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Magnesium

Magnesium is an important nutrient that plays a role in normal body functions. This guide explains what it does, common food sources, what can affect intake, and how tracking your diet can help you understand your overall nutrient intake.

Recommended intake varies by age, sex, and life stage. Tracking what you actually eat can help you understand your overall dietary intake over time.

What Magnesium does

Magnesium plays a role in:

  • regulating muscle function
  • supporting normal nerve function
  • contributing to blood sugar and blood pressure regulation
  • playing a role in making protein, bone, and DNA

Magnesium intake

Intake targets vary across life stages. Age, sex, eating patterns, food variety, and day-to-day routines can all influence how much magnesium appears in a person’s diet.

Tracking can help you compare your usual food pattern with the foods that commonly provide magnesium.

Common food sources of Magnesium

Food sources of Magnesium may include:

Illustrated food sources of magnesium including leafy greens, avocado, citrus, banana, nuts, dark chocolate, and cereal.
Illustrated examples of common food sources.
  • nuts and seeds
  • beans and lentils
  • whole grains
  • green leafy vegetables such as spinach
  • fortified breakfast cereals and some dairy foods

The amount can vary depending on the food, serving size, preparation method, and brand.

What can affect Magnesium intake

A person’s intake may vary due to factors such as:

  • food preferences and usual food choices
  • restricted diets or low intake of nuts, seeds, legumes, or grains
  • appetite changes or small meal sizes
  • digestive tolerance and limited food variety
  • lifestyle habits and meal routines

Why intake may be lower in some people

Some people may find it harder to get enough Magnesium from food alone because of:

  • low intake of nuts, seeds, legumes, or whole grains
  • limited meal variety over time
  • poor tolerance of some common magnesium-containing foods
  • changing appetite or eating patterns

Dietary intake can vary a lot from one person to another. This page is about food intake and tracking, not diagnosis or treatment.

Tracking Magnesium intake

Tracking your food intake can help you see whether your diet regularly includes foods that provide magnesium and whether those patterns stay consistent over time.

  • see whether your diet includes foods that provide Magnesium
  • spot patterns over time
  • identify possible gaps in overall dietary variety
  • prepare clearer information for discussion with a healthcare professional

How NutriSignals helps

NutriSignals helps you review magnesium intake from the foods you record. It is designed to help you better understand your diet, identify possible nutrient gaps, and generate clear nutrition reports you can share with your healthcare professional.

When to speak with a healthcare professional

If you have symptoms, ongoing health concerns, a diagnosed condition, or questions about your diet, seek advice from your doctor, specialist, or dietitian. They can assess your individual situation.

Want a clearer picture of your nutrient intake?

NutriSignals helps you track your diet, review nutrient gaps, and create reports you can take to your healthcare professional.