Vitamin A

Vitamins and Minerals Database

Vitamin A

Vitamin A is a fat-soluble vitamin required for vision, immune function, reproduction, growth, and maintenance of epithelial tissues.

Type: vitamin Last reviewed: 2026-05-19

Overview

01

Biological role

Vitamin A supports normal vision through retinal pigments, maintains epithelial integrity, contributes to immune function, and is required for growth and reproduction.

02

Mechanism of action

Retinal participates in the visual cycle; retinoic acid regulates gene expression involved in cell differentiation, immune function, and epithelial maintenance.

03

Chemical forms

Preformed vitamin A as retinol and retinyl esters; provitamin A carotenoids including beta-carotene. Fat-soluble vitamin stored in the liver; excess risk is mainly from preformed vitamin A in supplements or liver.

Quick answers before choosing a supplement

What it helps withVitamin A supports normal vision through retinal pigments, maintains epithelial integrity, contributes to immune function, and is required for growth and reproduction.
Best time to takeTake consistently; fat-soluble vitamins are usually best with a meal that contains fat, while water-soluble vitamins are usually flexible.
Best form to knowPreformed vitamin A as retinol and retinyl esters; provitamin A carotenoids including beta-carotene. Fat-soluble vitamin stored in the liver; excess risk is mainly from preformed vitamin A in supplements or liver.
Low intake signsDeficiency can impair dark adaptation and cause xerophthalmia; severe deficiency can lead to blindness and increased susceptibility to infection.
Too much may causeExcess preformed vitamin A can cause toxicity. Chronic high intake is associated with liver abnormalities, reduced bone mineral density, and birth defects when excessive during pregnancy.
Key food sourcesPreformed vitamin A is found in liver, fish oils, dairy products, and eggs. Provitamin A carotenoids are found in orange and dark-green vegetables and some fruits.

Chemical forms and absorption

Common forms

Preformed vitamin A as retinol and retinyl esters; provitamin A carotenoids including beta-carotene. Fat-soluble vitamin stored in the liver; excess risk is mainly from preformed vitamin A in supplements or liver.

Absorption context

Dietary fat supports absorption of fat-soluble vitamin A and carotenoids. Carotenoid bioavailability varies by food matrix and preparation.

Clinical use

Established physiology is strong for vision, epithelial integrity, growth, and immunity. Clinical benefit from supplementation depends on deficiency risk and population context.

Absorption and action pathway

Food or supplementPreformed vitamin A is found in liver, fish oils, dairy products, and eggs. Provitamin A carotenoids are found in orange and dark-green vegetables and some fruits.
AbsorptionDietary fat supports absorption of fat-soluble vitamin A and carotenoids. Carotenoid bioavailability varies by food matrix and preparation.
Body roleVitamin A supports normal vision through retinal pigments, maintains epithelial integrity, contributes to immune function, and is required for growth and reproduction.
Safety checkPregnant people should avoid high-dose preformed vitamin A unless prescribed. Beta-carotene supplements are not recommended for smoking-related cancer prevention because trials found harm in smokers and asbestos-exposed populations.

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 timingTake consistently; fat-soluble vitamins are usually best with a meal that contains fat, while water-soluble vitamins are usually flexible.
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 Vitamin A?

Take consistently; fat-soluble vitamins are usually best with a meal that contains fat, while water-soluble vitamins are usually flexible.

Can Vitamin A be taken with coffee or milk?

It depends on the vitamin. Fat-soluble vitamins are best with food; water-soluble vitamins are generally more flexible.

Who should be careful with Vitamin A?

Pregnant people, lactating people, infants, and people with fat-malabsorption conditions require careful assessment. Smokers should avoid high-dose beta-carotene supplements unless advised by a clinician.

Food and Intake

900adult men
700adult women
770pregnancy
1,300lactation
Age / groupMaleFemalePregnancyLactationUpper limit
1-3 years300300UL 600
4-8 years400400UL 900
9-13 years600600UL 1,700
14-18 years9007007501,200UL 2,800
19+ years9007007701,300UL 3,000
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: mcg RAE/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 adults 900/700 mcg RAE men/women; pregnancy 770; lactation 1,300; UL 3,000 preformed
Europe / EFSAPRI adults about 750/650 mcg RE men/women; pregnancy 700; lactation 1,300
Australia-New Zealand / NRVRDI adults 900/700 mcg RE men/women; pregnancy 800; lactation 1,100
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 Vitamin A

900 mcg RAEDaily Value used for percent and serving calculations
Food Serving amount Vitamin A %DV %DV bar Servings to reach 900 mcg RAE
fried beef liver 3 oz 6,582 mcg RAE 731%
0.1
baked sweet potato with skin 1 item 1,403 mcg RAE 156%
0.6
boiled spinach 1/2 cup 573 mcg RAE 64%
1.6
raw carrot 1/2 cup 459 mcg RAE 51%
2.0
vitamin A-fortified milk 1 cup 149 mcg RAE 17%
6
boiled egg 1 egg 75 mcg RAE 8%
12

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

Safety

LOW

Deficiency

Deficiency can impair dark adaptation and cause xerophthalmia; severe deficiency can lead to blindness and increased susceptibility to infection.

UL

Excess and toxicity

Excess preformed vitamin A can cause toxicity. Chronic high intake is associated with liver abnormalities, reduced bone mineral density, and birth defects when excessive during pregnancy.

!

Precautions

Pregnant people should avoid high-dose preformed vitamin A unless prescribed. Beta-carotene supplements are not recommended for smoking-related cancer prevention because trials found harm in smokers and asbestos-exposed populations.

SP

Special populations

Pregnant people, lactating people, infants, and people with fat-malabsorption conditions require careful assessment. Smokers should avoid high-dose beta-carotene supplements unless advised by a clinician.

Fast risk map

Solubility and storage: Preformed vitamin A as retinol and retinyl esters; provitamin A carotenoids including beta-carotene. Fat-soluble vitamin stored in the liver; excess risk is mainly from preformed vitamin A in supplements or liver.

LOW: insufficient intake

Deficiency can impair dark adaptation and cause xerophthalmia; severe deficiency can lead to blindness and increased susceptibility to infection.

UL: excess intake

Excess preformed vitamin A can cause toxicity. Chronic high intake is associated with liver abnormalities, reduced bone mineral density, and birth defects when excessive during pregnancy.

Precautions: interactions and timing

Pregnant people should avoid high-dose preformed vitamin A unless prescribed. Beta-carotene supplements are not recommended for smoking-related cancer prevention because trials found harm in smokers and asbestos-exposed populations.

SP: special populations

Pregnant people, lactating people, infants, and people with fat-malabsorption conditions require careful assessment. Smokers should avoid high-dose beta-carotene supplements unless advised by a clinician.

Interactions and Clinical Context

Rx

Drug interactions

Vitamin A supplements can interact with retinoid medications and may add to toxicity risk. ODS also notes concern with hepatotoxic medicines because high vitamin A intake can affect the liver.

Food

Food interactions

Dietary fat supports absorption of fat-soluble vitamin A and carotenoids. Carotenoid bioavailability varies by food matrix and preparation.

Note

Clinical notes

Established physiology is strong for vision, epithelial integrity, growth, and immunity. Clinical benefit from supplementation depends on deficiency risk and population context.

EV

Evidence level

High for essentiality, deficiency effects, and UL; population-specific for supplementation benefit.

Keep learning in Wellity

References
Vitamin A and Carotenoids – Health Professional Fact Sheet
NIH Office of Dietary Supplements · Introduction; Recommended Intakes; Sources of Vitamin A; Vitamin A Deficiency; Health Risks from Excessive Vitamin A; 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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