
Magnesium is one of the most-searched supplements in the world, and one of the easiest to formulate badly. The difference usually comes down to a single decision: which magnesium form goes in the bottle. Pick magnesium oxide because it’s cheap and elemental-heavy, and you ship a product that mostly passes through the body. Pick glycinate and you pay more for something that actually absorbs.
For brand owners, this is a sourcing and positioning decision as much as a formulation one. Here’s how to choose.
Magnesium oxide is inexpensive and contains a high percentage of elemental magnesium by weight — but it’s poorly absorbed and more likely to cause a laxative effect. Magnesium glycinate (magnesium bound to the amino acid glycine) is far better absorbed and gentler on digestion, which is why it dominates premium sleep, stress, and relaxation positioning.
Elemental content on a label can be misleading: a high number from oxide doesn’t mean a high absorbed dose. What reaches the bloodstream is what matters.
| Form | Absorption | Tolerability | Best Positioning |
|---|---|---|---|
| Glycinate | High | Gentle | Sleep, stress, premium daily |
| Citrate | Good | Mild laxative effect | Value, regularity |
| Oxide | Low | Laxative-prone | Cheapest; not for absorption claims |
| L-threonate | Good | Gentle | Cognitive, premium niche |
Glycinate costs more per kilo and takes more space per dose, so a true full-dose glycinate product is physically larger and more expensive than an oxide equivalent. That has format consequences: hitting a meaningful elemental dose of glycinate often means a larger capsule, multiple capsules, or a powder. Be wary of “magnesium glycinate” products at impossibly low prices — they’re often a glycinate-oxide blend (sometimes labeled “buffered”) that quietly leans on cheap oxide.
If your brand competes on quality, efficacy, and experience — the brand-owner lane, not the commodity lane — glycinate (or a glycinate-led blend) is almost always the right call. Reserve oxide for products where it’s genuinely appropriate, and never let a cost saving on form undercut the absorption claim on your own label.
For absorption and tolerability, yes. Glycinate is far better absorbed and gentler on digestion, while oxide is cheaper but poorly absorbed and more likely to cause a laxative effect. Oxide’s high elemental content doesn’t translate to a high absorbed dose.
The glycinate form costs more per kilo and takes more space per elemental dose, so a true full-dose product uses more material and larger or multiple units. Suspiciously cheap glycinate is often blended with oxide.
Magnesium glycinate is the standard choice for sleep, stress, and relaxation products because of its absorption and gentleness. L-threonate is a premium option where cognitive positioning is the goal.
Formulating a magnesium product that actually absorbs? UniWell Labs sources premium magnesium forms and labels honest elemental doses for brand owners. Talk to our team about your magnesium line.