Vitamin D (25-Hydroxy): Normal Range, Deficiency, How Much to Take

Reviewed by AskAnything Clinical Team, MD-reviewedLast updated 2026-04-26

Vitamin D is one of the most-tested labs in primary care and one of the most over-interpreted. The body makes vitamin D from skin exposure to sunlight; supplements (D3) cover what sun cannot. The 25-hydroxy vitamin D test (25-OH-D) measures the storage form and is what your panel reports.

Despite a decade of optimistic marketing, large randomized trials (VITAL, D2d) have shown that for most healthy adults with mildly low vitamin D, supplementation does not reduce cancer, cardiovascular disease, fractures, or diabetes. Where it clearly matters: bone health in deficiency, falls in older adults, immune function in chronic deficiency, and pregnancy.

What 25-OH-D measures

The 25-hydroxy vitamin D test combines D2 (from plant supplements and fortified foods) and D3 (from sunlight, animal foods, and most supplements). It is the right test for vitamin D status — not the active form (1,25-dihydroxy vitamin D), which is regulated by the parathyroid and reflects different physiology.

Reported in either ng/mL (United States) or nmol/L (most of the rest of the world). Conversion: 1 ng/mL = 2.5 nmol/L. This page uses ng/mL.

Vitamin D ranges

DemographicLowHighUnit
Severe deficiency011ng/mL
Deficient1219ng/mL
Insufficient2029ng/mL
Sufficient (target)3060ng/mL
High (no proven benefit)60100ng/mL
Potentially toxic100500ng/mL

The Endocrine Society and Institute of Medicine give slightly different cutoffs:

  • Below 12 ng/mL: severe deficiency. Risk of rickets in children, osteomalacia in adults, secondary hyperparathyroidism.
  • 12–20 ng/mL: deficient. Bone health affected; supplementation indicated.
  • 20–30 ng/mL: insufficient by Endocrine Society criteria, sufficient by IOM criteria. Practically, most experts treat this range with at least modest supplementation.
  • 30–60 ng/mL: sufficient. The target range for most adults.
  • 60–100 ng/mL: high but not toxic. No proven additional benefit.
  • Above 100 ng/mL: potentially toxic at sustained levels — risk of hypercalcemia.

What high vitamin D means

Genuinely high vitamin D — above 100 ng/mL — is almost always supplement-induced. Sun exposure does not cause vitamin D toxicity because the skin self-regulates production. Common patterns:

  • High-dose supplementation (10,000+ IU/day for months) without monitoring.
  • Mistakenly taking 50,000 IU capsules daily instead of weekly.
  • Granulomatous diseases (sarcoidosis, tuberculosis, lymphoma) that activate vitamin D pathologically — usually presents with high calcium more than high 25-OH-D.

Toxicity manifests as hypercalcemia: nausea, kidney stones, confusion, and renal injury. Stop the supplement, recheck in 4–6 weeks, and check serum calcium.

What low vitamin D means

Low vitamin D is common. About 25–40% of adults globally are deficient or insufficient depending on the cutoff used. Risk factors:

  • Limited sun exposure — northern latitudes, indoor work, sunscreen use, dark skin in low-sun environments.
  • Older adults — skin produces vitamin D less efficiently with age.
  • Obesity — vitamin D is sequestered in adipose tissue, lowering circulating levels.
  • Malabsorption — celiac disease, inflammatory bowel disease, post-bariatric surgery.
  • Liver or kidney disease — affects vitamin D activation.
  • Some medications — anticonvulsants (especially older ones), glucocorticoids, antiretrovirals, cholestyramine.

How to correct deficiency:

  • Mild deficiency (20–30 ng/mL): 1,000–2,000 IU D3 daily.
  • Moderate deficiency (12–20 ng/mL): 4,000–5,000 IU D3 daily for 2–3 months, then maintenance.
  • Severe deficiency (under 12 ng/mL): 50,000 IU D3 weekly for 6–8 weeks, then daily maintenance.
  • Recheck 25-OH-D after 8–12 weeks.

D3 (cholecalciferol) is more effective than D2 (ergocalciferol) at raising blood levels. Take with the largest meal of the day for better absorption — vitamin D is fat-soluble.

Reading vitamin D in context

Vitamin D varies seasonally. Levels in late summer can be 30–50% higher than in late winter at the same latitude. A November test in Boston is not directly comparable to a July test. If your level looks borderline, the time of year matters.

The other under-appreciated point: low vitamin D is a marker as much as a cause. People with chronic illness, obesity, low sun exposure, and poor diet tend to have low vitamin D — but supplementing alone often does not improve those underlying conditions. This is one reason large randomized supplementation trials have been disappointing for endpoints like cancer and cardiovascular disease.

Where supplementation does clearly help: bone health and fracture prevention in deficient older adults, fall risk reduction in deficient older adults, pregnancy outcomes, and severe deficiency in any age group.

Track this biomarker over time in AskAnything.health — upload your lab results and see trends at a glance.

When to act on vitamin D

  • Below 12 ng/mL — treat aggressively; check parathyroid hormone and calcium.
  • 12–20 ng/mL — supplement and recheck in 8–12 weeks.
  • Persistently low despite supplementation — consider malabsorption (celiac, IBD), obesity-related sequestration, or medication interaction.
  • Above 100 ng/mL — stop the supplement, check calcium, recheck in 4–6 weeks.

This information is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice. Always consult your healthcare provider about your lab results.

Tests that complete the picture

  • Calcium and parathyroid hormone (PTH) — together with 25-OH-D, these clarify whether deficiency has caused secondary hyperparathyroidism.
  • Phosphorus, alkaline phosphatase — bone metabolism context.
  • Magnesium — required for vitamin D activation; deficiency interferes with response to supplementation.
  • Albumin — most calcium is bound to albumin; correct calcium for albumin level.

Patterns to recognize

Combinations of values that together point at a specific clinical picture. One number rarely tells the whole story.

Vitamin D deficiency triad

  • 25-OH vitamin D <20 ng/mL
  • PTH elevated (secondary hyperparathyroidism)
  • Alkaline phosphatase elevated
  • Calcium normal or low-normal, possible bone pain

Sustained vitamin D deficiency drives compensatory PTH elevation and bone turnover — the bone-disease pattern that supplementation reliably reverses.

Next: Replete with 50,000 IU D3 weekly for 6–8 weeks, then 1,000–2,000 IU/day; recheck 25-OH-D, PTH, and ALP at 12 weeks.

Hypovitaminosis D in malabsorption

  • 25-OH vitamin D <20 ng/mL despite oral supplementation
  • Known celiac, IBD, or post-bariatric surgery
  • Often with low ferritin, low B12, low magnesium

Fat-soluble vitamin malabsorption — oral D3 alone often does not correct the deficit while the gut disease is active.

Next: High-dose D3 (10,000+ IU/day) with the largest fatty meal; treat underlying gut disease; consider D2 50,000 IU or parenteral routes.

Vitamin D unresponsive to supplementation

  • 25-OH vitamin D persistently <30 ng/mL on 4,000 IU/day
  • Magnesium <1.7 mg/dL
  • Often on PPIs or diuretics

Magnesium is a cofactor for vitamin D activation. Low magnesium blunts the response to D3 supplementation regardless of dose.

Next: Replace magnesium; recheck 25-OH-D after 8–12 weeks of combined repletion.

Vitamin D toxicity

  • 25-OH vitamin D >100 ng/mL
  • Calcium >10.5 mg/dL
  • Sustained intake >10,000 IU/day for months
  • Nausea, polyuria, or kidney stones

Prolonged high-dose supplementation pushes calcium up via increased gut absorption — true toxicity, almost always iatrogenic.

Next: Stop supplement, hydrate, recheck calcium and 25-OH-D in 4–6 weeks; rule out granulomatous disease if calcium remains high.

Frequently Asked Questions

Above 30 ng/mL is sufficient for most adults. Below 20 is deficient, 20–30 is insufficient, and above 100 is potentially toxic. The optimal target sits between 30 and 60 ng/mL — there is no proven additional benefit at higher levels.

For mild deficiency (20–30 ng/mL), 1,000–2,000 IU of D3 daily. For moderate deficiency (12–20 ng/mL), 4,000–5,000 IU daily for 2–3 months, then a maintenance dose. For severe deficiency (under 12 ng/mL), 50,000 IU weekly for 6–8 weeks. Take with a fatty meal for better absorption. Recheck after 8–12 weeks.

It is right at the boundary between insufficient and sufficient. The Endocrine Society would say it is the lower edge of acceptable; the Institute of Medicine would say it is fully sufficient. In practice, modest supplementation (1,000–2,000 IU/day) is reasonable and safe.

Yes, and for many people it is the dominant source. About 15–30 minutes of midday sun on the arms and legs (without sunscreen) several times a week generates substantial vitamin D in light-skinned individuals. Darker skin needs longer exposure. Sunscreen, latitudes above ~37°N in winter, and indoor work all reduce skin synthesis.

It reliably prevents bone disease in deficient people. The large randomized trials (VITAL, D2d) found no clear benefit on cancer, cardiovascular disease, or diabetes prevention from supplementation in adequately replete adults. The evidence for falls reduction in deficient older adults is reasonable. Most other claims are weak or unconfirmed.

D3 (cholecalciferol). It raises blood 25-OH-D more effectively and durably than D2 (ergocalciferol). D2 is sometimes prescribed because it can be made vegan and is available as 50,000 IU prescription capsules, but D3 is the better choice for most people.

Yes. Sustained intake above 10,000 IU/day, or accidental dosing of 50,000 IU capsules daily instead of weekly, can produce toxic levels (above 100 ng/mL) over months. Symptoms are those of hypercalcemia: nausea, kidney stones, confusion, kidney injury. The fix is stopping the supplement and rechecking after 4–6 weeks.

The most common reasons: under-dosing for the degree of deficiency, taking supplements without a fatty meal (vitamin D is fat-soluble), obesity (which sequesters vitamin D in fat), malabsorption (celiac, IBD, post-bariatric surgery), or magnesium deficiency (magnesium is required to activate vitamin D). If you are taking 4,000 IU/day with a meal and not improving after 12 weeks, look for one of these.

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