Introduction: Low circulating magnesium (Mg) level is associated with increased cardiovascular mortality, and conversely, dietary Mg intake is associated with a decreased risk of developing heart failure. Hypothesis: We investigated whether Mg deficiency alone could cause cardiomyopathy. Methods: C57BL/6J mice were fed with a low-Mg diet (low-Mg, 15-30 mg/kg Mg) or a normal diet (nl-Mg, 600 mg/kg Mg) for 6 weeks. To test reversibility, half of the low-Mg mice were fed then with normal diet for another 6 weeks (low→nl-Mg group). Results: Mg deficiency increased mortality, especially in female mice. After 6 weeks of low-Mg diet, surviving mice showed significantly decreased serum Mg (0.9±0.1 vs. 2.8±0.1 mg/dL for nl-Mg) and a reciprocal increase in serum Ca, K, and Na. Low-Mg mice exhibited a decreased cardiac ejection fraction (EF%, 39.8±1.9% vs. 52.0±1.7% of nl-Mg) and impaired relaxation (E/e’: 21.1±1.1 vs. 15.4±0.4 of nl-Mg) in echocardiography. At the cellular level, ATP, Ca transient amplitude, sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca load, resting sarcomere length, and sarcomere shortening were all decreased significantly in low-Mg hearts and cardiomyocytes. These changes were accompanied by evidence of mitochondrial dysfunction with significantly increased mitochondrial ROS production and mitochondrial membrane depolarization. Mg repletion normalized electrolytes, contraction, relaxation, and cellular changes. The SR Ca pump (SERCA) was decreased, the SR Ca channel RyR2 oxidized, and cardiac myosin binding protein C S-glutathionylated in low-Mg mouse hearts. These changes were normalized with Mg repletion. In vivo , mitoTEMPO treatment during low Mg diet improved the cardiac relaxation and increased cellular ATP levels without improving contraction. Conclusions: Mg deficiency caused a reversible diastolic and systolic cardiomyopathy associated with mitochondrial dysfunction. This cardiomyopathy may explain the relationship of hypomagnesemia and worsening heart failure. Mg intake could reverse these changes, reinforcing the known correlation of increased Mg intake and reduced heart failure symptoms and mortality. In deficiency states, Mg supplementation may represent a novel treatment for systolic and diastolic heart failure.