TMG vs Betaine – What’s the Difference and Which Do You Need?

TMG (Trimethylglycine) and betaine are often used interchangeably. That’s not surprising: chemically, they are the same molecule. Still, this raises questions for many people.

Is TMG different from betaine?
Why is it sometimes called TMG and sometimes betaine?
And does that difference matter for effectiveness, dosage, or safety?

On this page, we explain this clearly, completely, and based on scientific evidence.

πŸ‘‰ New to TMG? Read first: How does TMG work?


Short answer: Is TMG the same as betaine?

Yes.
TMG and betaine are chemically identical.

  • TMG = Trimethylglycine (the chemical name)
  • Betaine = the nutritional and common name

The difference is not in the substance itself, but in:

  • The context in which the name is used
  • The purpose for which the supplement is used

What is betaine? (nutritional context)

The term betaine is typically used in relation to:

  • Nutrition
  • General nutrients
  • Traditional nutritional science

Betaine naturally occurs in foods such as:

  • Beets
  • Spinach
  • Quinoa
  • Whole grains

In this context, betaine is often mentioned for:

  • Osmoregulation (water balance in cells)
  • General metabolic support

What is TMG? (supplement & biochemical context)

The term TMG (Trimethylglycine) is mainly used in:

  • Supplements
  • Biochemical literature
  • Methylation-related contexts

Here, the focus is on:

  • Methylation processes
  • Support of the BHMT pathway
  • Conversion of homocysteine β†’ methionine

πŸ‘‰ See also: TMG and methylation explained


Why are two names used for the same substance?

This mainly has to do with context and focus:

Name Context Focus
Betaine Nutrition General metabolism
TMG Supplements Methylation & biochemistry

In supplements, TMG is almost always used to:

  • Avoid confusion with other forms of betaine
  • Highlight its role in methylation

Is there a difference in effectiveness between TMG and betaine?

No β€” not at the molecular level.

What does differ:

  • The intended use
  • The dosage
  • The combination with other supplements

From food, you typically get:

  • Dozens to hundreds of milligrams of betaine per day

In supplements (TMG):

  • 500–1,500 mg per day (targeted use)

πŸ‘‰ See also: TMG dosage


TMG / betaine and methylation: the core

TMG plays a key role as a methyl donor via the BHMT pathway (betaine-homocysteine methyltransferase).

This pathway:

  • Converts homocysteine into methionine
  • Works independently of folate
  • Complements B-vitamin-dependent methylation

πŸ“š PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18042831/


TMG vs B vitamins – not competitors

Some people wonder:

β€œDo I need TMG if I already take B12 and folate?”

The answer is: they work via different pathways.

Substance Pathway
Folate / B12 Methionine cycle
TMG / betaine BHMT pathway

That’s why they are often combined, not replaced.


TMG vs betaine HCl – important distinction

This is where confusion often occurs.

❗ Betaine β‰  Betaine HCl

  • Betaine (TMG) β†’ methylation, cellular processes
  • Betaine HCl β†’ stomach acid support

Betaine HCl:

  • Contains hydrochloric acid
  • Used for digestion
  • Has no methylation function

πŸ‘‰ For methylation, only TMG / betaine without HCl is suitable.


When should you choose TMG as a supplement?

TMG is often used:

  • When there is an increased need for methylation
  • In combination with NMN
  • During intense mental or physical stress
  • As a complement to B vitamins

πŸ‘‰ Read also: NMN supplements


Are there differences in side effects between TMG and betaine?

Because they are the same substance, side effects are not different, but dose-dependent.

At higher supplement doses, the following may occur:

  • Headaches
  • Restlessness
  • Digestive discomfort

πŸ‘‰ Fully explained here: TMG side effects


What does science say about TMG / betaine?

Research mainly focuses on:

  • Homocysteine
  • Liver metabolism
  • Methylation processes

Key conclusions:

  • TMG effectively lowers homocysteine
  • Well tolerated within standard dosages
  • Safe for long-term use

πŸ“š EFSA: https://efsa.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.2903/j.efsa.2017.4784


TMG vs betaine summary

Aspect TMG Betaine
Chemical Identical Identical
Context Supplement Nutrition
Focus Methylation General metabolism
Dosage 500–1,500 mg Lower via food
Suitable for supplementation βœ”οΈ βœ”οΈ (same substance)

Frequently asked questions

Is TMG better than betaine?
No, it’s the same substance β€” TMG is the targeted supplement form.

Can I replace dietary betaine with TMG?
TMG complements nutrition, but does not replace a varied diet.

Is betaine HCl the same as TMG?
No, these are different substances with different functions.


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