Is Melatonin Safe Long-Term? What the 2025 Heart Study Means - Premium Grounding

Is Melatonin Safe Long-Term? What the 2025 Heart Study Means

Dr. Sarah Mitchell

What Are the Long-Term Risks of Melatonin?

Long-term melatonin use refers to the chronic, nightly consumption of melatonin supplements for periods exceeding several months. While short-term use (days to a few weeks) is generally considered safe for managing jet lag, shift work sleep disruption, or temporary insomnia, the safety profile of prolonged nightly use has received increasing scientific scrutiny. Emerging research presented at the American Heart Association Scientific Sessions in November 2025 identified a statistical association between melatonin use lasting 12 or more months and elevated cardiovascular risk, including approximately 90% higher risk of heart failure over a five-year period. Combined with widespread product mislabeling documented in JAMA (2023) and a 530% increase in pediatric melatonin-related poison control calls over the past decade, the long-term risk profile of chronic melatonin supplementation is more complex than previously understood. This article examines the current evidence and explores alternative approaches to sustainable sleep.

Melatonin has been the world's most popular sleep supplement for over a decade. It's available over the counter in most countries, it's marketed as natural and safe, and millions of people take it every single night without a second thought.

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But a growing body of evidence is raising questions that deserve honest, direct answers. Is nightly melatonin actually safe long-term? What does the latest research show? And if the risk profile is changing, what should you do about it?

This article breaks down the current evidence — including the study that made headlines in late 2025 — and gives you a clear, evidence-based framework for making an informed decision.

The 2025 AHA Heart Study: What It Actually Found

In November 2025, researchers presented findings at the American Heart Association (AHA) Scientific Sessions that generated significant media coverage and public concern. Here's what the study actually showed:

The Key Findings

Population: The study analyzed health records of adults who reported regular melatonin use for 12 months or longer, compared to non-users.
Follow-up period: Five years.
Primary finding: Long-term melatonin users showed approximately 90% higher risk of heart failure compared to non-users over the study period.
Presentation: The data was presented at AHA Scientific Sessions — a major cardiology conference — but had not yet undergone full peer-reviewed journal publication at the time of presentation.

Important Context

Before drawing conclusions, several important caveats must be acknowledged:

Association, not causation: The study found an association — not proof that melatonin directly causes heart failure. People who take melatonin long-term may also have underlying conditions (chronic insomnia, anxiety, shift work) that independently increase cardiovascular risk.
Preliminary data: Conference presentations undergo less rigorous review than full journal publications. The methodology, confounders, and statistical adjustments will face more scrutiny during formal peer review.
Dose and product variability: The study did not control for melatonin dose or product quality — a significant limitation given the labeling problems discussed below.

That said, a 90% increase in risk is a substantial signal. Even accounting for confounders, cardiologists have noted that this warrants serious follow-up research and should give chronic users reason to reassess their nightly habit.

The JAMA Labeling Problem: You Don't Know What You're Taking

The AHA study becomes even more concerning when paired with a 2023 study published in JAMA (Journal of the American Medical Association) that tested the actual melatonin content of popular supplements.

The findings were alarming:

Finding Detail
Products mislabeled 88% of products tested did not contain the amount of melatonin stated on the label
Maximum deviation Some products contained up to 347% more melatonin than labeled
Gummy products Particularly prone to inaccurate dosing due to manufacturing variability
Contaminants Some products contained serotonin (a regulated substance) as an undeclared ingredient

This means that a person taking what they believe is 5 mg of melatonin nightly could actually be consuming 17 mg or more — every night, for months or years. When evaluating the cardiovascular risk from the AHA study, the actual dose exposure may be far higher than participants believed.

Because melatonin is classified as a dietary supplement in the United States (not a drug), it's not subject to the same FDA manufacturing standards, purity requirements, or dosage accuracy regulations that apply to pharmaceutical medications. There is essentially no guarantee that what's on the label matches what's in the bottle.

Known Side Effects of Melatonin

Even setting aside the emerging cardiovascular data, melatonin's side effect profile is more extensive than most people realize:

Common Side Effects

Vivid dreams and nightmares: Melatonin increases REM sleep density, which can produce intensely vivid or disturbing dream experiences. This is one of the most commonly reported reasons people want to stop taking it.
Morning grogginess: The "melatonin hangover" — feeling sluggish, foggy, and unrested the next morning — is particularly common at doses above 3 mg. Some people report grogginess lasting well into the afternoon.
Headaches: A dose-dependent side effect that worsens at higher doses.
Dizziness and nausea: Can occur at any dose, but more common at higher doses.
Daytime drowsiness: Particularly problematic for people who drive or operate machinery in the morning hours.

Less Common but Notable Concerns

Hormone interactions: Melatonin can interact with reproductive hormones, potentially affecting menstrual cycles, fertility, and hormone-sensitive conditions. This is particularly relevant for long-term users.
Blood pressure effects: Melatonin can lower blood pressure, which may interact with antihypertensive medications.
Immune modulation: Melatonin has immunomodulatory effects that are not fully understood in the context of chronic use.
Drug interactions: Melatonin can interact with blood thinners, diabetes medications, immunosuppressants, and birth control pills.

The Pediatric Crisis: 530% Increase in Poisoning Calls

One of the most concerning trends in the melatonin landscape involves children. Over the past decade, calls to poison control centres related to pediatric melatonin ingestion have increased by approximately 530%.

Several factors drive this crisis:

Gummy formulation: Melatonin gummies look and taste like candy, making accidental ingestion by children far more likely.
Easy accessibility: Because melatonin is sold as a supplement, it often isn't stored with the same caution as medications.
Labeling inaccuracy: Combined with the JAMA finding that products can contain 347% more melatonin than labeled, a child who eats a handful of gummies may consume a dramatically higher dose than expected.
Growing parental use: More parents giving melatonin to children (often without medical guidance) means more bottles in more homes.

While acute melatonin overdose is rarely life-threatening, it can cause severe drowsiness, digestive upset, and in some cases, hospitalisation — particularly in young children or when combined with inaccurate labeling.

Putting It in Context: When Melatonin IS Appropriate

This article isn't arguing that melatonin is universally dangerous. The evidence supports melatonin use in specific, short-term situations:

Use Case Evidence Level Duration
Jet lag recovery Strong 3–5 days per trip
Shift work schedule transition Moderate 1–2 weeks during rotation
Delayed sleep phase disorder (clinical) Moderate Weeks to months (under medical supervision)
Temporary situational insomnia Moderate 1–2 weeks maximum
Chronic nightly sleep aid Weak — and emerging safety concerns Not recommended long-term

In all of these appropriate use cases, the recommended approach is a low dose (0.3–0.5 mg) at the physiological level, taken 30–60 minutes before desired sleep time, for a limited duration. The concern isn't with melatonin as a tool — it's with the way most people actually use it: high doses, every night, for months or years, with products they can't trust to be accurately labeled.

The Alternative Approach: Support Your Body's Natural Melatonin

If chronic melatonin supplementation carries risks, what's the alternative for people who genuinely struggle with sleep?

The answer lies in understanding why your body isn't producing enough melatonin on its own — and addressing that root cause rather than adding external hormones.

The Cortisol-Melatonin Axis

In a healthy circadian rhythm, cortisol (your stress and wakefulness hormone) peaks in the morning and gradually declines throughout the day. As cortisol drops in the evening, melatonin rises — signaling your body that it's time to sleep.

For most chronic poor sleepers, this axis is disrupted. Cortisol remains elevated into the evening due to stress, screen exposure, irregular schedules, or chronic inflammation. With cortisol still elevated, melatonin can't rise adequately — and the supplement temporarily masks this fundamental dysfunction.

The most sustainable approach is to fix the cortisol rhythm, which then allows natural melatonin production to resume.

How Grounding (Earthing) Addresses the Root Cause

Grounding — maintaining physical contact with the Earth's electrical charge, either directly (barefoot on soil) or through conductive equipment like grounding sheets — has demonstrated measurable effects on cortisol regulation.

The Ghaly and Teplitz (2004) study, published in the Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine, measured 24-hour cortisol profiles in subjects sleeping grounded versus ungrounded. The results showed significant normalization of the circadian cortisol rhythm in the grounded group — specifically, cortisol dropped more appropriately in the evening and night.

This is directly relevant to the melatonin question: if cortisol normalizes in the evening, the biological conditions for natural melatonin production are restored. You don't need to supplement what your body can produce on its own when the suppressive factor (cortisol) is addressed.

A 2025 double-blind, placebo-controlled study provided further evidence, demonstrating measurable sleep quality improvements in grounded participants versus a sham-grounded control group. The double-blind design is particularly significant because it eliminates the placebo effect — a major confounder in sleep research.

How Grounding Sheets Work

A grounding sheet is a flat sheet woven with conductive stainless steel fibres that connect to the earth port of your electrical outlet via a grounding cord. No electricity flows through the cord — only the Earth's natural electrical charge.

You place the grounding sheet on your mattress and sleep in contact with it. A natural-fibre fitted sheet (cotton or linen) can be placed on top without blocking conductivity. While you sleep, free electrons from the Earth transfer to your body, helping to:

Normalize cortisol rhythm (the primary mechanism for sleep improvement)
Reduce oxidative stress and systemic inflammation
Support natural melatonin production by addressing upstream cortisol elevation

To confirm your outlet's earth port is properly wired, a socket tester is available separately.

The key advantage over melatonin supplements: grounding doesn't cause tolerance, doesn't carry the labeling uncertainty of supplements, and doesn't introduce an external hormone into your system. It works with your biology rather than overriding it.

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Melatonin Supplements vs. Supporting Natural Production: A Comparison

Factor Melatonin Supplements Natural Production (via Grounding + Light)
Mechanism External hormone supplementation Cortisol regulation restoring endogenous production
Dosage accuracy 88% of products mislabeled (JAMA 2023) Your body self-regulates the exact amount needed
Cardiovascular concerns Emerging signal (AHA 2025 study) No cardiovascular concerns identified
Tolerance Receptor desensitization over time No tolerance — natural production adapts to need
Side effects Grogginess, vivid dreams, headaches, hormone interactions None commonly reported
Long-term sustainability Diminishing returns; ongoing cost Consistent; one-time investment (grounding sheet)

What You Should Do Now

Based on the current evidence, here's a straightforward framework:

1
If you're using melatonin short-term for jet lag or shift work: Continue as needed. The evidence supports this use case. Keep doses low (0.3–0.5 mg) and limit duration to 1–2 weeks.
2
If you've been taking melatonin nightly for 3+ months: Consider tapering off and transitioning to root-cause strategies. See our guide: How to Stop Taking Melatonin: A Step-by-Step Guide.
3
If you've been taking melatonin nightly for 12+ months: The AHA data suggests this is the group with the most reason for concern. A gradual taper with replacement strategies is strongly advisable.
4
If you're giving melatonin to children: Consult a paediatrician. Given the labeling inaccuracies and the surge in poisoning calls, melatonin use in children warrants medical oversight rather than self-directed supplementation.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Is melatonin safe to take every night?

Short-term nightly use (a few weeks) at physiological doses (0.3–0.5 mg) is generally considered safe. However, chronic nightly use for months or years raises emerging concerns, including a preliminary 2025 AHA study linking 12+ months of use to approximately 90% higher heart failure risk. The safety of long-term nightly use at the doses found in most commercial products (5–10 mg) has not been established.

What did the 2025 melatonin heart study find?

Researchers presented data at the November 2025 American Heart Association Scientific Sessions showing that adults who used melatonin nightly for 12 or more months had approximately 90% higher risk of heart failure over a five-year follow-up compared to non-users. The findings are preliminary (presented at a conference, not yet fully peer-reviewed in a journal) and represent an association, not proven causation.

Can melatonin cause heart problems?

The evidence is not yet conclusive, but the AHA 2025 data represents a significant signal that long-term use may be associated with increased cardiovascular risk. This is preliminary research and needs replication and peer review. However, the size of the association (approximately 90% higher risk) has prompted many sleep specialists to recommend that chronic users reconsider nightly supplementation.

How much melatonin is actually in my supplement?

According to a 2023 JAMA study, 88% of melatonin products are mislabeled, with some containing up to 347% more melatonin than stated. Because melatonin is regulated as a supplement (not a drug), manufacturers aren't held to pharmaceutical-grade accuracy. You may be consuming significantly more or less than you think.

What are safer alternatives to melatonin for long-term sleep support?

The most evidence-backed alternatives address the root cause of poor sleep (cortisol dysregulation) rather than supplementing a hormone. Grounding sheets normalize cortisol rhythms to support natural melatonin production (Ghaly & Teplitz 2004; 2025 double-blind study). Morning bright light exposure and evening light restriction recalibrate circadian timing. Magnesium glycinate supports nervous system relaxation without causing tolerance.

Should I stop taking melatonin immediately?

A gradual taper is recommended over stopping abruptly, to minimize rebound insomnia. Our step-by-step tapering guide outlines a 4-week protocol. If you have specific health concerns, discuss your situation with your healthcare provider.

Key Takeaways

A 2025 AHA study found long-term melatonin use (12+ months) associated with ~90% higher heart failure risk — preliminary but significant.
88% of melatonin products are mislabeled (JAMA 2023), with some containing 347% more than stated — you may be taking far more than you think.
Pediatric melatonin poisoning calls have increased 530% over the past decade.
Melatonin IS appropriate short-term at low doses (0.3–0.5 mg) for jet lag and shift work. The concern is chronic nightly use at high doses.
The alternative: support natural melatonin production by normalizing cortisol through grounding, light management, and sleep hygiene.
If you've been on melatonin 12+ months, a gradual taper with replacement strategies is strongly recommended.

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Disclaimer: This content is for informational purposes only and is not intended as medical advice. Grounding products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Individual results may vary. Always consult with a qualified healthcare professional before making changes to your health routine.
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Written by

Dr. Sarah Mitchell

Sleep & Wellness Researcher

Sleep and wellness researcher with over 10 years of experience in circadian health, grounding science, and evidence-based recovery strategies. Dr. Mitchell brings a rigorous, science-first approach to understanding how grounding supports better sleep and overall well-being.

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