Skip to content

Free Shipping on All Orders

Why Do You Still Feel Tense After a 'Relaxing' Epsom Salt Bath?

The shocking difference between Magnesium Chloride and Epsom salts that most people never discover

John B. Rhinehart

Yareli’s Founder

Soothing Baths, Little Relief — What’s Missing?

You still feel tense. Your skin still feels dry. The relaxation barely lasts an hour.
Here's what no one tells you: Most bath salts use magnesium sulfate (Epsom salts) that your skin can barely absorb. You're literally watching your money dissolve down the drain.

Think about it - How many times have you:

Spent 20-30 minutes soaking, only to feel the same stress return within hours?

Bought bag after bag of "premium" Epsom salts with minimal results?

Wondered why some people rave about magnesium baths while yours feel... ordinary?

The frustrating truth? It's not your fault. It's your salt.

Here's what changes everything:
Magnesium Chloride vs. Magnesium Sulfate (Epsom Salts)

The molecular structure of magnesium chloride allows it to:

Absorb 3x more efficiently through your skin

Create longer-lasting effects

Provide higher bioavailability

Deliver more concentrated magnesium to your body

‘‘Magnesium chloride has superior transdermal absorption compared to magnesium sulfate. Meanwhile, Epsom salts (magnesium sulfate) have larger molecular structures that struggle to penetrate your skin barrier effectively.’’

Clinical Studies Prove

Shop Now
Absorption Rate
Molecular Structure
Duration of Effects

Skin Benefits

Source

Magnesium Chloride

High bioavailability
Smaller, penetrates easily
Long-lasting relief
Improved hydration & barrier function
Pure Dead Sea
Epsom salt

Limited absorption

Larger, struggles to absorb
Short-term, if any

Minimal skin
Improvement

Often synthetic
Shop Now
Shop Now

(4.8) 2599 Reviews

A Self-Care Ritual Loved by Thousands

Our magnesium chloride comes from the Dead Sea - the most mineral-rich body of water on Earth.

For over 2,000 years, people have traveled to the Dead Sea for its healing properties. Now you can experience that same mineral therapy in your own bathroom.

Pure. Potent. Proven.

Free Shipping on All Orders

90-Day Money Back Guarantee
Free Shipping on All Orders
90-Day Money Back Guarantee

Free Shipping on All Orders

90-Day Money Back Guarantee
Free Shipping on All Orders
90-Day Money Back Guarantee
Blue bag labeled 'Dead Sea Soak' with scoop of bath flakes on wood surface.

Upgrade to Real Magnesium Absorption

(4.8) 2599 Reviews

Yareli Dead Sea Soak

$32.29

$37.99

15% Off

Indulge at home with our magnesium-rich solutions, harvested from the Dead Sea in Israel and unlock their curative properties.

Over 100,000 satisfied customers

Clinically studied ingredients
Free shipping on every order

ORDER NOW - $32.29

Free Shipping on All Orders

90-Day Money Back Guarantee
Secure Checkout

Ditch the Salts That Do Nothing

Upgrade to pure Dead Sea magnesium chloride and finally experience
what a real magnesium bath should feel like.

Use code

NEWYOU22

Get 22% Off your first order when you make the switch today.

Ditch the Salts That Do Nothing

Upgrade to pure Dead Sea magnesium chloride and finally experience what a real magnesium bath should feel like.

Use code

NEWYOU22

Get 22% Off your first order when you make the switch today.

Primary Studies Supporting Magnesium Chloride vs. Epsom Salt Claims:

Chandrasekaran NC, Weir C, Alfraji S, Grice J, Roberts MS, Barnard RT.

Effects of magnesium deficiency--more than skin deep.
Experimental Biology and Medicine. 2014;239(10):1280-91. doi: 10.1177/1535370214537745. PMID: 24928863.

Proksch E, Nissen HP, Bremgartner M, Urquhart C.

Bathing in a magnesium‐rich Dead Sea salt solution improves
skin barrier function, enhances skin hydration, and reduces inflammation in atopic dry skin. International Journal of Dermatology. 2005;44(2):151-7. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-4632.2005.02079.x.
PMID: 15689218.

Coquet C, Bauza E, Oberto G, et al.

Skin smoothing effects of Dead Sea minerals: comparative profilometric evaluation of skin surface. Drugs and Experimental Clinical Research. 2005;31(3):89-99. PMID: 16033247.