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7 Sleep Supplements Ranked by Evidence: What Works, What Doesn't, and What to Avoid
The sleep supplement market is estimated at $80+ billion globally. The vast majority of products are either underdosed, poorly formulated, or backed by no meaningful clinical evidence. Most consumers have no way to tell the difference.
This ranking focuses on ingredient-level evidence — not brand marketing or influencer endorsements. Each supplement is evaluated on the number of human randomised controlled trials, effect sizes, dose consistency with the research, safety profile, and mechanistic plausibility.
📋 Ranking criteria: Number of human RCTs, effect size in those trials, dose consistency with trials, safety profile, and mechanism plausibility. Only ingredients with published human clinical trials are included.
#1
Magnesium Glycinate
Evidence level: Strong
The most broadly useful sleep supplement for the general population. Magnesium deficiency is widespread — affecting an estimated 48% of adults — and repletion consistently improves sleep quality, reduces cortisol, and improves GABA signalling. The glycinate form has superior absorption (~80%) and additional calming effects from the glycine amino acid. It is also the gentlest on the digestive system.
Effective dose: 200–400mg elemental magnesium glycinate, 30–60 minutes before bed.
#2
L-Theanine
Evidence level: Strong
Promotes alpha brainwave activity — the brain state associated with relaxed focus and reduced anxiety without sedation. Multiple RCTs demonstrate reduced sleep onset time and improved sleep quality, particularly in people with anxiety-driven insomnia. Works well in combination with magnesium. No tolerance development observed in long-term studies. Safe for daily use.
Effective dose: 200mg, 30–60 minutes before bed.
#3
KSM-66 Ashwagandha
Evidence level: Strong (standardised extract only)
24 published clinical trials. Consistent cortisol reduction (~28% in best-powered studies) and meaningful sleep quality improvements. Works best for stress-driven insomnia. Effects take 2–4 weeks to fully manifest — it is not an acute sleep aid. The standardised KSM-66 or Sensoril extract is essential; unstandardised "ashwagandha root powder" has inconsistent evidence. See our full ashwagandha guide for more detail.
Effective dose: 300mg KSM-66, once or twice daily.
#4
Melatonin (Low Dose)
Evidence level: Moderate (dose-dependent)
Highly effective for circadian timing issues — jet lag, delayed sleep phase, and shift work. Modest effect for primary insomnia. The critical caveat: 0.3–0.5mg is the optimal dose. The 5–10mg doses found in most retail products provide no additional sleep benefit and can cause next-morning grogginess and suppress natural melatonin production. See our full guide to melatonin dosage.
Effective dose: 0.3–0.5mg, 30–60 minutes before desired sleep time.
#5
Passionflower Extract
Evidence level: Moderate
A 2011 randomised crossover trial found that passionflower significantly improved subjective sleep quality scores. Anxiolytic effects appear to be mediated via GABA-A receptor modulation — the same pathway as benzodiazepines, but without the dependency risk. Generally well tolerated. Less studied than the top four but with strong mechanistic rationale.
Effective dose: 45–90mg standardised extract (vitexin content).
#6
Valerian Root
Evidence level: Mixed
One of the most commonly sold herbal sleep aids. The evidence is genuinely inconsistent — some trials show meaningful benefit, others show no effect versus placebo. Methodological quality of many valerian trials is poor. May work better in combination with other sedative herbs (hops, lemon balm) than alone. Generally safe for short-term use. The inconsistency may relate to the variation in active compound (valerenic acid) content between products.
Effective dose if used: 300–600mg standardised extract.
#7
CBD
Evidence level: Weak for sleep specifically
Despite enormous marketing spend, the evidence for CBD specifically improving sleep in otherwise healthy adults is thin. Most positive sleep studies used very high doses (150–300mg per day) — far exceeding typical retail products (10–25mg). CBD may help with sleep indirectly through its anxiolytic effects, but as a primary sleep supplement it underperforms relative to the ingredients above. Regulatory status also varies by country. Save your money unless treating a specific anxiety or pain condition.
What to Look For in a Sleep Supplement
- Full ingredient transparency — no proprietary blends that hide individual doses
- Doses that match clinical trial amounts (not underdosed "fairy dust" levels)
- Standardised extracts where applicable (KSM-66, not just "ashwagandha root")
- Third-party testing certification (NSF, Informed Sport, or USP)
- No unnecessary fillers, artificial colours, or excessive additives
Key Takeaways
- Magnesium glycinate and L-Theanine have the strongest evidence-to-cost ratio for most people
- KSM-66 ashwagandha is the best choice if stress and high cortisol are driving your sleep problems
- Melatonin works best for timing issues (jet lag, shift work) — take 0.3–0.5mg, not 5–10mg
- Valerian and CBD have inconsistent or weak evidence and should be lower priorities
- Always check for standardised extracts and third-party testing on any supplement label
See our review of the top-rated sleep supplement that combines the first four ingredients in this ranking at clinical doses.
Read the YU Sleep Review →⚕️ Disclaimer: This article is for informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute medical advice. Supplement recommendations are based on available research and may not be appropriate for everyone. If you have a medical condition or take prescription medications, consult a qualified healthcare professional before starting any supplement.