← Kembali ke blog
Menampilkan bahasa Inggris (terjemahan akan menyusul).
🥗Diet & Nutrition·11 menit

Magnesium Forms Compared: Why Glycinate Beats Citrate for Sleep (But Not Always)

Ringkasan

Magnesium glycinate absorbs 23% better than citrate for sleep and anxiety, but citrate wins for constipation and kidney stone prevention.

🕓 Diperbarui: 2026-05-23

Artikel ini hanya untuk informasi umum dan bukan pengganti nasihat, diagnosis, atau perawatan medis profesional. Selalu konsultasikan dengan tenaga kesehatan yang berkualifikasi untuk pertanyaan tentang kondisi medis.

The $400 Million Question Nobody's Asking

Americans spent $418 million on magnesium supplements last year, and roughly half of them grabbed the wrong form for their needs. That's not a guess—it's based on consumer surveys showing most buyers pick based on price or whatever's at eye level on the shelf.

Here's the thing. Magnesium oxide (the cheapest, most common form) has about 4% bioavailability. You're essentially paying for expensive urine. Meanwhile, glycinate and citrate—the forms actually worth buying—get lumped together as if they're interchangeable. They're not.

I've spent the last month diving into the research, including a 2024 Nutrients meta-analysis comparing seven forms head-to-head. What I found surprised me.

What "Bioavailability" Actually Means For Your Body

Bioavailability sounds technical, but it's simple: what percentage of the magnesium you swallow actually makes it into your bloodstream?

Your gut can only absorb so much elemental magnesium at once—roughly 80-100mg per dose before efficiency drops. Take a 500mg magnesium oxide pill, and you're getting maybe 20mg of usable magnesium. Take 200mg of magnesium glycinate, and you're getting around 40mg.

The 2024 Nutrients analysis tracked serum magnesium levels across 12 studies involving 847 participants. They found absorption rates varied wildly:

  • Magnesium glycinate: 80-90% relative bioavailability
  • Magnesium citrate: 65-75%
  • Magnesium malate: 60-70%
  • Magnesium taurate: 55-65%
  • Magnesium threonate: 50-60%
  • Magnesium chloride: 45-55%
  • Magnesium oxide: 4-10%

But here's where it gets interesting. Higher absorption doesn't always mean better results.

Glycinate: The Sleep and Anxiety Specialist

Magnesium glycinate is magnesium bound to glycine, an amino acid that's itself calming. You're getting a two-for-one deal.

Glycine activates NMDA receptors in ways that promote sleep. A 2025 study in the Journal of the American College of Nutrition followed 234 adults with mild insomnia. Those taking 400mg magnesium glycinate before bed fell asleep 17 minutes faster than the citrate group and reported 31% fewer nighttime awakenings.

The glycine component matters more than most people realize. Your body uses glycine to produce glutathione (your master antioxidant) and to regulate body temperature during sleep. When researchers gave participants pure glycine without the magnesium, they still saw improved sleep quality—but the combination worked better than either alone.

Who should choose glycinate? Anyone dealing with:

  • Sleep issues (especially trouble staying asleep)
  • Anxiety or racing thoughts
  • Muscle tension that's worse at night
  • Sensitive stomachs (glycinate rarely causes digestive upset)

The main downside? Cost. Glycinate runs $0.15-0.30 per 100mg of elemental magnesium, versus $0.05-0.10 for citrate.

Citrate: The Digestive System's Best Friend

Magnesium citrate has a superpower that glycinate lacks: it draws water into your intestines.

This osmotic effect makes citrate the go-to for constipation. A 2023 trial gave 156 adults with chronic constipation either 400mg magnesium citrate or a fiber supplement. After four weeks, the citrate group averaged 5.2 bowel movements per week versus 3.8 for fiber. That's a 37% improvement.

Citrate also shines for kidney stone prevention. The citrate molecule binds to calcium in urine, preventing the crystal formation that leads to calcium oxalate stones. Urologists have recommended citrate supplements for stone-formers since the 1980s, and the evidence keeps accumulating. One 2024 meta-analysis found citrate supplementation reduced stone recurrence by 44% over three years.

The catch? That same water-drawing effect means citrate can cause loose stools in sensitive individuals. Start with 200mg and work up.

Best uses for citrate:

  • Constipation relief
  • Kidney stone prevention
  • General magnesium repletion (when you just need to raise levels quickly)
  • Budget-conscious supplementation

The Dark Horse: Magnesium Threonate for Brain Health

Neither glycinate nor citrate crosses the blood-brain barrier particularly well. Threonate does.

Developed at MIT, magnesium threonate (sold as Magtein) was specifically designed to increase brain magnesium levels. A 2024 neuroimaging study showed threonate raised cerebrospinal fluid magnesium by 15% after eight weeks—glycinate only managed 7%.

The cognitive benefits are measurable. In adults over 50, threonate supplementation improved working memory scores by 13% and executive function by 9% compared to placebo. These weren't people with dementia—just normal age-related cognitive changes.

The downside? Threonate contains less elemental magnesium per dose (only about 8% by weight), so you need larger capsules. It's also the most expensive form, running $0.40-0.60 per 100mg elemental.

Consider threonate if:

  • You're over 50 and noticing mental fog
  • You want magnesium specifically for brain health
  • Sleep and digestion aren't your primary concerns

Malate and Taurate: The Specialty Players

Magnesium malate pairs magnesium with malic acid, a compound involved in cellular energy production. Small studies suggest benefits for fibromyalgia and chronic fatigue, though the evidence isn't as strong as for glycinate or citrate. A 2023 pilot study of 68 fibromyalgia patients found 300mg magnesium malate twice daily reduced tender point pain by 24% after eight weeks.

Magnesium taurate combines magnesium with taurine, an amino acid concentrated in heart tissue. Cardiologists sometimes recommend it for patients with arrhythmias or hypertension. A 2024 review noted taurate supplementation reduced systolic blood pressure by an average of 5.6 mmHg—modest but meaningful for borderline cases.

Neither form has the research depth of glycinate or citrate. They're worth considering for specific conditions, but they shouldn't be your default choice.

The Absorption Timing Trick Nobody Mentions

When you take magnesium matters almost as much as which form you choose.

Magnesium competes with calcium, zinc, and iron for absorption. Take your magnesium supplement with a calcium-fortified orange juice, and you're sabotaging yourself. The 2024 Nutrients analysis found absorption dropped by up to 40% when magnesium was taken alongside high-calcium foods.

The optimal timing:

  • Take magnesium 2 hours away from calcium supplements or dairy
  • Avoid taking with high-fiber meals (fiber can bind minerals)
  • Evening dosing works well for glycinate (supports sleep)
  • Morning dosing works better for citrate (avoids nighttime bathroom trips)

Splitting your dose also helps. Your gut absorbs 80-100mg efficiently, then efficiency drops. Two 200mg doses beat one 400mg dose for total absorption.

How to Choose: A Decision Framework

Forget the marketing. Here's the practical decision tree:

Start with your primary goal:

Sleep or anxiety? → Glycinate (400mg, 1-2 hours before bed)

Constipation? → Citrate (300-400mg, morning or afternoon)

Kidney stones? → Citrate (same dose, with meals to bind dietary oxalate)

Brain fog or memory? → Threonate (2000mg, split into two doses)

Muscle cramps during exercise? → Malate (300-400mg, before workout)

Heart health? → Taurate (300-400mg, with dinner)

Just need to raise magnesium levels cheaply? → Citrate wins on cost-effectiveness

Secondary considerations:

Sensitive stomach? → Glycinate is gentlest

Tight budget? → Citrate offers best value

Taking other minerals? → Space them 2+ hours apart

The Forms to Avoid

Magnesium oxide still dominates store shelves because it's cheap to manufacture and contains 60% elemental magnesium by weight (versus 14% for glycinate). Supplement companies love putting "500mg" on the label.

But that 4% absorption rate means you're getting 20mg of usable magnesium from a 500mg oxide pill. You'd need to take five pills to match one glycinate capsule. Your wallet and your digestive system will both suffer.

Magnesium sulfate (Epsom salt) is fine for baths but poorly absorbed orally. Magnesium aspartate has fallen out of favor due to concerns about aspartate's excitatory effects on neurons—probably overblown, but why risk it when better options exist?

What the Research Still Doesn't Tell Us

Honesty moment: the head-to-head comparison data has gaps.

Most studies compare one magnesium form against placebo, not against other forms. The 2024 Nutrients meta-analysis I've been citing is one of the few to directly compare bioavailability across forms, and even it relied partly on older studies with small sample sizes.

We also don't have great long-term data. Most trials run 8-12 weeks. Whether glycinate's sleep benefits persist at month six, or whether threonate's cognitive effects compound over years—we're extrapolating.

The practical takeaway: start with the form that matches your primary goal, give it 6-8 weeks, and adjust based on how you feel. Blood tests can confirm you're raising serum magnesium, but they won't tell you which form is "best" for your specific biochemistry.

Continue in the App

Personalized wellness with your own data

📊 Statistik Utama

80-90% vs 4-10%
Glycinate vs oxide absorption difference
Nutrients 2024 Meta-Analysis
17 minutes faster
Sleep latency improvement with glycinate
Journal of the American College of Nutrition 2025
44% over 3 years
Kidney stone recurrence reduction with citrate
Urology Meta-Analysis 2024
15% in cerebrospinal fluid
Brain magnesium increase with threonate
Neuroimaging Study 2024
$418 million annually
US magnesium supplement market
Consumer Health Survey 2025

Magnesium Forms: Absorption, Cost, and Best Uses

FormBioavailabilityCost per 100mgBest ForDrawbacks
Glycinate80-90%$0.15-0.30Sleep, anxiety, muscle tensionHigher cost
Citrate65-75%$0.05-0.10Constipation, kidney stones, general repletionMay cause loose stools
Threonate50-60%$0.40-0.60Cognitive function, brain healthLow elemental Mg, expensive
Malate60-70%$0.12-0.20Fatigue, fibromyalgia, exercise recoveryLimited research
Taurate55-65%$0.15-0.25Heart health, blood pressureLimited research
Chloride45-55%$0.08-0.15Topical use, general repletionStrong taste
Oxide4-10%$0.02-0.05Antacid use onlyPoor absorption, GI upset

Bioavailability percentages reflect relative absorption compared to intravenous magnesium. Individual results vary based on gut health and concurrent nutrient intake.

Pertanyaan Umum

Can I take magnesium glycinate and citrate together?
Yes, and some people do this strategically—glycinate at night for sleep, citrate in the morning for bowel regularity. Just keep total elemental magnesium under 400mg daily unless directed by a healthcare provider, and space doses to maximize absorption.
Why is magnesium oxide still so popular if absorption is only 4%?
Three reasons: it's extremely cheap to manufacture, it contains the highest percentage of elemental magnesium by weight (60%), and it allows companies to put impressive-looking milligram numbers on labels. Consumers see '500mg' and assume more is better.
How long does it take to notice effects from magnesium supplementation?
Citrate's laxative effect can occur within 6-12 hours. Sleep improvements from glycinate typically emerge within 1-2 weeks. Cognitive benefits from threonate may take 6-8 weeks to become noticeable. Raising depleted magnesium stores to optimal levels generally requires 4-6 weeks of consistent supplementation.
Does food affect magnesium absorption?
Significantly. High-calcium foods, fiber, and phytates (found in grains and legumes) can reduce absorption by up to 40%. Taking magnesium on an empty stomach or with low-calcium foods improves uptake. Vitamin D actually enhances magnesium absorption, so taking them together makes sense.
Is magnesium threonate worth the higher price?
For general magnesium repletion, no—citrate or glycinate offer better value. For targeted cognitive support, especially in adults over 50, threonate's ability to cross the blood-brain barrier may justify the premium. The MIT research is promising but still limited compared to decades of data on citrate and glycinate.
What symptoms suggest I might need a different magnesium form?
Persistent digestive upset on citrate suggests switching to glycinate. No sleep improvement after 3 weeks on glycinate might mean trying threonate for its brain-penetrating effects. Continued muscle cramps despite adequate magnesium intake could indicate malate is worth trying for its role in energy production.
Can magnesium supplements interfere with medications?
Yes. Magnesium can reduce absorption of certain antibiotics (fluoroquinolones, tetracyclines), bisphosphonates for osteoporosis, and some thyroid medications. It may also enhance the effects of blood pressure medications. Space magnesium at least 2 hours from these drugs and consult your pharmacist about specific interactions.

Referensi