Can Magnesium Cure Tinnitus? The Short Answer
When you are living with tinnitus, the ringing never really stops. Not during meetings, not at dinner, and certainly not at 3 a.m. when you are scrolling through forums and reading story after story from people who say magnesium fixed everything. Those stories are real, they are earnest, and they are everywhere. It is completely understandable to want this to be the answer. This article will not mock that hope. What it will do is give you the most accurate, complete picture of what the science actually shows about magnesium and tinnitus, including what the clinical trials found, why “magnesium cured my tinnitus” stories are so compelling even when the statistics point the other way, and the narrow situations where magnesium may have genuine clinical rationale.
Can Magnesium Cure Tinnitus? The Short Answer
Magnesium has not been shown to cure tinnitus in any placebo-controlled trial. The only dedicated clinical study was an uncontrolled open-label design with 19 participants, and a 2016 global survey of 1,788 tinnitus patients found that 70.7% of supplement users experienced no change in their symptoms (Coelho et al. (2016)). The American Academy of Otolaryngology explicitly recommends against dietary supplements, including magnesium, for persistent bothersome tinnitus (Tunkel et al. (2014)). Magnesium is biologically plausible and safe at standard doses, but there is no controlled evidence that it reduces tinnitus.
Why Magnesium Is Biologically Plausible as a Magnesium Tinnitus Supplement
There are real reasons researchers became interested in magnesium for tinnitus, and understanding them matters. Three mechanisms have been proposed.
First, magnesium acts as a natural antagonist at NMDA receptors. These receptors are involved in glutamate signalling in the auditory pathway, and excess glutamate activity (excitotoxicity) has been theorised to contribute to the phantom sound perception in tinnitus. Magnesium blocking these receptors could, in theory, dampen that overactivity.
Second, magnesium supports smooth muscle relaxation in blood vessels, including those supplying the inner ear. Improved cochlear blood flow is one proposed route by which magnesium might support auditory health.
Third, magnesium has antioxidant properties that help protect sensory hair cells in the cochlea from oxidative damage. A preclinical animal study found that oral antioxidant vitamins combined with magnesium limited noise-induced hearing loss by promoting hair cell survival and modulating apoptosis-related genes (Alvarado et al. (2020)).
That last point deserves emphasis. The strongest mechanistic case for magnesium concerns noise-induced hearing loss prevention, not treatment of established tinnitus. Preventing acute cochlear injury and reversing an already-established phantom sound generated by central auditory pathway remodelling are different biological problems. A cross-sectional study did find that serum magnesium was significantly lower in tinnitus patients than in healthy controls (Uluyol et al. (2016)), which adds biological interest. But an association in blood levels does not mean that giving magnesium to non-deficient people will reverse their tinnitus. The mechanism is plausible. The clinical evidence for treatment is a different matter.
What the Clinical Evidence Actually Shows
There are three pieces of evidence worth understanding in order of scientific weight.
The Cevette 2011 trial. This is the study cited most often by websites claiming magnesium helps tinnitus. Researchers at the Mayo Clinic enrolled 26 people with tinnitus and gave them 532 mg of oral magnesium daily for three months. Nineteen participants completed the study. The Tinnitus Handicap Inventory (THI) scores for those with at least slight impairment did decrease significantly (p=0.03) (Cevette et al. (2011)). That sounds like good news. The problem: there was no placebo group. The study authors acknowledged this directly, writing that “a placebo control was not performed” because the purpose was simply to investigate whether the treatment showed any effect at all.
Why does the absence of a placebo group matter so much for tinnitus specifically? Because tinnitus symptoms fluctuate naturally, and because placebo response in tinnitus trials is substantial. A 2024 systematic review and meta-analysis of 23 randomised controlled trials found that placebo arms achieved a mean 5.6-point improvement in THI scores (95% CI 3.3 to 8.0) (Walters et al. (2024)). The improvement Cevette reported falls squarely within that range. In other words, the entire positive result from the only dedicated magnesium-for-tinnitus trial could be explained by non-specific response alone.
The study has not been replicated in the 13-plus years since publication.
The Coelho 2016 global survey. This survey collected data from 1,788 tinnitus sufferers across 53 countries, of whom 413 reported taking supplements. Magnesium was used by 6.6% of supplement takers. Across all supplements combined, 70.7% of users reported no effect, 19.0% reported improvement, and 10.3% reported worsening (Coelho et al. (2016)). The authors concluded that dietary supplements should not be recommended for tinnitus. One important caveat: the magnesium-specific subgroup was small (roughly 27 people), so these numbers describe the broader supplement-using population rather than magnesium users exclusively.
The 2024 AUDISTIM RCT. This is the only placebo-controlled trial involving magnesium for tinnitus, and it is also the one no competitor article currently mentions. Researchers tested a multi-ingredient supplement containing magnesium plus vitamins against placebo in 114 participants. The treatment group showed a modest effect (Cohen’s d=0.44). The placebo arm also improved by 6.2 THI points. That near-equal improvement in both groups illustrates precisely why uncontrolled studies like Cevette 2011 cannot tell us whether magnesium is doing anything. An additional limitation: because the formula contained multiple ingredients, the trial cannot isolate magnesium’s individual contribution.
There is no Cochrane systematic review of magnesium for tinnitus. This contrasts with ginkgo biloba, which has been Cochrane-reviewed and found ineffective. The absence of a Cochrane review is not evidence either way, but it signals that the field has not generated enough rigorous trials to warrant one.
Why ‘It Worked for Me’ Stories Feel So Convincing
If you have read dozens of accounts from people who say magnesium stopped their ringing, you probably noticed how specific and sincere they sound. These are not fabrications. The people writing them genuinely experienced what they describe. The difficulty is that personal experience cannot tell us what caused the improvement.
Three overlapping phenomena explain the pattern.
Tinnitus symptoms fluctuate. Loudness, intrusiveness, and distress all vary day to day and week to week, independently of anything a person does. Someone who starts magnesium during a particularly bad stretch is statistically likely to see some improvement in the following weeks regardless of whether the supplement does anything at all.
The placebo effect in tinnitus is real and measurable. As the Walters et al. (2024) meta-analysis confirmed, people in the placebo arms of well-designed trials improve by nearly 6 THI points on average. This is not imaginary relief. It is a genuine neurological response involving real changes in how the brain processes and prioritises the tinnitus signal. The person who improves after starting magnesium may have had a real neurological experience without magnesium being the cause.
Regression to the mean also plays a role. People tend to seek new treatments when their symptoms are at their worst. Peaks in any naturally fluctuating condition tend to be followed by a return toward average, which can make any intervention taken at the peak appear effective.
None of this means the person’s experience was invalid. It means that personal experience, even sincere and detailed personal experience, cannot distinguish between magnesium doing something and magnesium coinciding with a natural improvement.
Is There Any Scenario Where Magnesium Might Help?
A blanket dismissal would not be fully accurate, so here are the two situations where the picture is more detailed.
Magnesium deficiency. If you have a documented magnesium deficiency (which a GP or primary care physician can test through a serum magnesium blood test), correcting it may plausibly support auditory health. The cross-sectional data showing lower serum magnesium in tinnitus patients (Uluyol et al. (2016)) provides a rationale for testing, even if it does not prove that supplementation will reduce tinnitus. If deficiency is confirmed, treatment is appropriate regardless of tinnitus, and the tinnitus may or may not respond.
Migraine-associated tinnitus. This is a specific subtype where magnesium has genuine clinical support. A clinical review noted that magnesium and vitamin B2 are effective first-line treatments for migraine-associated vestibulocochlear disorders, including tinnitus (Umemoto et al. (2023)). The mechanism here is migraine suppression, not direct cochlear action. If your tinnitus worsens with migraines or is linked to migraine episodes, discussing magnesium prophylaxis with your doctor is reasonable.
On safety: magnesium is generally safe at recommended supplemental doses up to 350 mg per day (the NIH upper tolerable limit for supplements). Note that the Cevette trial used 532 mg daily, which exceeds standard supplemental guidance and can cause gastrointestinal side effects. At higher doses, magnesium can be dangerous in people with impaired kidney function, as the kidneys regulate magnesium excretion. Before starting any supplementation, speak with your doctor, particularly if you have kidney disease or take other medications.
Conclusion: Honesty Is Not the Same as Dismissal
If you came to this article hoping to find confirmation that magnesium would silence the ringing, the evidence above is hard to read. The only clinical trial was too small and too flawed to be meaningful. The largest real-world survey found no benefit in 70.7% of supplement users. The one placebo-controlled trial involving magnesium showed that the placebo group improved nearly as much as the treatment group.
Knowing this is not a dead end. It protects money, time, and the kind of false hope that makes the eventual disappointment worse. The treatments with the strongest evidence behind them are cognitive behavioural therapy for tinnitus distress (recommended by the AAO-HNS clinical practice guideline) and sound therapy; hearing aids offer meaningful relief for people who also have hearing loss (Tunkel et al. (2014)).
If you want to rule out magnesium deficiency, ask your doctor for a serum magnesium test. If your tinnitus is connected to migraines, that connection is worth exploring with a specialist. For everything else, the paths that genuinely help are not found in a supplement aisle. They are found through evidence-based care, and that is where your time and energy are best spent.
