MGB+ Calm
For people prone to queasy mornings, nausea, and a nervous, unsettled stomach.
A gentle daily capsule for the queasy-morning, easily-unsettled-stomach pattern.
- A well-absorbed form of vitamin B1 (benfotiamine) and gentle magnesium, the fuel your gut-brain nerves run on
- Plus targeted helpers like beta-caryophyllene and ginger for a settled stomach
- Two gentle capsules a day, with food






Steadier mornings. A calmer stomach.
Two gentle capsules a day, with food. Best over a few steady weeks.
One small thing sits under a lot of this.
Your gut and your brain talk all day, on a kind of two-way phone line. That line runs on nerves, and nerves need fuel.
A big part of that fuel is a well-absorbed form of vitamin B1.
Calm uses benfotiamine, a B1 form your body takes up easily, plus gentle magnesium, to support the normal back-and-forth between your gut and brain. Then Calm adds targeted helpers, led by beta-caryophyllene with ginger, for a settled, steadier stomach.
Every dose, on the label.
Six active ingredients, each chosen for the nausea and gut-brain connection. No proprietary blends.
Only from people who actually bought it. We show the critical reviews too. Read every review →
Built by an ER doctor who kept seeing the same thread.
For years, people came to my ER with stubborn gut symptoms, and every test came back normal. I kept noticing the same quiet thread underneath: a well-absorbed form of vitamin B1 almost no one was looking at. So I built MGB+ around it, with an independent board of doctors.
Questions, answered
Some people notice a change within two weeks. The honest window is four to twelve weeks of daily use. If it isn't helping by then, you're covered by the 12-week guarantee.
Anytime from your account. Skip a shipment, change your date, pause, or cancel.
Calm is a daily dietary supplement for the queasy-morning, easily-unsettled-stomach pattern, not a treatment for any condition. If you have a diagnosed medical condition, talk with your clinician about whether a daily supplement fits your plan.
Check with your doctor or pharmacist first if you take prescription medicine, are pregnant or nursing, or have a health condition.
