Lymphatic Massage
Glycine: What It Is, What the Recent Research Shows, and How to Choose a Good One
Glycine’s one of those supplements that gets recommended everywhere from sleep forums to longevity clinics, and I think that breadth is exactly why it’s worth slowing down and looking properly at what the evidence actually supports. It’s not exotic, it’s not expensive, and unlike a lot of what crosses my desk, there’s genuinely decent research behind a few specific uses. Here’s the overview, the way I’d want it if I were reading up on it myself.
What it is
Glycine is the simplest amino acid, and technically non-essential — your body makes roughly 3 grams of it a day on its own, mostly in the liver and kidneys. It’s a building block for protein, and it’s also a major structural component of collagen, which is part of why it comes up so often in skin and joint conversations. Beyond structure, it acts as an inhibitory neurotransmitter in the spinal cord and brainstem, and as a co-agonist at NMDA receptors — which is the mechanism behind most of its sleep and cognitive research. It also feeds into glutathione production, the body’s master antioxidant, which is where a lot of the newer longevity and metabolic research is focused.
Dietary sources include meat, fish, dairy, legumes, and bone broth or gelatin — anything collagen-rich. Supplemental glycine is usually taken in doses well beyond what food alone provides, because most therapeutic research uses gram-level amounts.
What the recent trials show
Sleep. This is glycine’s best-established use, and the research has kept building on it. A 2025 clinical trial found that 3 grams of glycine before bed significantly improved next-day alertness, reduced fatigue, and improved attention and working memory in healthy adults who’d been sleep-restricted to five hours a night. Polysomnography-based work from the same period confirmed glycine improves sleep quality and shortens the time it takes to fall asleep, with the proposed mechanism being that it lowers core body temperature via peripheral vasodilation — your body needs that temperature drop to initiate sleep — without leaving people groggy the next day.
Aging and mitochondrial health — GlyNAC. One of the more interesting threads right now is glycine combined with N-acetylcysteine, known as GlyNAC. A pilot trial in older adults found the combination corrected glutathione deficiency, reduced oxidative stress, improved mitochondrial function, lowered inflammation, and improved insulin resistance, endothelial function, muscle strength and cognition over 24 weeks — with several of these markers worsening again after the supplement was withdrawn, which is a reasonably convincing sign the effect was real rather than incidental. Animal research on the same combination has shown a notable increase in lifespan, thought to work through the same glutathione pathway.
Physical performance and recovery. A 2024 review looked at glycine as an ergogenic aid — muscle recovery, strength, endurance, and sleep-linked recovery — and the honest conclusion was that the signal is promising but the human trial base is still thin. Worth watching rather than leaning on heavily yet.
Skin and collagen-linked aging. More recent research has looked at the specific ratio of amino acids in collagen — three parts glycine to one part proline to one part hydroxyproline — as the functional unit driving collagen’s benefits. A 2025 clinical observational trial using this ratio showed improved skin features within three months and a measurable reduction in biological age markers within six months.
What it’s good for, in practice
Pulling that together, glycine has decent evidence behind it for:
- Sleep quality and next-day alertness, particularly when sleep is already compromised
- Supporting glutathione and antioxidant capacity, especially in combination with NAC
- General mitochondrial and metabolic support in ageing
- Collagen and connective tissue support, alongside proline and hydroxyproline
It’s also commonly used more loosely for digestive comfort, gut lining support, and general calm — the evidence for these is thinner and more traditional than clinical, worth knowing before promising too much.
Sources: Dr Kumar Discovery, clinical trial summaries on glycine and sleep restriction/alertness, October 2025; Dr Brad Stanfield, review of glycine sleep trials and 2025 clinical evidence summary; Kumar et al., “Glycine and N-acetylcysteine (GlyNAC) supplementation in older adults,” Clinical and Translational Medicine, 2021; Ramos-Jiménez et al., “An Update of the Promise of Glycine Supplementation for Enhancing Physical Performance and Recovery,” Sports, 2024; collagen amino acid composition and biological age study, 2025 clinical observational trial.
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Cautions
Glycine has a genuinely good safety profile — it’s a natural part of human biochemistry, and the kidneys clear the excess efficiently, which is why it’s tolerated well even at gram-level doses. That said, a few things are worth flagging:
- Mild digestive upset — bloating or loose stool — can happen at higher doses, particularly if introduced too quickly.
- Doses above roughly 500mg per kilogram of body weight have shown cytotoxic potential in research contexts; this is far above any typical supplemental dose, but it’s the ceiling worth knowing about.
- Long-term safety data beyond several months is still limited, so I wouldn’t treat it as something to take indefinitely without periodic reassessment.
- If you’re on medication for seizures, dementia, or schizophrenia, or taking other amino acids or creatine, check with your prescriber first — glycine can interact with neurological pathways these medications also work on.
- Pregnant or breastfeeding women should check with their doctor before starting, as with most supplements taken at therapeutic rather than dietary levels.
Dosage guidelines
There’s no single official recommended dose, but the research clusters into a few useful bands:
- General wellness / daily support: 2–5g per day
- Sleep support: 3g, taken around 30–60 minutes before bed
- Higher therapeutic use (under guidance): up to 15–60g per day has been used in some clinical contexts, but this isn’t a self-directed range — it belongs in a supervised setting
Start low — around 1–2g daily — and build up over a week or two so you can see how your gut tolerates it before moving toward the higher end of a range.
How to choose a good one
Supplement quality varies more with glycine than people expect, given how simple the molecule is. A few things worth checking on a label:
- Third-party testing. Look for a certificate of analysis or a testing seal (NSF, Informed Sport, or similar) confirming purity and that the product contains what it claims.
- Powder over capsules, generally. Glycine powder is naturally sweet, dissolves easily, and gives you far more flexibility on dose than capsules — useful given the gram-level doses involved. It should dissolve fully and cleanly in water or tea; if it clumps or leaves residue, that’s often a sign of poor processing or added fillers.
- Plain glycine vs. combination products. Decide what you’re actually treating before you buy. Magnesium glycinate is a different product aimed at magnesium delivery with glycine as the carrier, not a glycine dose in its own right — read labels carefully, because the two get confused often.
- Minimal ingredient list. For plain glycine powder, the ingredient list should be short — ideally just glycine. Anti-caking agents, sweeteners, or flow agents aren’t necessarily harmful, but they’re not necessary either.
- Source transparency. Reputable manufacturers will state whether the glycine is fermentation-derived or synthetically produced. Either can be high quality, but a company willing to say so is generally a company worth trusting on the rest of the label too.

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