TRUSTED BY OVER 82,000 GROWING BUMPS

Magnesium Cream vs. Oil vs. Spray: Which Format is Best for Pregnancy?

If you've spent any time researching natural remedies for pregnancy leg cramps or restless legs, you've likely been pointed toward transdermal (topical) magnesium. But once you start shopping, you'll find a confusing array of options: slippery oils, stinging sprays, and thick creams.

While the active ingredient — magnesium chloride — remains the same across all three formats, the delivery vehicle matters a lot when your skin is stretched, sensitive, and often more reactive than usual. Here's a breakdown of how these formats compare for the expectant mum.

1. Magnesium Oil: The Potent Original

"Magnesium oil" is a bit of a misnomer; it isn't actually an oil, but a highly concentrated solution of magnesium chloride flakes in water that feels oily to the touch.

  • The Pros: It's the most concentrated form of topical magnesium, providing a high dose per millilitre.

  • The Cons: Because it's so concentrated, it's well-known for causing a sharp itching or stinging sensation on the skin. For a pregnant woman already dealing with stretching, sensitive skin on her bump or thighs, this can be genuinely uncomfortable. It also leaves a salty, tacky residue that can transfer to your sheets.

2. Magnesium Spray: The Convenient Choice

Magnesium sprays are essentially the "oil" mentioned above, just housed in a spray bottle for easier application, handy for harder-to-reach spots like the lower back.

  • The Pros: It's quick to apply and keeps your hands clean. Good for a fast top-up before bed.

  • The Cons: Like the oil, the high salt concentration can lead to skin dryness. If you have any small scratches or freshly shaved legs, the spray can sting. It also atomises into the air, which can occasionally cause a coughing fit if inhaled in a small bathroom.

3. Magnesium Cream: The Pregnancy Favourite

Magnesium creams and balms take the magnesium chloride and suspend it in a base of nourishing fats, things like shea butter, cocoa butter, or coconut oil.

  • The Pros: The fats in the cream buffer the absorption in a way that many women find eliminates the stinging sensation associated with sprays and oils. It also does double duty: delivering the mineral to your muscles while deeply moisturising your skin at the same time.

  • The Cons: It takes a little longer to rub in than a quick spray, but most women find the massage aspect a genuinely nice part of their wind-down routine.

Why Cream Tends to Win for Pregnant Women

According to Healthdirect Australia, many women experience increased skin sensitivity and dryness during pregnancy, including conditions like pruritus (itching). Using a high-concentration spray on already reactive skin can aggravate this, which is where a cream format has a clear advantage.

Many women also find that the act of massaging a cream into a cramped calf or tight lower back provides physical relief that a spray simply can't replicate. If you're unsure whether topical magnesium is right for your pregnancy, it's always worth a quick chat with your midwife or GP first. We love following @bumpnbub and @birthwithbeth for trustworthy, practical pregnancy wellness advice.

How Sleepybelly Can Help

We created the Sleepybelly Magnesium Body Cream specifically with pregnancy skin sensitivity in mind. By blending high-quality magnesium chloride with skin-soothing ingredients, it's designed to be absorbed comfortably, without the sting that puts so many women off magnesium oils and sprays.

If you're building a wind-down routine that actually helps you sleep, here's what many of our customers do:

  1. The Magnesium Massage: Apply the Sleepybelly Magnesium Body Cream to your lower back, calves, and feet. Many women find this part of their routine genuinely calming, a quiet moment that's just for them at the end of the day.

  2. Structural Support: Once the cream is absorbed, settle into your Sleepybelly Pregnancy Pillow. Its adjustable wedge system helps keep your hips and spine in a comfortable position throughout the night, so the muscles you've just cared for aren't fighting poor posture by morning.

For more on how magnesium can support sleep during pregnancy, take a look at our post on the benefits of magnesium balm.

The Bottom Line

While oils and sprays offer high concentrations of magnesium, they often come with skin irritation that most pregnant women want to avoid. A magnesium cream is the format many expectant mums gravitate toward; it combines the muscle-supporting potential of magnesium with the skin-soothing benefits of a rich moisturiser, making it a gentler, more pleasant part of a nightly routine.

The information in this article is general in nature and intended as comfort support only. It is not medical advice. Always consult your midwife, GP, or a qualified healthcare provider for guidance specific to your situation.

Read More

What to Do If Your Pregnancy Pillow Feels Too Big, Hot or Awkward

Waking up with an ache through your outer hips or lower back usually means your setup is twisting your joints out of alignment. A common slip is resting only the top knee on a bulky pillow, which lets the ankle drop lower than the knee and rolls the hip inward. To protect your pelvic alignment, ensure your knees and ankles remain perfectly stacked and parallel to one another. Placing firm support tucked directly against your back will also prevent you from unconsciously rolling backwards or twisting your torso forward during the night.

Best Sleep Positions After a C-Section

A Caesarean section is a major abdominal surgery that requires careful positioning afterward to protect your healing incision and core muscles from painful strain. For the first few weeks, sleeping on your back with a supportive pillow tucked under your knees is often the least painful option, as it prevents the lower abdomen from being stretched flat. If you prefer side-sleeping, placing a thick pillow between your knees and ankles keeps your hips parallel and stops your top leg from twisting forward, while hugging a soft pillow tightly against your belly provides essential bracing support for coughing or shifting. Many mothers also find comfort in a semi-upright or reclined position at a 45-degree angle, which significantly reduces the core effort required to get in and out of bed.

How Many Sleep Sacks Do You Really Need? A Practical Guide

Once your baby transitions away from the swaddle, a well-fitted sleep sack provides consistent warmth without the serious safety hazards of loose bedding in the cot. For most families, the magic number is three sleep sacks per size or TOG rating, creating a seamless rotation of one for the baby to wear, one in the wash after a nappy leak or spit-up, and an emergency spare tucked away for a two in the morning disaster. Attempting to get by with fewer often leads to a midnight laundry crisis, trying to dry a sleeping bag quickly while a tired baby cries.

Search