BODYDATA
Research vs Bro-science

Do Glycine and GABA Really Improve Sleep and Recovery? The Sleep Supplement Myth vs. Research

Published: 2026-06-30

Written by: Shingo YoshizakiReviewed by: Tomonobu Someda

Improving sleep quality to maximize training recovery — glycine and GABA are promoted for this purpose. But some argue "swallowing amino acids and neurotransmitters can't affect the brain." Let's separate the evidence for each.

Round1

Does glycine (3g before bed) improve sleep quality?

What's said

「サプリは効かない」懐疑派・一般的な認識

Swallowing amino acids can't affect brain neurotransmission. Glycine improving sleep is anecdotal — there's no real science behind it.

VS

What research says

  • Bannai et al.
  • (2012) RCT found that 3 g of glycine before sleep significantly improved subjective sleepiness, fatigue, and cognitive function (working memory, attention) the next day under sleep-restricted conditions.
  • The proposed mechanism involves peripheral vasodilation → heat dissipation → core body temperature reduction, plus central inhibitory neurotransmitter modulation.
  • Inagawa et al.
  • (2006) also documented improved slow-wave sleep with pre-sleep glycine.
  • Effective at just 3 g with no significant adverse effects.
Verdict

Pre-sleep glycine (3 g) shows meaningful sleep quality and next-day performance improvements in multiple RCTs. Low cost, minimal side effects — a practical sleep supplement option.

Confidence:Moderate evidence
Round2

Does oral GABA supplementation improve sleep?

What's said

GABAサプリマーケティング・リラクゼーション系情報

GABA is the brain's primary inhibitory neurotransmitter — supplementing it directly relaxes the brain and definitely improves sleep. It's more powerful than melatonin.

VS

What research says

  • Oral GABA's ability to cross the blood-brain barrier (BBB) in meaningful amounts remains debated — pharmacologists generally consider large-scale peripheral-to-CNS transfer unlikely.
  • Some studies show GABA supplements affect subjective relaxation and stress biomarkers, likely through enteric GABA receptors (gut-brain axis) or indirect HPA axis modulation — not direct CNS entry.
  • RCT evidence for central sleep improvement is weaker for GABA than for melatonin or glycine.
  • The "works directly on the brain" marketing claim lacks strong scientific support.
Verdict

Evidence for oral GABA directly improving sleep via CNS action is weak. Indirect relaxation effects are suggested, but glycine and melatonin have stronger direct evidence. GABA is lower priority.

Confidence:Weak evidence

Related supplements

PR
Melatonin

Shorter time to fall asleep and improved sleep quality reported in meta-analysis

View in official store
Magnesium

Supports sleep quality and ease of falling asleep when correcting deficiency (confirmed in elderly)

View in official store

The links below include affiliate links (PR).

Published: 2026-06-30

Written by

Shingo Yoshizaki

Software Engineer / Research Writer at BODYDATA

An engineer's job is verification. I read the source before I trust gym lore — same as code.

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Reviewed by: Tomonobu Someda

Content reviewed from the perspective of coaching practice and supplement-industry experience