Calcium

Vitamins and Minerals Database

Calcium

Calcium is a major mineral required for bones, teeth, muscle contraction, nerve transmission, vascular function, and blood clotting.

Type: mineral Last reviewed: 2026-05-19

Overview

01

Biological role

Most body calcium is stored in bones and teeth; the remainder supports muscle contraction, nerve signaling, blood clotting, enzyme activity, and vascular contraction and dilation.

02

Mechanism of action

Calcium functions as a structural mineral in hydroxyapatite and as a regulated intracellular and extracellular signaling ion. Vitamin D, parathyroid hormone, and calcitonin regulate calcium balance.

03

Chemical forms

Dietary calcium salts; supplement forms include calcium carbonate and calcium citrate.

Quick answers before choosing a supplement

What it helps withMost body calcium is stored in bones and teeth; the remainder supports muscle contraction, nerve signaling, blood clotting, enzyme activity, and vascular contraction and dilation.
Best time to takeUse with meals if the supplement irritates the stomach; separate from medicines or competing minerals when needed.
Best form to knowDietary calcium salts; supplement forms include calcium carbonate and calcium citrate.
Low intake signsLong-term inadequate intake contributes to low bone mass and osteoporosis risk. Acute hypocalcemia is usually related to medical conditions and can cause neuromuscular symptoms.
Too much may causeExcess calcium can cause constipation, kidney stones, hypercalcemia, renal insufficiency, and impaired absorption of iron and zinc.
Key food sourcesSources include milk, yogurt, cheese, calcium-set tofu, fortified plant milks, fortified juices, canned fish with bones, and some leafy greens.

Chemical forms and absorption

Common forms

Dietary calcium salts; supplement forms include calcium carbonate and calcium citrate.

Absorption context

Calcium carbonate is best absorbed with food, while calcium citrate can be taken with or without food. High oxalate and phytate foods can reduce calcium absorption from those foods.

Clinical use

Calcium works with vitamin D and physical activity for bone health. Supplement decisions should consider total dietary calcium, not supplements alone.

Absorption and action pathway

Food or supplementSources include milk, yogurt, cheese, calcium-set tofu, fortified plant milks, fortified juices, canned fish with bones, and some leafy greens.
AbsorptionCalcium carbonate is best absorbed with food, while calcium citrate can be taken with or without food. High oxalate and phytate foods can reduce calcium absorption from those foods.
Body roleMost body calcium is stored in bones and teeth; the remainder supports muscle contraction, nerve signaling, blood clotting, enzyme activity, and vascular contraction and dilation.
Safety checkPeople with kidney disease, hypercalcemia, kidney stones, or high calcium intake from supplements should seek clinical guidance.

What to take with, and what to avoid

Works Well With

Food-first intakeAdequate protein and energyBalanced dietProfessional review when using medicines

Avoid / Use Caution

High-dose use without indicationStacking multiple productsIgnoring medicines or kidney/liver diseaseUsing supplements instead of diagnosis

Best time to take

Main timingUse with meals if the supplement irritates the stomach; separate from medicines or competing minerals when needed.
Split doses when neededSome nutrients are easier to tolerate or absorb when divided into smaller doses.
Check overlapReview multivitamins and combination products to avoid unnecessary duplication.

Frequently asked questions

When is the best time to take Calcium?

Use with meals if the supplement irritates the stomach; separate from medicines or competing minerals when needed.

Can Calcium be taken with coffee or milk?

Some minerals compete with foods, drinks, or medicines. Separate timing is useful when treating a deficiency.

Who should be careful with Calcium?

Adolescents, postmenopausal women, older adults, people avoiding dairy, and people with malabsorption may require dietary assessment.

Food and Intake

1,00019-50 years
1,200women 51+ years
1,000men 51-70 years
1,000pregnancy/lactation
Age / groupMaleFemalePregnancyLactationUpper limit
1-3 years700700UL 2,500
4-8 years1,0001,000UL 2,500
9-18 years1,3001,3001,3001,300UL 3,000
19-50 years1,0001,0001,0001,000UL 2,500
51-70 years1,0001,200UL 2,000
71+ years1,2001,200UL 2,000
How to read: RDA/AI values are targets for generally healthy people. EAR is used to estimate adequacy probability or group-level adequacy, not as a personal goal below the RDA.
Unit: mg/day. Values should be interpreted by age, sex, pregnancy, lactation, and health context. Local labeling rules may differ from clinical nutrition references.

International reference intake comparison

Country / authorityCommon reference value
USA / NIH-FNBRDA 1,000 mg most adults; 1,200 mg in women 51+ and adults 71+
Europe / EFSAPRI adults 950 mg
Australia-New Zealand / NRVRDI 1,000 mg adults; higher in adolescents/older adults
Thailand / Thai FDAThailand: use Thai RDI and Thai FDA / Ministry of Public Health regulations for labeling and supplement products. Do not interpret labeling values as therapeutic doses; product-specific limits must be checked against the latest notification and formula.

This table compares reference-intake frameworks across authorities. Values may use different terms such as RDA, AI, PRI, or NRV and should not be merged into one universal dose.

Food source comparison for Calcium

1,000 mgDaily Value used for percent and serving calculations
Food Serving amount Calcium %DV %DV bar Servings to reach 1,000 mg
plain yogurt 8 oz 415 mg 42%
2
calcium-fortified orange juice 1 cup 349 mg 35%
3
mozzarella cheese 1.5 oz 333 mg 33%
3
sardines with bones 3 oz 325 mg 33%
3
milk 1 cup 300 mg 30%
3
calcium-set tofu 1/2 cup 253 mg 25%
4

Food values are practical comparison values. Actual content varies by variety, preparation, fortification, and serving size.

Safety

LOW

Deficiency

Long-term inadequate intake contributes to low bone mass and osteoporosis risk. Acute hypocalcemia is usually related to medical conditions and can cause neuromuscular symptoms.

UL

Excess and toxicity

Excess calcium can cause constipation, kidney stones, hypercalcemia, renal insufficiency, and impaired absorption of iron and zinc.

!

Precautions

People with kidney disease, hypercalcemia, kidney stones, or high calcium intake from supplements should seek clinical guidance.

SP

Special populations

Adolescents, postmenopausal women, older adults, people avoiding dairy, and people with malabsorption may require dietary assessment.

Fast risk map

Body regulation: Dietary calcium salts; supplement forms include calcium carbonate and calcium citrate.

LOW: insufficient intake

Long-term inadequate intake contributes to low bone mass and osteoporosis risk. Acute hypocalcemia is usually related to medical conditions and can cause neuromuscular symptoms.

UL: excess intake

Excess calcium can cause constipation, kidney stones, hypercalcemia, renal insufficiency, and impaired absorption of iron and zinc.

Precautions: interactions and timing

People with kidney disease, hypercalcemia, kidney stones, or high calcium intake from supplements should seek clinical guidance.

SP: special populations

Adolescents, postmenopausal women, older adults, people avoiding dairy, and people with malabsorption may require dietary assessment.

Interactions and Clinical Context

Rx

Drug interactions

ODS lists interactions with dolutegravir, levothyroxine, lithium, quinolone antibiotics, tetracycline antibiotics, and thiazide diuretics. Calcium can reduce absorption of some medicines when taken together.

Food

Food interactions

Calcium carbonate is best absorbed with food, while calcium citrate can be taken with or without food. High oxalate and phytate foods can reduce calcium absorption from those foods.

Note

Clinical notes

Calcium works with vitamin D and physical activity for bone health. Supplement decisions should consider total dietary calcium, not supplements alone.

EV

Evidence level

High for essentiality, bone role, RDA, UL, and drug-interaction precautions.

Keep learning in Wellity

References
Calcium – Health Professional Fact Sheet
NIH Office of Dietary Supplements · Introduction; Recommended Intakes; Sources of Calcium; Calcium Deficiency; Health Risks from Excessive Calcium; Interactions with Medications
Nutrient Recommendations and Databases
NIH Office of Dietary Supplements · Dietary Reference Intakes definitions and nutrient recommendation context
Vitamins and minerals
National Health Service · Overview and individual vitamin/mineral pages linked from overview
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