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How Long Does Magnesium Hydroxide Take to Work?

Last reviewed: December 2025

Quick Answer

According to antacid pharmacology literature and product labeling, magnesium hydroxide begins to neutralize stomach acid and relieve heartburn symptoms within 5-10 minutes for most people.

Timeline:

  • Onset: 5-10 minutes
  • Peak effect: 10-20 minutes after dose
  • Duration: 30 minutes to 3 hours (depending on stomach contents)
  • Laxative effect: 30 minutes to 6 hours (when used at laxative doses)

The liquid form typically works faster than chewable tablets.

Detailed Timeline

As an Antacid

First 5 minutes: According to antacid pharmacology:

  • Magnesium hydroxide enters stomach
  • Begins chemical reaction with stomach acid
  • Acid neutralization starts immediately upon contact
  • Some people feel relief within 5 minutes

5-10 minutes:

  • Most people begin experiencing symptom relief
  • Acid neutralization is actively occurring
  • Burning sensation starts to subside
  • Stomach pH begins rising from acidic levels

10-20 minutes:

  • Peak acid-neutralizing effect
  • Maximum symptom relief
  • Stomach pH raised from 1-3 to 3-5
  • Most significant reduction in acidity

30 minutes to 3 hours:

  • Effect gradually wears off
  • Duration depends on stomach contents
  • Acid production continues (not prevented, just neutralized)
  • May need redosing for continued relief

As a Laxative

When used at laxative doses (higher amounts):

According to FDA-approved laxative labeling:

  • Onset: 30 minutes to 6 hours
  • Most people: 2-4 hours
  • Osmotic effect draws water into intestines
  • Produces bowel movement
  • Individual variation in timing

Factors Affecting How Fast It Works

Formulation Type

Liquid suspension: According to pharmaceutical literature:

  • Fastest onset (5-10 minutes)
  • Already dissolved
  • Immediate contact with stomach acid
  • Larger surface area for reaction
  • Most people’s preferred form for speed

Chewable tablets:

  • Slightly slower (10-15 minutes)
  • Must be broken down first
  • Chewing thoroughly improves speed
  • Still relatively fast
  • More portable

Stomach Contents

On empty stomach:

  • Faster onset (5 minutes)
  • Rapid mixing with acid
  • Less dilution
  • But shorter duration (30-60 minutes)
  • Acid quickly replenished

With food or after meals:

  • Slightly slower onset (10-20 minutes)
  • Food slows mixing
  • Buffers the effect
  • But longer duration (1-3 hours)
  • Food continues buffering acid

Amount of Acid Present

Higher acid levels:

  • May take slightly longer for complete relief
  • More acid to neutralize
  • May need higher dose
  • Full relief in 10-20 minutes

Lower acid levels:

  • Faster relief
  • Less acid to neutralize
  • Relief in 5-10 minutes

Dose Taken

Lower doses:

  • Work quickly but may not provide complete relief
  • Effect may wear off faster
  • May need redosing sooner

Higher doses (within recommended limits):

  • Work at same speed
  • Provide more complete relief
  • Longer duration
  • More laxative effect risk

Individual Factors

Factors that may affect timing:

  • Stomach emptying rate
  • Amount of stomach acid produced
  • Individual sensitivity to relief
  • Severity of symptoms
  • Previous meals

Comparison with Other Heartburn Treatments

Antacids Speed Comparison

According to pharmacological literature comparing antacid onset times:

Sodium bicarbonate:

  • Fastest: 1-2 minutes
  • But very short duration

Magnesium hydroxide:

  • Very fast: 5-10 minutes
  • Moderate duration (30 min to 3 hours)

Calcium carbonate:

  • Very fast: 5 minutes
  • Moderate duration (30 min to 3 hours)
  • Similar to magnesium hydroxide

Aluminum hydroxide:

  • Slower: 15-30 minutes
  • Similar duration

Magnesium Hydroxide vs H2 Blockers

Magnesium hydroxide:

  • Onset: 5-10 minutes
  • Neutralizes existing acid
  • Duration: 30 minutes to 3 hours
  • Immediate relief
  • Short-acting

H2 blockers (famotidine):

  • Onset: 30-60 minutes
  • Reduces acid production
  • Duration: 6-12 hours
  • Delayed but longer relief
  • Better for prevention

Magnesium Hydroxide vs PPIs

Magnesium hydroxide:

  • Onset: 5-10 minutes
  • Immediate symptom relief
  • Works on existing acid
  • Short duration
  • For occasional symptoms

PPIs (omeprazole, esomeprazole):

  • Onset: 1-4 days for full effect
  • No immediate relief
  • Blocks acid production
  • 24+ hour duration
  • For frequent/chronic symptoms

Key insight: According to clinical guidelines, antacids like magnesium hydroxide are for immediate relief, while H2 blockers and PPIs are for prevention and long-term management.

Why Magnesium Hydroxide Works So Fast

Chemical reaction basis:

According to antacid chemistry:

Immediate acid neutralization:

  • Mg(OH)₂ + 2HCl → MgCl₂ + 2H₂O
  • Reaction occurs on contact
  • Does not require absorption
  • No metabolism needed
  • Works directly in stomach

No systemic absorption needed:

  • Stays in stomach (mostly)
  • Acts locally
  • No need to enter bloodstream
  • No processing by liver
  • Immediate chemical effect

This is why antacids work faster than all other heartburn treatments.

When You’ll Feel Relief

Most people experience:

For mild heartburn:

  • Relief in 5-10 minutes
  • Rapid improvement
  • Nearly complete relief by 15 minutes

For moderate heartburn:

  • Initial relief in 5-10 minutes
  • Significant improvement in 10-15 minutes
  • Complete relief by 20 minutes

For severe heartburn:

  • Initial relief in 10 minutes
  • May take 15-20 minutes for full relief
  • May require maximum recommended dose
  • Consider seeing healthcare provider if regularly severe

What If It’s Not Working Fast Enough?

If you’re not feeling relief within 20 minutes:

Possible reasons:

  • Insufficient dose
  • Very high acid levels
  • Symptoms may not be from acid (something else)
  • Severe GERD requiring different treatment
  • Medication expired or improperly stored

What to try: According to clinical practice:

  • Ensure adequate dose (check label)
  • Use liquid form if using tablets
  • Shake liquid well before use
  • May take additional dose (within daily limits)
  • Drink small amount of water to help distribution

When to seek medical care:

  • No relief after 30 minutes with adequate dose
  • Severe pain
  • Difficulty swallowing
  • Shortness of breath
  • Pain radiating to arm, neck, or jaw (could be heart)
  • Symptoms are worsening

Duration of Effect

How long relief lasts:

According to antacid pharmacology:

On empty stomach:

  • 30-60 minutes typical
  • Acid quickly neutralized
  • But stomach emptying removes antacid
  • New acid produced quickly replenishes

With or after food:

  • 1-3 hours typical
  • Food slows stomach emptying
  • Antacid stays in stomach longer
  • Food provides additional buffering
  • More sustained relief

Individual variation:

  • Some people: 30 minutes
  • Others: up to 3 hours
  • Depends on acid production rate
  • Depends on stomach emptying
  • Depends on meal timing

Repeat Dosing

When to take another dose:

According to product labeling:

  • Can dose every 2-3 hours if needed
  • Maximum 4 times in 24 hours
  • Take when symptoms return
  • No minimum time required between doses (but spacing recommended)
  • More than 2-3 hours apart is typical

If needing frequent redosing:

  • Symptoms may be too frequent for antacids
  • Consider H2 blocker for longer coverage
  • See healthcare provider if symptoms occur 2+ times per week
  • May indicate GERD or other condition

Tips for Fastest Relief

To maximize speed of relief:

  1. Use liquid form - works faster than tablets
  2. Shake bottle well - ensures even distribution
  3. Measure accurately - adequate dose important
  4. Take at first sign of symptoms - easier to neutralize early
  5. Can take with small amount of water - helps distribution
  6. Chew tablets thoroughly if using that form
  7. Don’t lie down immediately - keeps medication in stomach

Preventive Use

Can you take it before symptoms start?

According to clinical practice:

Before known trigger:

  • Can take before meal that typically causes heartburn
  • May provide some protection
  • Works once acid is produced
  • Not as effective as true prevention with H2 blockers or PPIs

Better prevention options:

  • H2 blockers (famotidine) taken 30-60 minutes before meals
  • PPIs for daily prevention
  • Lifestyle modifications
  • Avoiding trigger foods

Antacids work best for treating symptoms, not preventing them.

Laxative Onset Time

When used for constipation at higher doses:

According to FDA-approved laxative labeling:

Typical onset:

  • 30 minutes to 6 hours
  • Most people: 2-4 hours
  • Individual variation significant
  • Taken at bedtime usually produces morning bowel movement

Factors affecting laxative speed:

  • Dose taken
  • Severity of constipation
  • Individual intestinal motility
  • Hydration status
  • Recent food intake

What Doesn’t Affect How Fast It Works

These factors do NOT significantly change onset time:

  • Age (works equally fast in adults of all ages)
  • Gender
  • Body weight
  • Time of day
  • Specific brand (if same formulation and concentration)

The chemical reaction happens at the same speed regardless of these factors.

Tolerance or Decreased Effectiveness

Does it stop working as fast over time?

According to medical literature:

No tolerance develops:

  • Chemical reaction always works at same speed
  • Does not become less effective with regular use
  • Speed of onset remains consistent
  • No need to increase dose for same speed

If seems less effective:

  • May be using for wrong type of symptoms
  • Underlying condition may be worsening
  • Not actual acid-related symptoms
  • Time to see healthcare provider for evaluation

Sources

This information is based on antacid pharmacology literature, product labeling and clinical data on magnesium hydroxide onset of action, pharmaceutical chemistry references, FDA-approved OTC antacid monograph, and peer-reviewed studies comparing antacid effectiveness timelines.

Last reviewed: December 2025