
Does ZMA Actually Boost Testosterone? Common Belief vs. the Evidence
Published: 2026-06-25
Written by: Shingo YoshizakiReviewed by: Tomonobu Someda
ZMA has been marketed as a testosterone booster, sleep enhancer, and muscle recovery aid since the late 1990s. It remains a staple in gyms worldwide. But independent research tells a markedly different story from the marketing claims.
Let the data settle it.
Does ZMA increase testosterone levels?
What's said
Brilla & Conte (2000) /ボディビル系コンテンツ・サプリメーカーの製品訴求
ZMA raises testosterone. The zinc and magnesium optimize hormonal output during sleep, making it easier to build muscle. This isn't just bro science — studies have proven it.
What research says
- The original testosterone claims came from Brilla & Conte (2000), co-authored by the ZMA patent holder — a significant conflict of interest.
- An independent RCT (Koehler et al.
- 2009; n=42) found that 8 weeks of ZMA supplementation raised blood zinc and magnesium but produced no significant changes in serum testosterone or IGF-1.
- No conflict-free study has replicated a testosterone-raising effect.
For people with adequate nutritional status, there is no credible evidence that ZMA raises testosterone. The claim originates from a conflict-of-interest study and has not been replicated by independent research.
Does ZMA improve sleep quality and muscle recovery?
What's said
ZMAユーザーの体感談・フィットネス系SNS
Taking ZMA before bed deepens sleep and speeds up recovery after training. The combination of magnesium's relaxing effect and vitamin B6's neural support should work synergistically.
What research says
- Magnesium alone shows some evidence for sleep improvement in elderly adults with insomnia (Abbasi et al.
- 2012; double-blind RCT), but generalizing to young athletes requires caution.
- Evidence specifically supporting the ZMA formulation (zinc + magnesium + B6) for sleep or recovery in trained individuals is sparse in independent research.
- Much of the perceived benefit likely comes from magnesium alone, not the ZMA blend as such.
Magnesium alone has some evidence for sleep improvement, primarily in deficient or elderly populations. But evidence that the ZMA blend is specifically effective for young trainees is weak. If magnesium is the goal, standalone supplementation is more cost-effective.
Does zinc or magnesium supplementation help when you are actually deficient?
What's said
スポーツ栄養系コンテンツ・トレーニー向けサプリ広告
Athletes lose minerals through sweat, so zinc and magnesium deficiency is common in trainees. Everyone who works out should supplement with ZMA to cover the gap.
What research says
- When true deficiency exists, supplementing zinc or magnesium may normalize testosterone and performance markers — research supports this.
- But this is a correction of deficiency, not a supraphysiological boost in people who are already replete.
- Many healthy athletes obtain sufficient amounts through diet, and widespread deficiency across the training population is not well established.
- If deficiency is suspected, lab testing (serum zinc, magnesium) is the rational first step.
Supplementation makes sense when deficiency is confirmed. But taking ZMA to 'boost testosterone' without established deficiency lacks a rational evidence base. Check dietary intake first; use lab testing if deficiency is suspected.
Related supplements
PR
Testosterone normalization in zinc-deficient individuals (deficiency correction)

Supports sleep quality and ease of falling asleep when correcting deficiency (confirmed in elderly)
The links below include affiliate links (PR).
Related research
Sources
- Koehler K, et al. (2009) Eur J Clin Nutr — Effect of zinc and magnesium supplementation on testosterone and IGF-1 in resistance-trained men
- Abbasi B, et al. (2012) J Res Med Sci — Magnesium supplementation and primary insomnia in elderly: double-blind RCT
- Brilla LR & Conte V (2000) Med Sci Sports Exerc — Effects of a novel zinc-magnesium formulation on hormones and strength
- Wilborn CD, et al. (2004) J Int Soc Sports Nutr — Effects of ZMA supplementation on training adaptations and markers of anabolism and catabolism
Published: 2026-06-25

Written by
Shingo YoshizakiSoftware Engineer / Research Writer at BODYDATA
An engineer's job is verification. I read the source before I trust gym lore — same as code.
View profile →
Reviewed by: Tomonobu Someda
Content reviewed from the perspective of coaching practice and supplement-industry experience