capsule contains roughly 70 mg of elemental magnesium — check the label for elemental content. Most people need 2–3 capsules to get a meaningful dose.

Can magnesium help me sleep better?

Yes. Magnesium activates your parasympathetic nervous system (rest-and-digest mode), regulates GABA receptors (the calming neurotransmitter), and helps control melatonin production. Clinical trials show it improves sleep onset, duration, and quality — especially in people who are deficient, which is most people.

How do I know if I'm magnesium deficient?

Standard serum magnesium misses most deficiency because only 1% of your magnesium is in your blood. Ask for an RBC magnesium test — it measures magnesium inside your red blood cells and is much more accurate. Optimal RBC magnesium is 5.0–6.5 mg/dL. Symptoms of deficiency include muscle cramps, poor sleep, anxiety, and eye twitching.

Research & Science

How it works in your body

Magnesium acts as a cofactor for over 300 enzymes, including those in the electron transport chain (ATP production), DNA polymerase, and RNA transcription. It regulates neuronal excitability by blocking NMDA receptors (voltage-gated calcium channels) — preventing neurons from firing excessively. This is why magnesium deficiency causes muscle cramps, anxiety, and insomnia.

The glycine component activates glycine receptors in the brainstem and hypothalamus, promoting vasodilation in extremities and lowering core body temperature — a signal that initiates sleep. Glycine also acts as a co-agonist at NMDA receptors alongside glutamate, playing a complex modulatory role in neurotransmission.

Magnesium is also essential for vitamin D metabolism: it's required by the enzymes CYP2R1 (liver hydroxylation) and CYP27B1 (kidney activation). Supplementing D3 without adequate magnesium can paradoxically worsen deficiency symptoms.

What the studies show

Side effects & safety

Magnesium glycinate is one of the safest supplements available. Side effects are mild and uncommon:

Which labs to check

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