Supplements: Magnesium and Sleep
500mg magnesium oxide × 8 weeks improved insomnia index scores, sleep time, and sleep efficiency vs placebo in elderly subjects (Abbasi 2012, PMID 23853635).
| Measure | Value | Unit | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Evidence Tier | 2 | tier | Moderate — RCT evidence in deficient/elderly populations; effects in replete young adults less clear |
| RCT Dose | 500 | mg magnesium oxide | Abbasi 2012; improvement in ISI, sleep time, sleep efficiency, serum melatonin, serum renin |
| Recommended Elemental Dose for Sleep | 300–400 | mg elemental Mg | As glycinate form; 300mg elemental = ~2,500mg magnesium glycinate (12% elemental) |
| Athlete Sweat Loss | ~4 | mg/liter sweat | High training volume athletes have elevated magnesium needs vs sedentary population |
| Magnesium Glycinate Elemental % | 12–14 | % | Lower % than oxide (60%) but superior absorption and GI tolerability |
| Dietary Deficiency Prevalence | ~45 | % of US adults | NHANES data; majority of Americans consume below the RDA (310-420mg/day) |
Magnesium occupies the intersection of widespread dietary deficiency, clear physiological mechanisms, and genuine clinical evidence — making it one of the more evidence-grounded supplements in the sleep category. The critical nuances are form selection and understanding who benefits most.
Why Magnesium Affects Sleep
Magnesium participates in over 300 enzymatic reactions and is particularly important in the nervous system. Sleep-relevant mechanisms include:
- NMDA receptor modulation: Magnesium ions block NMDA glutamate receptors at rest, reducing excitatory nervous system activity
- GABA-A activation: Magnesium potentiates GABA-A receptors, the primary inhibitory neurotransmitter system
- Melatonin synthesis support: Magnesium is a cofactor for enzymes in the melatonin biosynthesis pathway
Deficiency in any of these pathways produces measurable sleep disruption — and approximately 45% of US adults consume below the RDA for magnesium.
Form Comparison Table
| Magnesium Form | Elemental Mg% | Sleep Evidence | Dose for Sleep | Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Magnesium glycinate | 12-14% | Good — glycine synergy | 300-400mg elemental | Moderate | Preferred form; GI-friendly |
| Magnesium L-threonate | ~8% | Emerging — cognitive focus | 144mg elemental (2g MgT) | High | Best for brain Mg; costly |
| Magnesium oxide | 60% | RCT data exists but poor absorption | 300-500mg elemental | Very low | Laxative at higher doses |
| Magnesium citrate | 16% | Moderate | 200-400mg elemental | Low | Good bioavailability; mild laxative effect |
| Magnesium malate | 16% | Weak (sleep) | 300-400mg elemental | Low-moderate | Better evidence for muscle fatigue than sleep |
| Magnesium taurate | 8-10% | Theoretical (cardiovascular focus) | 200-400mg elemental | Moderate | Less studied for sleep specifically |
Athletic Considerations
Athletes training at high volume lose magnesium through sweat at approximately 4mg per liter. A two-hour session producing 2 liters of sweat causes ~8mg of additional magnesium loss. Over weeks, this deficit compounds if dietary intake is marginal. Athletes who consume high amounts of processed food (low in magnesium) and train intensely are at greatest risk for functional deficiency affecting both sleep quality and muscle function.
Timing: 300-400mg elemental magnesium glycinate taken 30-60 minutes before target sleep time is the standard protocol. Splitting doses (morning + evening) is an option for those who experience GI sensitivity, though the sleep benefit requires the pre-bedtime dose.
Related Pages
Sources
- Abbasi B et al. The effect of magnesium supplementation on primary insomnia in elderly: a double-blind placebo-controlled clinical trial. J Res Med Sci. 2012;17(12):1161-1169.
- Inagawa K et al. Subjective effects of glycine ingestion before the sleep period on sleep quality. Sleep and Biological Rhythms. 2006;4(1):75-77.
- Slutsky I et al. Enhancement of learning and memory by elevating brain magnesium. Neuron. 2010;65(2):165-177.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which form of magnesium is best for sleep?
Magnesium glycinate is preferred for sleep. It has good bioavailability, minimal laxative effect, and the glycine component provides independent sleep benefit. Glycine acts via NMDA receptor modulation and thermoregulatory effects (lowering core body temperature), which directly improves sleep quality. Magnesium L-threonate also targets neurological function and has emerging data, but costs significantly more.
How much magnesium should I take for sleep?
300-400mg of elemental magnesium as glycinate, taken 30-60 minutes before bed. At 12-14% elemental content, this means roughly 2,000-3,000mg of magnesium glycinate compound. Avoid magnesium oxide for sleep — despite high elemental percentage, it has poor absorption and strong laxative effects that disrupt sleep at higher doses.
Will magnesium help sleep if I am not deficient?
Evidence is strongest in deficient populations. The Abbasi 2012 RCT studied elderly subjects who likely had suboptimal magnesium status. If your dietary magnesium intake is consistently above the RDA (310-420mg/day for adults), incremental supplementation may provide modest benefit at best. Athletes with high sweat losses are more likely to be genuinely depleted.
Can I take magnesium and melatonin together?
Yes — magnesium glycinate and low-dose melatonin (0.5mg) pair well as a sleep stack. They work through complementary mechanisms: magnesium acts on NMDA and GABA receptors while melatonin signals the circadian clock. Neither interacts adversely with the other. This combination is particularly useful for sleep disruption events like travel or schedule changes.
Does magnesium L-threonate cross the blood-brain barrier better?
Magnesium L-threonate (MgT) was specifically developed to increase brain magnesium levels. The 2010 Slutsky study showed MgT increased cerebrospinal fluid magnesium and improved memory in rats. Early human data is encouraging for cognitive function and sleep quality, but it is 3-5× more expensive than glycinate. For sleep specifically, glycinate plus the glycine amino acid delivers similar neurological benefit at far lower cost.