I Tried 7 Things For My Burning Feet At Night. Only One Finally Let Me Sleep.
For eight years I woke up around 2am with feet that felt like they'd been held against a stove. Burning on the soles. Pins and needles where the sheet touched my toes. A deep ache that wouldn't settle no matter how I arranged the pillows.
My doctor said it was probably age. Maybe menopause. Possibly early diabetic neuropathy but the tests came back fine. "You may just have to live with it," he told me, and I walked out of that office angry in a way I couldn't name for weeks.
I didn't live with it. I tried to fix it. Over three years I spent close to $2,000 on creams, gels, sprays, pills, heating devices, and one very expensive foot soak I saw advertised on Facebook. I read every thread. I asked every neighbor my age. I tried things my sister-in-law swore by and things a stranger on Reddit told me about at midnight.
Most of it did nothing. Some of it made things worse. One thing finally helped.
Here's what I tried, in the order I tried it. And what I wish someone had told me first.
My sleep pattern got so bad I only slept when I was so exhausted I slept through the pain.
A comment I read at 2am that felt like my own diary.1.Over-the-counter numbing creams
The first thing anyone tells you to try. Lidocaine creams, capsaicin rubs, menthol gels. Icy Hot, Aspercreme, the one with 4% lidocaine that promises "maximum strength." I bought three brands in the first month.
They numbed the surface of my skin for about 40 minutes. The burning underneath was still there. I could feel it through the numbness the way you can feel a bad tooth through novocaine.
Those creams sit on top of the skin. They numb the nerve endings right below the surface. But the burning and tingling aren't coming from the surface. They're coming from the tissue around the nerves deeper down. The cream can't reach it.
What I learned: the burning isn't on the surface. It's deeper.
2.Ice baths before bed
I read about this on a neuropathy Facebook group. A woman wrote that she soaked her feet in ice water for ten minutes before bed to numb the nerves enough to fall asleep.
I tried it for three weeks. The burning quieted for about an hour. Then I'd wake up at 3am and it would be back, sometimes worse because my feet were now cold on top of burning.
I stopped when my husband found me at 1:30am sitting on the bathroom floor with my feet in a mixing bowl of ice cubes, crying.
Ice numbs. It doesn't treat.
3.Vicks VapoRub with thick socks
Every neuropathy group online has someone swearing that rubbing Vicks on their feet and wool socks changes their life.
I tried it for two weeks. The menthol tingle was pleasant at first. It distracted from the burning. But it didn't go in. When the tingle faded around the 90-minute mark, my feet were back to exactly how they were before.
Menthol isn't a treatment. It's a sensation that temporarily covers another sensation.
Distraction, not mechanism.
4.Magnesium supplements
This is where I got closer. People in forums mentioned magnesium, and the research on magnesium and nerve function is real. I ordered magnesium glycinate. 400mg a night.
Two weeks in, nothing. I upped the dose. My stomach complained. After a month, I could tell the pills were doing something somewhere in my body, but not in my feet.
I learned why later. Oral magnesium goes through your digestive system and into your bloodstream. It gets distributed everywhere - your heart, your muscles, your bones. By the time it reaches the tissue around the nerves in your feet, there's very little of it left.
The idea was right. The delivery was wrong.
5.Heat pads, vibrating machines, "infrared" boots
Once you're 18 months into trying to fix something, you start buying gadgets. I bought three. A heated foot pad. A vibrating massager. A pair of "infrared therapy" boots that cost $179 and looked like science fiction.
The heat pad felt nice. The vibration was distracting, in a good way. None of them changed anything that lasted past the moment I took them off.
Comfortable, but not treatments.
6.Prescription options
At the end of year two, I went back to my doctor and asked for medication. He prescribed something common. Most people in my situation end up on it eventually.
It helped with the burning. But by week four I was having trouble remembering the names of my grandchildren. I'd walk into a room and forget why I was there three times in an hour.
The doctor said the fog was common and usually passed. It didn't. After three months I stopped taking it. Within two weeks my head was clear again. The burning came back too.
I wasn't willing to trade my mind for my feet.
I read somewhere late one night that peppermint oil takes away nerve pain. And I just so happened to have some. I used it on my feet. Gone till mid morning the next day.
Another comment I read at 2am with my feet on fire. I tried peppermint oil the next night. It didn't work for me either. But I understood the desperation.7.The one thing that finally worked: topical magnesium chloride
I came across it almost by accident. Someone in a forum mentioned that oral magnesium hadn't worked for her either, but a topical magnesium cream had. She said it absorbed into the tissue instead of her stomach, and that within two weeks her sleep had come back.
I was skeptical, because of course I was. I'd been skeptical about 14 things before this. But I looked up the research, and what I found changed my mind.
A 2023 clinical trial published in the Journal of Palliative Medicine tested transdermal magnesium chloride on patients with peripheral neuropathy. Participants applied it daily for 12 weeks. By week 8, their neuropathic symptom scores had dropped significantly. Importantly, their blood magnesium levels hadn't changed, meaning the magnesium was working locally in the tissue around the nerves rather than flooding the bloodstream the way pills do.
That was the mechanism I'd been missing for three years. Oral magnesium couldn't reach my feet. But applied to the skin, directly on the tissue around the nerves, it could.
I ordered Neuropura. Five ingredients: magnesium chloride, frankincense, arnica, MSM, and aloe vera, in a shea butter base. Simple label, plain jar.
The first night I applied it I felt a calming warmth within about 20 minutes. I slept until 5am, which was the first uninterrupted stretch I'd had in years. I didn't want to get excited. I gave it two weeks.
Two months in, I sleep most nights through. Some nights the burning still wakes me a little. Most nights it doesn't. It's not a cure. It's the thing that let me live my life again.
90-day money-back guarantee. Free shipping on all orders.
How topical magnesium compares to what I'd already tried
Topical magnesium
(Neuropura)
- Works in the tissue around the nerves
- Magnesium chloride + 4 botanicals
- Apply exactly where you need it
- No drowsiness, no fog
- Safe for long-term daily use
- Non-greasy, absorbs in minutes
Pills, prescriptions
& numbing creams
- Numbs the surface or floods the bloodstream
- Pills get diluted before reaching your feet
- Wears off in 40-90 minutes
- May cause drowsiness or fog
- Stomach upset (oral magnesium)
- Greasy or oily under socks
"After two months of nightly use, I'm sleeping 7-8 hours straight and actually wake up rested."Karen T. · Neuropura Customer
Real customers, real results







What I wish someone had told me three years ago
The burning in your feet at night isn't a mystery, and it isn't in your head. There's a real tissue issue around the nerves, and the reason most things you try don't help is because they can't reach that tissue. Creams that numb the surface don't go deep enough. Pills that travel through your bloodstream get diluted before they arrive. Menthol and heat and ice are distractions, not treatments.
Topical magnesium is the one thing I tried that was designed for the place the problem actually lives. It's not a drug. It's not a miracle. It's a small jar of something simple you put on your feet before bed.
If I'd known it existed three years ago, I would have saved myself a lot of money and a lot of bad nights.
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