Magnesium: The Complete Guide to Every Form, Every Benefit, and Why It Is the One Supplement Everyone Needs

16 min read Updated April 2026 Reviewed by Herb Terra Nutrition Team

If you could only take one supplement for the rest of your life, the evidence points to magnesium. That is not marketing. It is math. Magnesium is a cofactor in over 300 enzymatic reactions in your body. It is required for ATP production (energy), DNA synthesis, protein synthesis, muscle and nerve function, blood sugar regulation, blood pressure regulation, bone development, and the synthesis of glutathione (your body's master antioxidant). And roughly half the population does not get enough of it.

But "take magnesium" is incomplete advice. There are at least 11 common forms of supplemental magnesium, and they are not interchangeable. Magnesium oxide and magnesium glycinate have the same name on the front of the bottle but wildly different absorption rates, benefits, and side effects. Choosing the wrong form is the most common magnesium mistake, and it is the reason many people conclude "magnesium does not work for me" when the reality is they took a form that their body could barely absorb.

300+
Enzymatic reactions requiring magnesium
50%
Of adults with suboptimal magnesium intake
4% vs 80%
Absorption: Mg oxide vs Mg glycinate
11+
Common supplemental forms of magnesium

Why magnesium deficiency is epidemic

Magnesium deficiency is not simply a matter of poor diet. Multiple factors converge to make it the most common mineral deficiency in developed countries:

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Soil depletion

Industrial farming has reduced magnesium content in crops by 20-30% over the past 50 years. The vegetables your grandparents ate contained significantly more magnesium than the same vegetables today.

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Medication depletion

PPIs (acid reflux meds), diuretics, antibiotics, and oral contraceptives all deplete magnesium. An estimated 100+ million Americans take at least one magnesium-depleting medication.

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Stress burns magnesium

The stress response (HPA axis activation) increases magnesium excretion through the kidneys. Chronic stress creates a vicious cycle: stress depletes magnesium, low magnesium amplifies stress reactivity.

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Processed food diet

Food processing removes up to 80% of magnesium. White rice has 83% less magnesium than brown rice. White bread has 78% less than whole wheat. The modern diet is systematically stripped of magnesium.

The testing problem: Standard blood tests (serum magnesium) miss most deficiencies. Only 1% of your body's magnesium is in the blood; 99% is in bones, muscles, and soft tissues. Your body will maintain blood magnesium levels by pulling from bones and tissues long before serum levels drop. By the time a standard blood test shows low magnesium, you may be severely depleted. RBC (red blood cell) magnesium is a better test but is not routinely ordered. Symptoms are often the most reliable indicator.

The deficiency symptom checklist

Check the symptoms you experience regularly:

Every form of magnesium compared

Form Absorption Best for Side effects Verdict
Magnesium Glycinate ~80% (excellent) Sleep, anxiety, muscle cramps, general deficiency, daily use Minimal GI side effects. Best tolerated form Best overall form for most people
Magnesium L-Threonate High (crosses BBB) Brain health, memory, cognitive function, neuroprotection Well tolerated. Mild drowsiness possible Best for brain-specific benefits
Magnesium Citrate Good (~30%) Constipation (has laxative effect), general supplementation Loose stools / diarrhea at higher doses Good if constipation is a concern
Magnesium Oxide ~4% (very poor) Cheap. Sometimes used for heartburn Significant GI distress, diarrhea Avoid. 96% passes through unabsorbed
Magnesium Taurate Good Heart health, blood pressure, arrhythmia Well tolerated Good for cardiovascular focus
Magnesium Malate Good Energy production, fibromyalgia, muscle pain Well tolerated Good for energy and muscle concerns
Magnesium Chloride Good Topical use (lotions, oils), transdermal absorption Skin tingling with topical use Best for topical application
Magnesium Sulfate (Epsom salt) Poor orally, modest transdermally Bath soaks for muscle relaxation Strong laxative orally. Do not take as supplement Bath use only
Magnesium Orotate Good Athletic performance, heart health (European studies) Well tolerated. Expensive Niche use. High cost
Magnesium Carbonate Moderate (~30%) Antacid use, chalky supplements Can cause gas and bloating Not recommended for supplementation
Magnesium Hydroxide (Milk of Magnesia) Low Laxative, antacid Strong laxative effect Laxative, not a supplement
Magnesium Glycinate
~80% absorption
Magnesium L-Threonate
High (crosses blood-brain barrier)
Magnesium Citrate
~30% absorption
Magnesium Taurate
Good absorption
Magnesium Oxide
~4%

Why glycinate is the gold standard

Magnesium glycinate is magnesium chelated (bonded) with the amino acid glycine. This chelation does two things: it dramatically increases absorption (because the intestines absorb amino acid complexes more efficiently than inorganic mineral salts), and it adds the calming benefits of glycine itself.

The glycine bonus

Glycine is not just a transport mechanism. It is an inhibitory neurotransmitter that has its own calming and sleep-promoting properties. Glycine supplementation alone has been shown to improve subjective sleep quality and reduce daytime sleepiness (Bannai et al., 2012, Frontiers in Neurology). When you take magnesium glycinate, you are getting the benefits of both magnesium AND glycine, making it the superior form for sleep, anxiety, and stress.

Clinical evidence for magnesium glycinate
A 2021 systematic review in Nutrients analyzed 25 studies on magnesium supplementation in older adults and found significant improvements in sleep quality (effect size 0.47), blood pressure (mean reduction 5.78/2.15 mmHg), and inflammatory markers. The glycinate form was specifically noted for its superior bioavailability and tolerability. A separate 2017 systematic review (Boyle et al.) found magnesium supplementation reduced subjective anxiety, with chelated forms (including glycinate) showing the most consistent benefits.

Magnesium L-Threonate: the brain form

Magnesium L-Threonate (MgT) was developed by MIT neuroscientists specifically to address the problem that most magnesium forms do not efficiently cross the blood-brain barrier. The brain has some of the highest magnesium requirements of any organ (it uses magnesium for synaptic plasticity, neurotransmitter release, and NMDA receptor regulation), but standard magnesium supplements only modestly increase brain magnesium levels.

The MIT study
Slutsky et al. (2010, Neuron) showed that magnesium L-threonate was the only magnesium compound tested that significantly increased cerebrospinal fluid magnesium levels. The increase in brain magnesium enhanced synaptic density, improved both short-term and long-term memory in animal models, and reversed age-related cognitive decline. A 2016 human trial (Liu et al., Journal of Alzheimer's Disease) found that MgT improved cognitive ability in adults aged 50-70, with effects on executive function and working memory.

When to choose L-Threonate over glycinate: If your primary concerns are cognitive (brain fog, memory, focus, age-related cognitive decline), L-Threonate is the targeted choice. If your primary concerns are sleep, muscle cramps, anxiety, or general health, glycinate is better. Some people take both: glycinate in the evening (for sleep and body benefits) and L-Threonate in the morning (for cognitive benefits).

Magnesium for specific conditions

Condition How magnesium helps Best form Evidence
Insomnia / poor sleep GABA modulation, melatonin production support, muscle relaxation, cortisol reduction Glycinate (evening dose) Strong: systematic review, multiple RCTs
Anxiety / stress Modulates HPA axis, GABA receptor agonism, reduces neural excitability Glycinate Strong: systematic review of 18 studies
Muscle cramps / spasms Regulates calcium channels in muscle cells, prevents sustained contraction Glycinate or Malate Moderate-strong
Migraines Reduces cortical spreading depression, magnesium levels often low in migraine patients Glycinate or Citrate (400-600mg) Strong: American Academy of Neurology recommends
High blood pressure Vasodilation, calcium channel regulation, endothelial function Glycinate or Taurate Strong: meta-analysis (-5.78/-2.15 mmHg)
Brain fog / memory NMDA receptor modulation, synaptic plasticity, increased brain Mg levels L-Threonate Strong: MIT research, human RCT
Constipation Osmotic laxative effect draws water into intestines Citrate or Oxide (this is the one case where low absorption is useful) Strong (well-established mechanism)
Bone health Required for vitamin D activation and calcium metabolism. 60% of body Mg is in bones Glycinate Strong
PMS symptoms Reduces bloating, mood symptoms, cramps. Magnesium drops during luteal phase Glycinate Moderate-strong (multiple trials)
Type 2 diabetes / insulin resistance Improves insulin sensitivity, supports glucose metabolism Glycinate Strong: meta-analysis shows reduced diabetes risk

Which form do you need?

Use this quick decision guide:

If your primary goal is... Take this form Product
Better sleep Magnesium Glycinate Magnesium Glycinate 500mg
Less anxiety / more calm Magnesium Glycinate Magnesium Glycinate 500mg
Muscle cramps or recovery Magnesium Glycinate Magnesium Glycinate 500mg
Brain fog, memory, or cognitive health Magnesium L-Threonate Magnesium L-Threonate 90ct
General health / prevention Magnesium Glycinate Magnesium Glycinate 500mg
Heart health / blood pressure Magnesium Glycinate (or Taurate) Magnesium Glycinate 500mg
Constipation (primary concern) Magnesium Citrate (Glycinate does NOT have laxative effect)
Both body + brain benefits Glycinate (PM) + L-Threonate (AM) Glycinate + L-Threonate

Dosing, timing, and stacking

Factor Magnesium Glycinate Magnesium L-Threonate
Daily dose 200-400mg elemental magnesium Follow label (typically 3 capsules = ~144mg Mg + threonate)
Best timing Evening (1-2 hours before bed) for sleep benefit. Can split AM/PM Morning or early afternoon for cognitive benefit. Some take 2 AM + 1 PM
With or without food Either. Well tolerated both ways Either. Well tolerated both ways
Time to effect Sleep: 1-7 days. Anxiety: 1-2 weeks. Muscle cramps: 1-2 weeks. Blood pressure: 4-8 weeks Cognitive effects: 2-6 weeks (brain Mg levels need time to increase)
Upper limit 400mg elemental from supplements (total from all sources can be higher) Follow product dosing. Do not exceed recommendation
Side effects Rare. Mild drowsiness (feature, not bug). Very unlikely to cause GI issues Rare. Mild drowsiness possible. Occasional headache in first few days

What magnesium stacks well with

Stack Why it works Best for
Magnesium + Ashwagandha Magnesium calms via GABA. Ashwagandha modulates HPA axis cortisol. Two complementary pathways for stress Stress, anxiety, sleep
Magnesium + Omega-3 Magnesium for cardiovascular function + Omega-3 for anti-inflammation and lipid management Heart health, general wellness
Magnesium + Vitamin D Magnesium is required to convert vitamin D to its active form. Without adequate Mg, vitamin D supplementation is partially wasted Anyone taking vitamin D
Magnesium + Turmeric Curcumin Magnesium for systemic mineral support + Curcumin for anti-inflammatory. Both reduce CRP Inflammation, joint pain
Magnesium + Reishi Magnesium for GABA calming + Reishi for HPA axis and immune modulation. Deep evening calm stack Sleep quality, stress resilience
Interactions: Magnesium can reduce the absorption of certain antibiotics (tetracyclines, fluoroquinolones) and bisphosphonates (osteoporosis medications). If you take these, separate magnesium by 2-4 hours. Magnesium can enhance the effects of blood pressure medications (additive blood pressure lowering). If on BP medications, monitor and inform your doctor. People with kidney disease should consult their doctor before supplementing, as impaired kidneys may not excrete excess magnesium efficiently.

Magnesium Glycinate: The Foundation Supplement

High-absorption magnesium glycinate, 500mg per serving. The form recommended by functional medicine practitioners for sleep, stress, muscle health, and cardiovascular support. Chelated with glycine for maximum absorption and calming benefits.

Shop Magnesium Glycinate Shop Magnesium Glycinate Trio (Best Value)

Magnesium L-Threonate: The Brain Form

The only magnesium form clinically shown to cross the blood-brain barrier and increase brain magnesium levels. Developed by MIT neuroscientists for cognitive function, memory, and neuroprotection.

Shop Magnesium L-Threonate

The bottom line

Magnesium is the closest thing to a universal supplement. It is involved in over 300 reactions, half the population is deficient, and the symptoms of deficiency mimic or worsen dozens of common health complaints. But the form matters enormously. Magnesium oxide (the cheapest and most common form on store shelves) has roughly 4% absorption, meaning 96% of what you swallow passes through unabsorbed. Magnesium glycinate absorbs at approximately 80% and provides the additional calming benefit of the amino acid glycine, making it the superior choice for sleep, anxiety, muscle cramps, cardiovascular health, and general daily supplementation. Magnesium L-Threonate is the targeted choice for cognitive concerns, as it is the only form proven to meaningfully increase brain magnesium levels. Start with glycinate in the evening if you are new to magnesium. Most people notice improved sleep within the first week. That alone makes it worth trying.

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