Somewhere along the wellness content cycle, magnesium became synonymous with sleep. The sleepy girl mocktail went viral. Every supplement brand launched a bedtime magnesium formula. And somewhere in the process, the broader story of what magnesium actually does in the body got a little lost.
Magnesium is essential to more than 300 biochemical reactions in the body. Sleep is one of them, and the evidence for its role there is real, but it is a small part of a considerably more important picture. The more pressing issue for many people is that research suggests a substantial proportion of adults are not getting enough magnesium through diet alone, which has consequences that extend well beyond a restless night.
What magnesium actually does
Magnesium is involved in energy production at the cellular level. Without it, the body cannot efficiently convert food into the adenosine triphosphate that powers every process from muscle contraction to cognitive function. This is why one of the earliest and most common signs of insufficient magnesium is fatigue: not the dramatic, acute exhaustion of illness, but the background low-energy quality that many people accept as simply how they feel.
It is also critical for muscle and nerve function. Magnesium regulates the electrical signals that allow muscle fibres to contract and relax, which is why low levels are associated with muscle cramps, twitches and the uncomfortable restless legs that disrupt sleep for many people. The heart is a muscle, and magnesium’s role in maintaining a stable cardiac rhythm is well-established: deficiency has been linked to irregular heartbeat and elevated blood pressure.
The bone health connection
Approximately sixty per cent of the body’s magnesium is stored in bone. It works alongside calcium and vitamin D to maintain bone density, and its role here is more significant than it is often given credit for: magnesium is required to activate vitamin D, the nutrient most associated with bone health. Taking calcium and vitamin D supplements without adequate magnesium may therefore be less effective than it would be in the context of good overall mineral status. For women approaching or in the postmenopausal years, when bone density loss accelerates, magnesium intake is worth paying specific attention to.
Mood, stress and anxiety
The research on magnesium and mental health is particularly interesting. Magnesium is involved in regulating the neurotransmitters that influence mood, and low levels have been associated with increased anxiety, irritability and susceptibility to depression. A 2024 analysis found a positive correlation between magnesium depletion and depression scores in adults. The mechanism is partly through the nervous system: magnesium helps balance excitatory and inhibitory neurotransmitters, and when levels fall, the nervous system can become more reactive and harder to settle.
Stress and magnesium have a bidirectional relationship that is worth understanding. When the body is under chronic stress, it excretes more magnesium than usual. Lower magnesium then makes the stress response more pronounced. This feedback loop means that people under sustained pressure may have both a greater need for and a greater depletion of magnesium, making dietary adequacy particularly important during demanding periods.
Blood sugar regulation
Magnesium is involved in insulin function and glucose metabolism. Adequate magnesium intake is associated with better insulin sensitivity, and deficiency has been linked to increased risk of developing type 2 diabetes. For anyone managing blood sugar or with a family history of diabetes, ensuring adequate magnesium intake is one of the more actionable nutritional steps available.
How to get enough
The recommended daily intake for adult women is approximately 320 milligrams per day. Good dietary sources include dark leafy vegetables, nuts, particularly almonds and cashews, seeds, legumes, wholegrains and dark chocolate. Many people find that their diet does not reliably meet this threshold, particularly if it is heavy in processed foods, which contain minimal magnesium.
If supplementing, the form matters. Magnesium glycinate is the most commonly recommended form for general wellbeing and sleep, as it is well-absorbed and gentle on the digestive system. Magnesium citrate is better absorbed than oxide but has a mild laxative effect. Magnesium oxide, the cheapest and most widely available form, is the least well-absorbed. As with any supplement, checking with a healthcare provider before starting is sensible, particularly if you take other medications, as magnesium can interact with certain drugs, including antibiotics and some heart medications.
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