How Much Magnesium Per Day?
How much magnesium per day you need based on activity level and goals. RDA breakdown, dosing by goal, and absorption tips.
Medical Disclaimer: This content is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice. Consult a qualified healthcare provider before starting any new fitness or supplement program.
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How Much Magnesium Per Day Do You Need?
The short answer: 400-420mg per day for men and 310-320mg for women. These are the Recommended Dietary Allowances (RDA) set by the National Institutes of Health, and they represent the minimum daily intake considered adequate to prevent deficiency in healthy adults. [Source: NIH Office of Dietary Supplements]
The problem is that roughly 50% of Americans fall short of even these baseline numbers through food alone. And the RDA was established for the general population, not for people who train hard, sweat regularly, and place higher metabolic demands on their bodies. For many active people, the RDA is a floor, not a ceiling.
Here is the full breakdown by age and sex:
Adult women (19-30): 310mg. (31+): 320mg. Adult men (19-30): 400mg. (31+): 420mg. Pregnant women: 350-360mg. Breastfeeding: 310-320mg.
These numbers include magnesium from all sources, both food and supplements combined.
Magnesium Dosage by Goal
How much magnesium per day you should aim for depends partly on what you are trying to achieve. Different goals may call for different amounts and different forms.
General Health
For overall health maintenance, meeting the RDA (310-420mg total from food and supplements) is the target. If your diet includes whole grains, nuts, seeds, and some leafy greens, you may only need 100-200mg from a supplement to close the gap or none at all.
Sleep
Research on magnesium and sleep has used doses of 200-400mg, typically taken 30-60 minutes before bed. Magnesium glycinate is the preferred form for sleep because glycine itself has calming properties that complement magnesium’s effect on GABA receptors. For a full breakdown of the evidence, see our magnesium for sleep guide.
Exercise Recovery
Active individuals generally benefit from 400-500mg total daily from food and supplements. Chelated forms (glycinate, bisglycinate, malate) are preferred because they absorb well and cause fewer GI issues than oxide or citrate at higher doses. The goal is to replace what training depletes through sweat, urinary excretion, and ATP turnover.
Blood Pressure
Clinical trials studying magnesium’s effect on blood pressure have used supplemental doses of 300-500mg per day, typically for 8-26 weeks. Effects are modest, with meta-analyses showing reductions of about 2-4 mmHg systolic and 2-3 mmHg diastolic. This is relevant for long-term cardiovascular health but is not a replacement for medication.
These targets overlap. You do not stack separate doses for each goal. If you take 300mg of magnesium glycinate at night for sleep, that also counts toward your recovery and general health targets.
Do Active People Need More Magnesium?
Yes. A 2024 systematic review concluded that individuals engaged in intense exercise need 10-20% more magnesium than sedentary people. [Source: Tarsitano et al., 2024]
The reason is straightforward. Training increases magnesium demand through three mechanisms: sweat losses during exercise, increased urinary excretion after training, and higher ATP turnover during muscle contraction. Research has shown that athletes consistently have lower serum magnesium levels than untrained individuals, despite eating more magnesium through food. The body simply uses and excretes more when you train hard.
As a practical example, a 90kg male who trains 5 times per week may need 450-500mg of total daily magnesium to stay comfortably above the deficiency threshold. The standard RDA of 420mg assumes a sedentary lifestyle. For a deeper look at why magnesium matters for performance, see our magnesium benefits overview.
How to Estimate Your Daily Magnesium Intake
Most people overestimate how much magnesium they get from food. Here is what a realistic day of eating looks like for someone with a “decent” diet:
Breakfast: Oatmeal (1 cup cooked) = ~60mg Lunch: Chicken breast + white rice = ~45mg Snack: Banana = ~32mg Dinner: Pasta with meat sauce = ~40mg
Total: ~177mg
That is a fairly typical day and it covers less than half the male RDA. Even adding a handful of almonds (~80mg) only brings it to ~257mg, still well under 420mg. Getting to the RDA from food alone requires deliberately eating magnesium-dense foods at every meal: pumpkin seeds (156mg per ounce), spinach (157mg per cooked cup), black beans (120mg per cup).
The gap between what you eat and what you need is where supplementation makes sense. If your food intake realistically provides 150-250mg, a 200-300mg supplement gets you to the 400-500mg range. For product recommendations by form and goal, see our best magnesium supplement picks.
The 350mg Supplement Limit: What It Actually Means
The Tolerable Upper Intake Level (UL) for supplemental magnesium is 350mg per day. This number appears everywhere and is often presented as a hard safety cap. It is not.
The UL applies only to magnesium from supplements, not from food. You can eat 600mg of magnesium through food with zero concern. The 350mg limit exists because supplemental magnesium, particularly poorly absorbed forms like magnesium oxide, can cause diarrhea and cramping at higher doses.
Here is the nuance: the UL was largely established based on data from inorganic forms (oxide, chloride, sulfate) that are poorly absorbed and pull water into the intestines. Chelated forms like magnesium glycinate and bisglycinate are absorbed through different pathways and are significantly better tolerated at the same doses. Research confirms that organic forms (citrate, glycinate) show higher bioavailability and fewer GI side effects than inorganic forms (oxide). [Source: Lindberg et al., 1990]
This means 350mg of magnesium glycinate is a very different experience than 350mg of magnesium oxide. Many people take 400mg+ of glycinate daily without any digestive issues.
The real safety concern is for people with impaired kidney function. Healthy kidneys efficiently excrete excess magnesium. Compromised kidneys cannot, and magnesium can accumulate to dangerous levels. Anyone with kidney disease should consult a doctor before supplementing.
Timing and Absorption Tips for Magnesium
How you take magnesium affects how much your body actually absorbs.
Split your doses. Taking 150mg twice daily leads to better absorption than 300mg all at once. The intestines can only absorb so much magnesium at a time, and smaller doses reduce the chance of the excess pulling water into the colon and causing loose stools.
Take it with food. Food slows gastric emptying and gives magnesium more contact time with the intestinal wall. This improves absorption for all forms.
Avoid stacking with high-dose calcium or zinc at the same meal. These minerals compete for the same absorption pathways. If you take calcium or zinc supplements, space them at least 2 hours apart from magnesium.
Glycinate at night. If you take magnesium glycinate for sleep, the evening dose does double duty: supporting sleep quality while contributing to your daily total. Consistency matters more than perfect timing, but taking it 30-60 minutes before bed is the standard recommendation.
Stay consistent. Magnesium is not a “take it when you remember” supplement. The body does not store large reserves, and levels deplete daily through sweat, urine, and metabolic activity. Daily intake is what keeps tissue stores topped up.
For a comparison of how different forms affect both absorption and purpose, see our magnesium glycinate vs citrate comparison. If you are unsure whether you are low, our magnesium deficiency symptoms guide covers the signs to watch for.
Frequently Asked Questions
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