DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

Magnesium Supplements Crash Course (2026): Benefits and Side Effects

January 5, 2026
in News
Magnesium Supplements Crash Course (2026): Benefits and Side Effects

everyone is obsessed with magnesium supplements. It’s the key ingredient in #sleepygirlmocktails, powders stirred into tart cherry juice and prebiotic soda, a wellness cocktail for anxious millennials. Your coworkers are popping magnesium glycinate before bed instead of melatonin, because it allegedly cures insomnia, constipation, and existential dread. Folks seem especially concerned with optimizing their poop and pillow time. In 2025, Google searches for “which magnesium is best for sleep” and “which magnesium makes you poop” more than doubled.

Magnesium is essential for maintaining a healthy cardiovascular system. It’s also one of the most abundant minerals in the human body, running more than 300 biochemical reactions, from protein synthesis to nerve function and blood sugar regulation. Along with heart health, it also supports bone health and helps shuttle calcium and potassium across cell membranes, a process that allows for muscle contractions and normal heart rhythms.

You can get it from foods like legumes, leafy vegetables, and whole grains, or from fortified foods and dietary supplements. The question is: Do you need to supplement?

Table of Contents

  • Symptoms of Magnesium Deficiency
  • Benefits of Magnesium Supplements
  • Can You Take Too Much?
  • Should You Supplement?
  • WIRED’s Favorite Magnesium Supplements
  • Meet the Experts

Updated January 2026: I’ve added our favorite magnesium supplements, including Pure Encapsulations Magnesium Glycinate, Thorne Magnesium Bisglycinate, and Buoy Rainforest Activated Magnesium.

Symptoms of Magnesium Deficiency

While an essential mineral for overall health, many people don’t get enough magnesium. This is partly because magnesium is predominantly found in high-fiber food sources, and a significant portion of Americans do not consume sufficient fiber, according to registered dietitian Sue-Ellen Anderson-Haynes. Research confirms this: More than 90 percent of women and 97 percent of men fail to meet the recommended daily intake for dietary fiber.

Older adults are particularly at risk, as the body’s ability to absorb magnesium decreases with age. Health conditions like Crohn’s disease or kidney disease, alcohol use disorder, and the use of diuretics can all lead to magnesium depletion.

Anderson-Haynes notes that a magnesium deficiency (also known as hypomagnesemia) can result in a range of symptoms, such as headaches, nausea, constipation, tremors, heart palpitations, and muscle weakness. Chronic magnesium deficiency can increase the risk of developing high blood pressure, osteoporosis, insulin resistance, and type 2 diabetes.

Benefits of Magnesium Supplements

There are several types of magnesium supplements, including:

  • Magnesium citrate: Often taken as a remedy for occasional constipation.
  • Magnesium glycinate: Often taken for better sleep and reduced anxiety.
  • Magnesium oxide: Often taken for constipation or indigestion.
  • Magnesium l-threonate: Often taken for better sleep, cognitive function, and reduced stress.
  • Magnesium chloride: Often taken as an electrolyte replenisher and for its laxative effect.

Supplements are most useful for people with a confirmed deficiency, but early research suggests possible benefits for specific conditions, including migraines, insomnia, and cardiovascular disease.

“It’s really overlooked that magnesium can help with menstrual cycle irregularity in terms of making sure that you’re not having severe cramping,” says Anderson-Haynes, who adds it may also benefit women in perimenopause and menopause. Clinically, it may be part of the treatment for pregnancy complications like preeclampsia and eclampsia.

Can You Take Too Much?

The recommended dietary allowance is 320 milligrams per day for women and 420 milligrams per day for men. These are amounts most people can reach with a balanced diet; healthy kidneys regulate magnesium levels, excreting excess when magnesium intake is high and conserving it when it’s low.

Daily supplements under 350 milligrams are generally considered safe for healthy adults. “If you take too much magnesium, you’ll probably get diarrhea, because it loosens the bowels,” Anderson-Haynes says. Other side effects include nausea, gastrointestinal discomfort, and, at very high levels of magnesium (usually from overusing laxatives or antacids), low blood pressure, muscle cramps, breathing problems, and, in rare cases, cardiac arrest. People with kidney disease are at the highest risk of toxicity.

Should You Supplement?

For most healthy U.S. adults, magnesium supplements aren’t essential. If you struggle with migraines, insomnia, or other conditions where research suggests health benefits, they may be worth trying—but first talk to a health care professional.

Otherwise, focus on magnesium-rich foods. These include but are not limited to: legumes (beans, lentils, chickpeas), leafy greens (artichokes, kale, spinach), whole grains (oats, barley, quinoa), nuts (almonds, cashews, peanuts), fruit (bananas, avocado, dried apricots), and soy products (tofu, soy milk, edamame). Dark chocolate is also a good source of magnesium; 100 grams of 70-85 percent of cacao solids contain 228 milligrams of magnesium, which is more than half of the amount of magnesium recommended for daily intake.

If you do decide to take any dietary supplements, “look for a seal or certification that says GMP (Good Manufacturing Practices) or NSF,” says Anderson-Haynes, stressing the importance of third-party tests and verifications, considering the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) doesn’t regulate dietary supplements in the US.

Our Favorite Magnesium Supplements

Pure Encapsulations was recommended to me by my doctor, and it seems to be the company that health care professionals trust the most. I prefer capsules over powders when it comes to magnesium glycinate because I’m taking these right before bed and usually can’t stomach a liquid concoction. Each capsule contains 120 milligrams, and you can take one to four capsules a day depending on what your doctor recommends.

While magnesium glycinate is often taken for sleep and a better mood, it also supports heart health, cellular energy production, and bone structure. It’s also less likely to have a laxative effect if you’re usually sensitive to magnesium supplements. Pure Encapsulations sells several forms of magnesium, in capsule, powder, and liquid form.

Thorne (NSF Certified for Sport) is one of the brands we trust the most when it comes to dietary supplements, mostly because they rigorously test their products for potency, purity, and label accuracy through every step of the process. They screen raw materials for contaminants in their in-house laboratories. They check the supplements, including the bottles and labels, for defects. Before hitting the shelves, they ensure that no microbiological contamination has occurred during the manufacturing process. Lastly, products undergo stability testing to confirm that they will meet their label claims up to the expiration date.

Thorne also offers travel packs, capsules, multivitamins that contain magnesium, and other forms of magnesium, including Magnesium CitraMate, which is a blend of magnesium citrate and di-magnesium malate.

Many health care providers have drilled into me that you should get nutrients, like magnesium, from food as opposed to supplements. Like most people, I have trouble getting enough leafy greens and seeds in my diet. Buoy’s Rainforest Activated Magnesium does the job (and adds a minty undertone to my morning smoothies). This magnesium powder is formulated with plants sourced from the Australian rainforest, including anise myrtle, shiitake mushrooms, and pumpkin seed meal. Theoretically, these aid in better absorption and make the supplement more metabolically useful. I’m still following the doctor’s orders of using food sources, and I sleep more deeply when regularly using it. —Julia Forbes

Meet the Experts

  • Sue-Ellen Anderson-Haynes, MS, RDN, CDCES, is a spokesperson for the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics and founder of 360Girls&Women.

Power up with unlimited access to WIRED. Get best-in-class reporting and exclusive subscriber content that’s too important to ignore. Subscribe Today.

The post Magnesium Supplements Crash Course (2026): Benefits and Side Effects appeared first on Wired.

Ex-NFL pro Matt Kalil sues ex-wife, Haley, for saying his penis size ended their marriage
News

Ex-NFL pro Matt Kalil sues ex-wife, Haley, for saying his penis size ended their marriage

by Page Six
January 7, 2026

Matt Kalil is suing his ex-wife, Haley Baylee, for her viral comments on his penis size. The influencer claimed that ...

Read more
News

Animation Guild Scores Triple Win as DreamWorks, Netflix and ‘Ted’ Workers Vote to Unionize

January 7, 2026
News

‘The Rookie’ Boss on Tim and Lucy’s Big Move: ‘I’m Not Scared of What Happy Might Look Like’

January 7, 2026
News

What Being Mocked Really Does to Trump: Wolff

January 7, 2026
News

‘What garbage’: Analysts sound off on CBS News’s ‘disgraceful and disgusting’ J6 report

January 7, 2026
Ringleader of $250M Minnesota welfare fraud scandal ordered by judge to forfeit Porsche, luxury goods

Ringleader of $250M Minnesota welfare fraud scandal ordered by judge to forfeit Porsche, luxury goods

January 7, 2026
Hilary Duff’s husband eviscerates ‘self obsessed’ and ‘tone deaf’ Ashley Tisdale over toxic mom group drama

Hilary Duff’s husband eviscerates ‘self obsessed’ and ‘tone deaf’ Ashley Tisdale over toxic mom group drama

January 7, 2026
FEMA Staff Bracing for Dismissal of 1,000 Disaster Workers

FEMA Staff Bracing for Dismissal of 1,000 Disaster Workers

January 7, 2026

DNYUZ © 2025

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2025