The 60-second version
Magnesium is one of the most-marketed and most-misunderstood supplements in the fitness aisle. The evidence on magnesium supplementation is moderately strong for specific scenarios (deficient populations, intense-training athletes with documented low intake, certain sleep and muscle-cramp contexts) but weak for the broad “everyone needs more magnesium” claim. The form matters: glycinate and threonate cross the blood-brain barrier and have the cleanest evidence for sleep and cognition; citrate and malate are well-absorbed for general purposes; oxide is poorly absorbed and mostly produces laxative effects. The dose that’s safe for most adults: 200–400 mg/day of elemental magnesium from supplemental forms, plus dietary intake (leafy greens, nuts, whole grains). The Tipton et al. 2017 review and subsequent literature consistently show that magnesium status matters for muscle function, sleep quality, and certain cardiovascular markers — but the effect size on healthy, well-fed adults is small. The honest summary: most people don’t need to supplement; some demographic groups (chronic alcohol use, certain medications, intense endurance training in heat) benefit clearly; the form and timing matter when supplementing is appropriate.
Why magnesium matters physiologically
Magnesium is the fourth most abundant mineral in the human body and a cofactor for over 300 enzymatic reactions. Its functions include energy production (ATP requires bound magnesium to be biologically active), DNA synthesis, neuromuscular conduction, calcium homeostasis, and vascular smooth-muscle tone. Severe magnesium deficiency produces muscle cramps, irregular heartbeat, neurological symptoms, and cardiovascular instability — but severe deficiency is rare in well-fed populations.
The more relevant question for fitness-focused adults is sub-clinical magnesium status: is your dietary intake meeting the body’s needs, particularly under the higher-demand conditions of intense training? The published research suggests that 30–50% of adults in industrialized populations consume less than the recommended dietary allowance (RDA) of magnesium (310–420 mg/day depending on age and sex), but most don’t reach the threshold for clinical deficiency.
The contexts where magnesium intake matters most:
- Endurance athletes training in heat: substantial magnesium loss in sweat. Several studies estimate 5–20 mg per litre of sweat. A 2-hour run in summer conditions producing 3 L sweat = 15–60 mg lost.
- Chronic alcohol use: alcohol increases urinary magnesium excretion. Heavy drinkers commonly show low-normal serum magnesium.
- Diuretic users: most diuretics increase magnesium excretion. Adults on long-term diuretics often have low magnesium.
- Older adults: dietary intake often declines with age; absorption efficiency may also decrease.
- Type 2 diabetics: hyperglycemia increases urinary magnesium loss. Diabetes is associated with lower serum magnesium on average.
- People with chronic GI conditions: Crohn’s disease, celiac disease, and chronic diarrhea reduce magnesium absorption.
The forms of magnesium and what each is good for
Supplemental magnesium is sold in many salt forms with substantially different absorption profiles and clinical effects. The major forms:
Magnesium glycinate (also called bisglycinate)
- Absorption: very good (~90% in fasted state)
- Bioavailability: high — the glycine carrier helps transport across intestinal wall
- Best for: sleep support, calming effect (the glycine itself has calming properties), magnesium repletion in deficient individuals
- Side effects: minimal at typical doses; rarely causes loose stools
- Cost: moderate; widely available
Magnesium L-threonate
- Absorption: good
- Special property: crosses the blood-brain barrier more effectively than other forms
- Best for: cognitive support, particularly in studies on age-related cognitive decline
- Caveat: more expensive; the “Magtein” branded form has the cleanest research
- Cost: high
Magnesium citrate
- Absorption: good (~75%)
- Best for: general magnesium supplementation, mild constipation relief (the citrate has mild laxative effect at higher doses)
- Caveat: laxative effect can be a feature or bug depending on need
- Cost: low; widely available
Magnesium malate
- Absorption: good
- Best for: chronic fatigue and muscle pain (the malate is involved in cellular energy production); some studies suggest fibromyalgia symptom benefit
- Cost: moderate
Magnesium oxide
- Absorption: poor (4–15%)
- Best for: dosing for laxative purposes, or where label-mg-content is misleadingly high (high mg per pill but most isn’t absorbed)
- Caveat: cheap and abundant on store shelves but mostly produces gastric irritation and loose stools rather than systemic magnesium repletion
- Cost: very low
Magnesium chloride and sulfate
- Absorption: good
- Topical use: sold as “magnesium oil” or “Epsom salt” for soaking. The transdermal absorption claims are largely unsupported by published evidence; benefits of bathing in magnesium-laden water are likely topical (skin softening, muscle warming) rather than systemic magnesium repletion.
Dosing guidance
For an adult who has determined that supplementation is appropriate:
- Starting dose: 100–200 mg of elemental magnesium per day in supplement form, taken with a meal to reduce GI discomfort.
- Target dose: 200–400 mg/day total from supplements. Combine with dietary intake (200–300 mg from food typical for fitness-focused diets).
- Upper safe limit: the IOM tolerable upper intake from supplements is 350 mg/day for adults (excluding food sources, which are not capped). Exceeding this risks GI symptoms; very high doses can cause magnesium toxicity (rare in healthy kidneys).
- Split dosing: doses above 200 mg per dose can cause loose stools; splitting into 2–3 smaller doses through the day improves tolerability.
- Timing: glycinate and threonate are typically taken in the evening (60–90 minutes before sleep) for the calming/sleep-support benefit. Citrate and malate can be taken with any meal.
Lab testing isn’t typically necessary for supplementation decisions, but if you’re curious: serum magnesium is the standard test (anything below 0.75 mmol/L is low-normal; below 0.65 mmol/L is deficient). Red-blood-cell magnesium and intracellular magnesium tests give more sensitive readings but are less commonly available.
What the evidence shows by specific application
Sleep
Several RCTs (Boyle 2017; Abbasi 2012) suggest that magnesium supplementation improves sleep quality in older adults with documented insomnia. Effect size is moderate. The mechanism involves NMDA receptor regulation and parasympathetic activation. For fitness-focused adults without specific sleep complaints, the effect is smaller and harder to detect.
Muscle cramps
Tipton 2017 review and subsequent meta-analyses found mixed evidence: magnesium supplementation does NOT consistently reduce muscle cramps in non-deficient adults (Garrison et al. 2020 Cochrane review). For pregnant women experiencing leg cramps, a few studies show benefit; for athletes with documented muscle cramps in heat, repletion of magnesium and electrolytes is sensible.
Performance
The evidence for magnesium supplementation improving athletic performance in non-deficient athletes is weak. Several small studies show modest benefits (Setaro 2014; Cinar 2007), but the larger meta-analyses don’t support broad supplementation for performance gains. Magnesium status correction in deficient athletes likely matters; supplementing already-replete athletes does not produce reliable performance benefits.
Bone health
Magnesium is a structural component of bone. Long-term low intake is associated with lower bone density. The Castiglioni 2013 review identified magnesium adequacy as important for postmenopausal bone health. Combination with calcium, vitamin D, and resistance training is the evidence-based bone-health pattern.
Cardiovascular
Magnesium intake is inversely associated with cardiovascular disease risk in observational studies. Whether supplementation in non-deficient populations reduces actual cardiovascular events is less clear; the published RCTs are small and inconsistent. The safer recommendation: ensure adequate dietary intake; supplementation likely doesn’t hurt but the evidence for prevention isn’t strong enough to claim clinical benefit.
Migraine prevention
The evidence for magnesium supplementation in migraine prevention is moderate. Some headache neurology guidelines list magnesium 400–600 mg/day as a Level B recommendation. For people with frequent migraines, a supervised trial of 400 mg/day for 2–3 months is often a reasonable first-line option.
Dietary sources first
The general principle: if you can meet your magnesium needs from food, that’s the better default. Whole-food magnesium comes packaged with cofactors (other minerals, fibre, antioxidants) that supplements don’t replicate. The major dietary sources:
- Pumpkin seeds: ~150 mg per oz
- Almonds: ~80 mg per oz
- Dark leafy greens (spinach, Swiss chard): ~80–160 mg per cup cooked
- Black beans, kidney beans: ~60–120 mg per cup cooked
- Cashews, peanuts: ~80 mg per oz
- Whole grain bread, brown rice, quinoa: ~50–90 mg per cup serving
- Dark chocolate (70%+): ~60–90 mg per oz
- Avocado: ~60 mg per medium fruit
- Salmon, mackerel: ~40–50 mg per filet
A diet emphasizing leafy greens, nuts, legumes, and whole grains typically provides 350–500 mg of magnesium per day with minimal effort. Most adults eating this pattern don’t need to supplement.
A decision framework: when to supplement
For an adult deciding whether to add magnesium supplementation:
- Audit your diet: track magnesium intake for 5–7 days using a food-tracking app. If below 250 mg/day average, supplementation is reasonable.
- Consider context: if you train intensely in heat, take diuretics, drink alcohol regularly, or have chronic GI issues, magnesium status is more likely to be sub-optimal.
- Identify the symptom you’re targeting: sleep issues → glycinate or threonate; constipation → citrate; muscle cramps in heat → broad-spectrum electrolyte mix including magnesium; cognitive support → threonate; general supplementation → glycinate or citrate.
- Start low, go slow: 100–200 mg/day for 2 weeks, increase as tolerated to 200–400 mg/day.
- Re-evaluate after 4–8 weeks: did the targeted symptom improve? If not, magnesium probably wasn’t the issue. If yes, continue.
- Don’t exceed 350 mg/day from supplements without medical supervision. Combined with dietary intake, total can be higher (food sources don’t count toward the supplement upper limit).
Practical logistics and edge cases
Beyond the core protocol, several practical considerations come up.
Magnesium and medications. Several medication classes interact with magnesium: bisphosphonates, certain antibiotics (tetracyclines, quinolones), and proton pump inhibitors. Most interactions are reduced by spacing doses 2 hours apart. Verify with your pharmacist if you’re on chronic medications.
Quality variance. Supplement industry quality varies. Look for third-party tested brands (USP, NSF, Informed Choice). Cheap private-label oxide is the dominant low-quality offering; mid-priced glycinate or citrate from established brands is the safer purchase.
Pregnancy and breastfeeding. Pregnancy increases magnesium needs by 30–50 mg/day. Most prenatal vitamins include magnesium. Supplementing beyond the prenatal vitamin should be discussed with prenatal care provider.
Kidney function. Magnesium is excreted by the kidneys. People with chronic kidney disease can accumulate magnesium to toxic levels and should not supplement without medical supervision.
The marketing problem. Magnesium is heavily marketed as a panacea — “most adults are deficient,” “essential for sleep, energy, mood, performance,” etc. The marketing far exceeds the evidence base. Be sceptical of claims that don’t cite specific clinical trials with effect sizes.
Practical takeaways
- Magnesium matters physiologically: 300+ enzymatic cofactor roles, important for muscle function, sleep, bone health.
- Most well-fed adults don’t need to supplement; specific demographic groups (heat-training athletes, alcohol users, diuretic users, older adults) often benefit.
- Form matters: glycinate (sleep, calming), threonate (cognition), citrate (general/laxative), malate (energy/fatigue), oxide (mostly unhelpful).
- Dose: 200–400 mg/day from supplements; cap at 350 mg/day without medical supervision; split into 2–3 smaller doses if loose stools.
- Dietary sources first: pumpkin seeds, almonds, leafy greens, legumes, whole grains, dark chocolate.
- The marketing exceeds the evidence: be sceptical of broad “everyone needs more” claims; supplement based on documented context, not generic recommendations.
References
Tipton 2017Tipton KD. Nutritional support for exercise-induced injuries. Sports Med. 2015;45 Suppl 1:S93-104. View source →Garrison et al. 2020 CochraneGarrison SR, Korownyk CS, Kolber MR, et al. Magnesium for skeletal muscle cramps. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2020;9(9):CD009402. View source →Boyle 2017Boyle NB, Lawton C, Dye L. The effects of magnesium supplementation on subjective anxiety and stress — a systematic review. Nutrients. 2017;9(5):429. View source →Abbasi et al. 2012Abbasi B, Kimiagar M, Sadeghniiat K, et al. The effect of magnesium supplementation on primary insomnia in elderly. J Res Med Sci. 2012;17(12):1161-1169. View source →Castiglioni et al. 2013Castiglioni S, Cazzaniga A, Albisetti W, Maier JA. Magnesium and osteoporosis: current state of knowledge and future research directions. Nutrients. 2013;5(8):3022-3033. View source →Setaro 2014Setaro (2014). For the foundational research underlying this work, see related sports science books at: View source →Cinar 2007Cinar (2007). For the foundational research underlying this work, see related sports science books at: View source →


