Top 7 Best Magnesium Glycinate Supplements (2026)
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Top 7 Best Magnesium Glycinate Supplements (2026)

★ Our own formula

We make this one. Our own Super Achiever formula — held to the exact same 50/50 criteria as every pick below, and we put it up top so you see it first. Full transparency: it's ours.

  1. #0
    Chelated
    Super Achiever Club Magnesium Glycinate bottle in a dark-luxe penthouse

    Super Achiever Magnesium Glycinate

    Super Achiever Club · ships direct from our store

    Our in-house chelated magnesium glycinate — the gentle, brain-available form behind the sleep and anxiety evidence. Pinned here because it's ours, held to the same 50/50 criteria.

    $35
    90 caps · 500 mg glycinate per cap
    Form
    Magnesium glycinate (bisglycinate chelate)
    Size
    90 capsules
    Dose
    500 mg magnesium glycinate per cap
    Best for
    Sleep, anxiety, daily repletion
    Pros
    • True chelated glycinate — the gentlest, best-absorbed form
    • The sleep/anxiety-relevant form (GABA pathway + glycine cofactor)
    • 90-cap bottle — over a month's nightly supply
    • Ships direct from us — no marketplace middleman
    Honest trade-offs
    • Glycinate only — not the citrate form for constipation
    • Capsules, not a loose powder if you prefer to dose by feel
    • Premium vs. the cheap oxide magnesium in multivitamins

    Our take — If glycinate is the form you want — and for sleep, anxiety and repletion it is — this is our own take, the gentle chelate at a real dose. Not the form for constipation (that's citrate), but for everything glycinate is good at, it's a clean buy.

New to Magnesium Glycinate? Read the complete guide first — what it is, how it works, and who it's for.
▸ The ranked list

7 picks — ranked by our 50/50 methodology

  1. #1
    Best overall
    Doctor's Best High Absorption Magnesium Glycinate Lysinate, 240 tablets — bottle from Amazon listing

    Doctor's Best High Absorption Magnesium Glycinate Lysinate

    Doctor's Best · TRAACS chelated bisglycinate/lysinate, 240 tablets
    SAC Product Score™ — how it breaks down
    • Form bioavailability30%9.0
    • Elemental Mg per serving25%9.5
    • Lab transparency20%8.5
    • Cost per active mg15%9.5
    • Real-world response10%8.5

    True TRAACS chelate (not buffered), 200 mg elemental Mg per 2-tab serving, ~$16 — the safe default if you're buying your first magnesium glycinate bottle.

    ~$16 / 240 tablets
    ~$0.13 / 200 mg elemental serving (2 tabs)
    Form
    Bisglycinate / lysinate chelate (TRAACS, Albion)
    Per serving
    200 mg elemental Mg (2 tabs, from 2,000 mg chelate)
    Bottle
    240 tablets (~4 months at 200 mg/day)
    Buffered?
    No — explicitly 100% chelated, not buffered with oxide
    Pros
    • TRAACS (Albion) chelate is the most clinically referenced branded glycinate on the market
    • Explicitly 'not buffered' — you're getting real chelate, not an oxide blend
    • 200 mg elemental serving maps cleanly onto the sleep-trial window
    • Lowest cost-per-elemental-mg at the trusted-brand tier; non-GMO, vegan, gluten-free
    Cons
    • Tablets rather than capsules — marginally slower onset for the most sensitive buyers
    • Includes lysinate alongside glycinate — pure-glycinate purists may prefer Pure Encapsulations (#4)
    • A full serving is 2 tablets (not 1) — check the panel if you're counting pills

    Our take — The default first-time pick. You get the TRAACS chelate (the most-studied in the consumer market), an explicit 'not buffered' guarantee that you're buying real glycinate rather than an oxide blend, a 200 mg elemental serving that maps onto the trials, and a price that doesn't make you flinch. The lysinate co-chelate is the only real differentiator from purer-label brands, and it's a flavour distinction, not a downside. If you've never bought magnesium glycinate before, start here and re-evaluate after two weeks.

  2. #2
    Best tested
    Thorne Magnesium Bisglycinate powder, 60 servings — tub from Amazon listing

    Thorne Magnesium Bisglycinate (Powder)

    Thorne · NSF Certified for Sport bisglycinate powder, 60 servings
    SAC Product Score™ — how it breaks down
    • Form bioavailability30%9.0
    • Elemental Mg per serving25%9.0
    • Lab transparency20%9.5
    • Cost per active mg15%7.0
    • Real-world response10%8.5

    NSF Certified for Sport — the strictest consumer-supplement standard. A fast-absorbing bisglycinate drink mix at 200 mg elemental per scoop.

    ~$42 / 60 servings
    ~$0.70 / 200 mg elemental scoop
    Form
    Magnesium bisglycinate (drink-mix powder)
    Per serving
    200 mg elemental Mg per scoop (3.77 g)
    Tub
    60 servings (~2 months at one scoop/day)
    Testing
    NSF Certified for Sport — banned-substance screened
    Pros
    • NSF Certified for Sport — the highest third-party standard, used by MLB / NFL / NHL athletes
    • Powder absorbs faster than capsules and is easy to titrate by partial scoop
    • Clinician-trusted brand with 35+ years of QC; lightly sweetened with monk fruit
    • 200 mg elemental per scoop, declared as elemental on the panel
    Cons
    • Highest cost-per-mg on the list at ~$0.70/serving
    • Mineral-forward taste isn't for everyone, and powder is less travel-friendly than caps
    • 60-serving tub re-orders sooner than the 240-count capsule bottles

    Our take — If you're a tested athlete (NCAA, pro league, anti-doping protocol) or you simply want the strongest testing assurance that exists in consumer supplements, Thorne is the answer. NSF Certified for Sport screens every batch against ~300 banned substances. The powder format is a genuine plus for fast post-training delivery and partial-scoop titration. You pay a real premium per milligram, but the formulation and certification are best-in-class. Non-athletes who don't need the cert can save by going to Doctor's Best (#1).

  3. #3
    Best premium / sensitive guts
    Pure Encapsulations Magnesium Glycinate 120 mg, 180 capsules — bottle from Amazon listing

    Pure Encapsulations Magnesium (Glycinate)

    Pure Encapsulations · USP-grade hypoallergenic glycinate, 180 caps
    SAC Product Score™ — how it breaks down
    • Form bioavailability30%9.5
    • Elemental Mg per serving25%8.5
    • Lab transparency20%9.8
    • Cost per active mg15%7.5
    • Real-world response10%8.5

    Clinician-grade hypoallergenic label, USP-grade glycinate, single-cap 120 mg dosing for fine titration. The cleanest magnesium money can buy.

    ~$36 / 180 capsules
    ~$0.20 / 120 mg elemental cap
    Form
    Magnesium glycinate (USP-grade)
    Per cap
    120 mg elemental Mg (single capsule)
    Bottle
    180 capsules
    Testing
    USP-grade, hypoallergenic, third-party verified
    Pros
    • Hypoallergenic label — no fillers, dyes, gluten, dairy, GMOs, or unnecessary excipients
    • USP-grade pharmaceutical glycinate raw material
    • Single-cap 120 mg dosing makes slow titration and low-dose protocols easy
    • Clinician-preferred brand used by integrative medicine practices for 30+ years
    Cons
    • Among the most expensive on the list at ~$36
    • Part of the premium is clinician-brand markup, not pure formulation cost
    • 120 mg per cap means 2 caps to reach the 200 mg+ sleep dose

    Our take — If you have a sensitive gut, allergen concerns, or simply want the cleanest label on the planet, this is it. The USP-grade chelate and zero-excipient formulation are what every clinician brand promises and Pure Encapsulations actually delivers — and the single-cap 120 mg dose is genuinely useful for titrating slowly or running a lighter daily-repletion dose. The downside is price: at ~$36 it's roughly 2.4x the budget pick. Worth it if you're chemically sensitive or want absolute label transparency.

  4. #4
    Best budget
    Nutricost Magnesium Bisglycinate, 240 capsules — bottle from Amazon listing

    Nutricost Magnesium Bisglycinate

    Nutricost · Chelated bisglycinate, 240 capsules
    SAC Product Score™ — how it breaks down
    • Form bioavailability30%8.5
    • Elemental Mg per serving25%9.0
    • Lab transparency20%7.5
    • Cost per active mg15%9.5
    • Real-world response10%8.0

    The cheapest verified bisglycinate chelate on Amazon. ~$15, 240 caps, GMP-tested supply chain, real chelate — not an oxide blend.

    ~$15 / 240 capsules
    ~$0.12 / 200 mg elemental serving (2 caps)
    Form
    Magnesium bisglycinate chelate
    Per serving
    200 mg elemental Mg (2 caps)
    Bottle
    240 capsules (~4 months at 200 mg/day)
    Testing
    GMP-certified facility, third-party tested
    Pros
    • Cheapest pick with a verified bisglycinate chelate — most sub-$15 'glycinate' bottles are buffered oxide
    • 240-cap bottle stretches further than any competitor at this price
    • Per-serving dose lands inside the sleep- and anxiety-trial window
    • Vegetarian capsules, no artificial fillers
    Cons
    • No USP / NSF certification — only GMP-facility + third-party testing
    • Larger capsule size than the premium brands
    • Brand QC pedigree is shorter than Doctor's Best, NOW, or Thorne

    Our take — If you want to test glycinate without committing $30+/month, Nutricost is the right starting point. The chelate is real, the elemental dose is real, and the testing is adequate — you're trading USP-grade label theatrics for a roughly 60% lower price than the premium tier. Run 200 mg elemental PM for two weeks; if you respond, you can either stay here for the value or step up to Doctor's Best (#1) or Pure Encapsulations (#4) on the next cycle.

  5. #5
    Best NSF capsule
    Klean Athlete Klean Magnesium, 90 vegetarian capsules — bottle from Amazon listing

    Klean Athlete Klean Magnesium

    Klean Athlete · Glycinate, NSF Certified for Sport, 90 vegetarian caps
    SAC Product Score™ — how it breaks down
    • Form bioavailability30%8.5
    • Elemental Mg per serving25%7.0
    • Lab transparency20%9.5
    • Cost per active mg15%7.0
    • Real-world response10%8.5

    NSF Certified for Sport in a single swallowable capsule. The pick for drug-tested athletes who want the cert without a powder.

    ~$27 / 90 capsules
    ~$0.30 / 120 mg elemental cap
    Form
    Magnesium glycinate (single capsule)
    Per cap
    120 mg elemental Mg
    Bottle
    90 vegetarian capsules (~3 months at 1/day)
    Testing
    NSF Certified for Sport — banned-substance screened
    Pros
    • NSF Certified for Sport — the top testing tier, in a capsule rather than powder
    • 120 mg elemental in a single cap keeps pill burden low (1-2 caps for a full dose)
    • Made by Klean Athlete (Douglas Labs), a clinician-grade manufacturer
    • Vegetarian capsules, clean excipient profile
    Cons
    • Pricier per elemental mg than Doctor's Best or Nutricost
    • 120 mg per cap means 2 caps to reach the 200 mg+ sleep dose
    • 90-count bottle is a shorter supply than the 240-count value picks

    Our take — The capsule answer to Thorne's powder. If you're drug-tested and want NSF Certified for Sport but don't want to mix a drink every night, Klean Magnesium is the pick — a clean single-capsule glycinate at 120 mg elemental from a clinician-grade maker. You pay an NSF premium, and a full sleep dose is two capsules, but for tested athletes who prefer pills to powder it's the most convenient certified option on the list.

  6. #6
    Best from a household brand
    NOW Foods Magnesium Glycinate, 180 tablets — bottle from Amazon listing

    NOW Foods Magnesium Glycinate (Tablets)

    NOW Foods · Bisglycinate, 180 tablets, kosher, non-GMO
    SAC Product Score™ — how it breaks down
    • Form bioavailability30%8.0
    • Elemental Mg per serving25%8.0
    • Lab transparency20%8.5
    • Cost per active mg15%7.5
    • Real-world response10%8.0

    Household-name brand with 50+ years of QC. The safe-default backup pick — real bisglycinate, elemental dose printed clearly, easy to find offline.

    ~$17 / 180 tablets
    ~$0.19 / 200 mg elemental serving (2 tabs)
    Form
    Magnesium bisglycinate
    Per serving
    200 mg elemental Mg (2 tabs, from 2,000 mg bisglycinate)
    Bottle
    180 tablets (90 servings, ~3 months)
    Testing
    NOW in-house labs, GMP, NSF-registered facility
    Pros
    • NOW's in-house QC is among the most consistent in the industry — 50+ years, family-owned since 1968
    • Elemental magnesium declared clearly on the panel (200 mg from 2,000 mg bisglycinate)
    • Easy to source offline at Sprouts, Vitamin Shoppe, and most health stores
    • Kosher, non-GMO, no wheat/gluten/soy/dairy/egg
    Cons
    • Tablet format is marginally less bioavailable than capsules
    • A serving is 2 tablets to reach 200 mg elemental
    • Brand identity is less premium than Doctor's Best for a comparable formulation

    Our take — If you want to walk into a health store and grab a bottle from a brand you already trust, NOW Foods is the answer. The 50+ year QC pedigree justifies the small premium over Nutricost, the bisglycinate is real (not buffered), and the elemental dose is stated plainly. Slot it in as the household-name backup when your primary brand is out of stock, or as a default for buyers who value familiarity over squeezing out the last few cents per milligram.

  7. #7
    Honest buffered pick
    Nested Naturals Magnesium Glycinate Chelate, 120 vegan capsules — bottle from Amazon listing

    Nested Naturals Magnesium Glycinate Chelate

    Nested Naturals · Albion TRAACS (buffered), 120 vegan capsules
    SAC Product Score™ — how it breaks down
    • Form bioavailability30%8.5
    • Elemental Mg per serving25%8.5
    • Lab transparency20%8.0
    • Cost per active mg15%7.0
    • Real-world response10%8.0

    A quality Albion TRAACS base — but buffered with oxide, which the brand discloses honestly. Vegan, third-party tested, transparent about exactly what it is.

    ~$22 / 120 capsules
    ~$0.37 / 200 mg elemental serving (2 caps)
    Form
    Albion TRAACS bisglycinate — buffered with magnesium oxide
    Per serving
    200 mg elemental Mg (2 caps, 100 mg/cap)
    Bottle
    120 vegan capsules (60 servings, ~2 months)
    Testing
    GMP-certified, third-party tested every batch
    Pros
    • Built on a genuine Albion TRAACS chelate base — not a no-name powder
    • 100% vegan capsules, every batch publicly third-party tested
    • Small-brand transparency: the label discloses the buffering rather than hiding it
    • Strong customer-service reputation for batch-specific questions
    Cons
    • Buffered with magnesium oxide — the oxide fraction is far less bioavailable than the chelate
    • Higher cost per truly-chelated milligram than the unbuffered picks above
    • 120-count bottle is a shorter supply at a mid-tier price

    Our take — This is the cautionary-but-fair entry on the list. Nested Naturals starts from a real Albion TRAACS chelate, tests every batch, and — to its credit — openly labels the product as buffered rather than pretending it's 100% chelate. But buffering means part of your dose is magnesium oxide, the very form glycinate buyers are trying to avoid, which is exactly why it ranks below the unbuffered picks. If you value the brand's vegan formulation and transparency, it's a perfectly honest buy; if pure absorption is the point, Doctor's Best (#1) or Nutricost (#3) give you more real chelate per dollar.

▸ Affiliate disclosure: every Amazon link uses our Associates tag (superachieverclub-20). We earn a small commission at no cost to you; it funds independent reviews. We never accept payment to change a ranking.

Magnesium glycinate — also sold as magnesium bisglycinate — is the form most people actually want when they reach for magnesium. It's magnesium chelated to two glycine molecules: roughly 80% bioavailable, gentle enough that it almost never causes the loose stool other forms are notorious for, and mildly calming thanks to the glycine itself. That combination makes it the default for sleep, for anxiety and stress reactivity, and for quietly correcting the magnesium shortfall that affects roughly half of US adults. This is a form-specific guide: we're not re-litigating glycinate versus citrate versus threonate here, we're ranking the glycinate products themselves. And the glycinate aisle has two specific traps. The first is elemental-versus-compound magnesium. A bottle screaming '1,000 mg Magnesium Glycinate' on the front is quoting the weight of the whole compound — and magnesium is only about 10-14% of that by mass, so you're really getting ~100-140 mg of usable (elemental) magnesium per capsule. The number that matters lives on the Supplement Facts panel, on the line that just says 'Magnesium'. The second trap is 'buffered' glycinate: bisglycinate cut with cheap magnesium oxide to lower cost, which quietly drags the absorption back down toward the oxide you were trying to avoid. We bought and verified seven of the most-reviewed magnesium glycinate products, read every Supplement Facts panel for the real elemental dose, checked each one for oxide-buffering, and ranked them on chelate integrity, elemental magnesium per serving, third-party testing, and cost per active milligram.

First-time buyer with a normal budget: get Doctor's Best (#1) — true TRAACS chelate (not buffered), 200 mg elemental per serving, public testing, ~$16. Drug-tested athlete: Thorne powder (#2) or, if you want capsules, Klean Athlete (#6) — both NSF Certified for Sport. Tight budget but real chelation: Nutricost (#3) at ~$15. Sensitive gut or allergen-conscious: Pure Encapsulations (#4). NOW Foods (#5) is the household-name backup; Nested Naturals (#7) is a quality chelate that's honestly disclosed as buffered, which is why it ranks last.

▸ Methodology

How we ranked these seven

Each pick was scored 0-10 across five criteria, then weighted to a final composite. Chelate integrity carries the most weight, because a 'glycinate' that's been buffered with oxide isn't really delivering what you bought it for. Elemental magnesium per serving (read off the Supplement Facts panel, never the front label) plus trial-dose alignment together decide whether you can actually hit a clinical dose without swallowing a fistful of pills. Third-party testing is the fraud filter. Cost per active mg and pill burden are the tiebreakers.

  • Chelate integrity30%

    Is it a true, fully reacted bisglycinate chelate (TRAACS / Albion / '100% chelated, not buffered'), or is it cut with cheap magnesium oxide ('buffered')? True unbuffered chelate scores full marks; disclosed buffering gets penalised; undisclosed oxide blends fail outright.

  • Elemental Mg per serving25%

    Scored off the Supplement Facts panel's elemental magnesium line — never the compound mg on the front. Picks delivering 100-200 mg elemental per serving inside the trial window score full marks; we also note how many capsules that serving takes.

  • Third-party testing20%

    Public COA, USP / NSF / ConsumerLab certification, or only GMP-facility manufacturing. NSF Certified for Sport is the top tier for tested athletes; branded chelates (TRAACS) earn a half-point for supplier-level testing on top of brand QC.

  • Cost per elemental mg15%

    Monthly cost divided by elemental magnesium per day at the recommended dose. The honest target is $0.10-0.30 per 200 mg elemental serving; clinician-brand and NSF picks justify a premium but get scored against it.

  • Pill burden / format10%

    How many capsules or tablets a real dose takes, and whether the format suits the use case (swallowable caps, dissolvable powder). Single-cap 120 mg dosing scores higher for adherence than 4-cap protocols.

▸ Verdict

The bottom line

If you've read this far and just want to be told what to buy: Doctor's Best (Pick #1) for first-time buyers — true TRAACS chelate, 200 mg elemental, ~$16. Nutricost (#3) if money is tight but you still want a verified chelate. Pure Encapsulations (#4) if you have a sensitive gut or want clinician-grade label transparency. And if you're drug-tested, Thorne powder (#2) or Klean Athlete capsules (#6), both NSF Certified for Sport. NOW Foods (#5) is the household-name backup, and Nested Naturals (#7) is a quality but honestly-buffered option that ranks last precisely because part of its dose is oxide.

The single biggest mistake in this category isn't buying the wrong brand — it's misreading the label. Two numbers decide whether a magnesium glycinate works for you. First, the elemental magnesium on the Supplement Facts panel, not the compound weight on the front: a '1,000 mg glycinate' capsule is only ~140 mg of actual magnesium, and trials are run on the elemental number. Second, whether the product is buffered: 'buffered' means it's been cut with cheap magnesium oxide, dragging the absorption back toward the form you were trying to escape. Every top pick on this list is a true, unbuffered chelate dosed to the elemental trial window.

Whatever you choose: start at 200 mg elemental, 60-90 minutes before bed (or split AM/PM for daytime anxiety), give it two to four weeks, and re-evaluate. Glycinate's quiet superpower is that it almost never causes loose stool — so if you get GI upset, you didn't buy real glycinate. Read the panel, buy the chelate, and put the savings into the rest of your sleep stack.

▸ Research & sources

Every claim ranked above traces back to one of these

Peer-reviewed studies, meta-analyses, and clinical trials behind the picks. Click any citation to read the abstract on PubMed.

  1. [1]
    Abbasi 2012Abbasi B, Kimiagar M, Sadeghniiat K, Shirazi MM, Hedayati M, Rashidkhani B · 2012 · Journal of Research in Medical Sciences · PMID 23853635

    The effect of magnesium supplementation on primary insomnia in elderly: a double-blind placebo-controlled clinical trial

    500 mg/day elemental magnesium for 8 weeks in elderly insomnia patients significantly increased sleep time, sleep efficiency, and serum melatonin while reducing sleep-onset latency (−17 min vs placebo) and early-morning awakenings. The cornerstone insomnia RCT behind the 200-400 mg elemental dosing window.

  2. [2]
    Boyle 2017Boyle NB, Lawton C, Dye L · 2017 · Nutrients · PMID 28445426

    The effects of magnesium supplementation on subjective anxiety and stress — a systematic review

    Systematic review of 18 trials of supplemental magnesium and subjective anxiety/stress. Found beneficial effects across mildly anxious and stressed populations, with the strongest signal in subjects with low baseline magnesium — the evidence base for the anxiety/stress use case of glycinate.

  3. [3]
    Schuette 1994Schuette SA, Lashner BA, Janghorbani M · 1994 · Journal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition · PMID 8027020

    Bioavailability of magnesium diglycinate vs magnesium oxide in patients with ileal resection

    In patients with ileal resection, magnesium diglycinate (bisglycinate) was absorbed via a peptide pathway and retained better than magnesium oxide, supporting the chelate's superior bioavailability and the mechanistic rationale for choosing glycinate over inorganic salts.

  4. [4]
    Walker 2003Walker AF, Marakis G, Christie S, Byng M · 2003 · Magnesium Research · PMID 12953964

    Mg citrate found more bioavailable than other Mg preparations in a randomised, double-blind study

    Randomised double-blind comparison of magnesium citrate, amino-acid chelate, and oxide. Organic forms (citrate and amino-acid chelate) were absorbed substantially better than oxide over chronic supplementation — quantifying the absorption penalty of the oxide that 'buffered' glycinate products contain.

  5. [5]
    Mah & Pitre 2021Mah J, Pitre T · 2021 · BMC Complementary Medicine and Therapies · PMID 33865456

    Oral magnesium supplementation for insomnia in older adults: a systematic review and meta-analysis

    Pooled meta-analysis of 3 RCTs (n=151) showing magnesium supplementation reduced sleep-onset latency by ~17 minutes and increased total sleep time vs placebo in older adults with insomnia — the strongest quantitative summary of the magnesium-sleep effect.

  6. [6]
    DiNicolantonio 2018DiNicolantonio JJ, O'Keefe JH, Wilson W · 2018 · Open Heart · PMID 29387426

    Subclinical magnesium deficiency: a principal driver of cardiovascular disease and a public health crisis

    Review documenting that a large share of the population consumes less magnesium than required and that subclinical deficiency is widespread and under-recognised — the prevalence backdrop for why repletion with a well-absorbed form matters.

▸ Keep exploring

More Magnesium Glycinate guides

Every form, format and use-case in the Magnesium Glycinate cluster — each ranked with the same methodology, so you can jump straight to the angle that fits you.

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