Chloride

Vitamins and Minerals Database

Chloride

Chloride supports fluid balance, stomach acid and electrolyte balance. Food-first intake is preferred; supplements should be matched to diet, health context, and safety considerations.

Type: mineral Last reviewed: 2026-05-19

Overview

01

Biological role

Chloride supports fluid balance, stomach acid and electrolyte balance.

02

Mechanism of action

Chloride contributes to normal physiology through nutrient-specific enzyme, structural, signaling, transport, or regulatory roles described in authoritative nutrition references.

03

Chemical forms

Chloride may appear in foods and supplements in different chemical forms. Selection should consider the nutrient form, dose, tolerance, and health context.

Quick answers before choosing a supplement

What it helps withChloride supports fluid balance, stomach acid and electrolyte balance.
Best time to takeUse with meals if the supplement irritates the stomach; separate from medicines or competing minerals when needed.
Best form to knowChloride may appear in foods and supplements in different chemical forms. Selection should consider the nutrient form, dose, tolerance, and health context.
Low intake signsInadequate Chloride intake or absorption may affect body systems related to fluid balance, stomach acid and electrolyte balance. Deficiency risk depends on diet, absorption, medical conditions, and life stage.
Too much may causeMost people get enough through salt; sodium-related guidance may matter more.
Key food sourcestable salt, seaweed, tomatoes, lettuce, celery

Chemical forms and absorption

Common forms

Chloride may appear in foods and supplements in different chemical forms. Selection should consider the nutrient form, dose, tolerance, and health context.

Absorption context

Absorption can vary with food composition, supplement form, dose, and timing. Food-first intake is preferred when possible.

Clinical use

Established essential nutrient roles should be separated from supplement benefit claims. Supplement use is most appropriate when there is inadequate intake, increased need, deficiency risk, or a clinical indication.

Absorption and action pathway

Food or supplementtable salt, seaweed, tomatoes, lettuce, celery
AbsorptionAbsorption can vary with food composition, supplement form, dose, and timing. Food-first intake is preferred when possible.
Body roleChloride supports fluid balance, stomach acid and electrolyte balance.
Safety checkMost people get enough through salt; sodium-related guidance may matter more.

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 Chloride?

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

Can Chloride 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 Chloride?

Pregnant or lactating people, older adults, children, people with chronic diseases, and people taking regular medicines should use supplements with professional guidance.

Food and Intake

2.319-50 years
2.051-70 years
1.8>70 years
2.3pregnancy/lactation
Age / groupMaleFemalePregnancyLactationUpper limit
1-3 years1.51.5see sodium/salt
4-8 years1.91.9see sodium/salt
9-18 years2.32.32.32.3see sodium/salt
19-50 years2.32.32.32.3see sodium/salt
51-70 years2.02.0see sodium/salt
71+ years1.81.8see sodium/salt
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: g/day (AI). 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-FNBAI 2.3 g age 19-50; lower in older adults
Europe / EFSAEFSA AI chloride about 3.1 g/day related to sodium AI
Australia-New Zealand / NRVAI about 2.3 g 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 Chloride

2,300 mgDaily Value used for percent and serving calculations
Food Serving amount Chloride %DV %DV bar Servings to reach 2,300 mg
table salt 1/4 teaspoon 900 mg 39%
3
canned soup 1 cup 700 mg 30%
3
soy sauce 1 tablespoon 530 mg 23%
4
bread 1 slice 230 mg 10%
10
cheese 1 oz 180 mg 8%
13
olives 5 fruit 150 mg 7%
15

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

Safety

LOW

Deficiency

Inadequate Chloride intake or absorption may affect body systems related to fluid balance, stomach acid and electrolyte balance. Deficiency risk depends on diet, absorption, medical conditions, and life stage.

UL

Excess and toxicity

Most people get enough through salt; sodium-related guidance may matter more.

!

Precautions

Most people get enough through salt; sodium-related guidance may matter more.

SP

Special populations

Pregnant or lactating people, older adults, children, people with chronic diseases, and people taking regular medicines should use supplements with professional guidance.

Fast risk map

Body regulation: Chloride may appear in foods and supplements in different chemical forms. Selection should consider the nutrient form, dose, tolerance, and health context.

LOW: insufficient intake

Inadequate Chloride intake or absorption may affect body systems related to fluid balance, stomach acid and electrolyte balance. Deficiency risk depends on diet, absorption, medical conditions, and life stage.

UL: excess intake

Most people get enough through salt; sodium-related guidance may matter more.

Precautions: interactions and timing

Most people get enough through salt; sodium-related guidance may matter more.

SP: special populations

Pregnant or lactating people, older adults, children, people with chronic diseases, and people taking regular medicines should use supplements with professional guidance.

Interactions and Clinical Context

Rx

Drug interactions

Potential interactions depend on the nutrient, supplement dose, medicines used, and medical conditions. People using regular medicines should check interaction guidance from clinical sources or ask a clinician.

Food

Food interactions

Absorption can vary with food composition, supplement form, dose, and timing. Food-first intake is preferred when possible.

Note

Clinical notes

Established essential nutrient roles should be separated from supplement benefit claims. Supplement use is most appropriate when there is inadequate intake, increased need, deficiency risk, or a clinical indication.

EV

Evidence level

High for essential nutrient role; nutrient-specific supplementation benefits depend on baseline status and clinical context.

Keep learning in Wellity

References
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
Vitamin and Mineral Supplements
Nutrition.gov · General federal resource hub for vitamin and mineral supplements
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