Reviews

Vitamin D3 Supplements: Dose, Form, and What Matters Most

Healthy Mainer Editorial Team 3 min read

Walk into any pharmacy in Maine or New Hampshire between October and April and you’ll find an entire shelf dedicated to vitamin D. Capsules, tablets, liquid drops, gummies, sprays. Doses from 400 IU to 10,000 IU. It’s a lot to sort through, and the differences aren’t just marketing.

D3 vs. D2: Does It Matter?

Vitamin D comes in two main forms: D3 (cholecalciferol) and D2 (ergocalciferol). D3 is what your skin produces from sun exposure and is found in animal-based foods. D2 comes from plant sources and fungi.

A 2012 review published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition found that D3 raises and maintains blood levels of 25-hydroxyvitamin D more effectively than D2 at the same dose. For most people, D3 is the better choice. The exception is vegans or those avoiding animal products, for whom plant-derived D2 is the available alternative. Research is also emerging on broader health implications of sustained deficiency, including a recent midlife study linking vitamin D levels to Alzheimer risk.

Oil-Based vs. Dry Tablet

Vitamin D is fat-soluble. That means your body absorbs it better when there’s dietary fat present. Oil-based softgel capsules and liquid drops already contain a fat carrier, usually olive oil or MCT oil, which helps absorption regardless of when you take them. Dry tablets and gummies don’t have that built-in fat.

Research published in the Journal of Bone and Mineral Research found that taking vitamin D with the largest meal of the day improved absorption compared to taking it on an empty stomach. If you’re using a dry tablet or gummy, pairing it with a meal that includes some fat, like eggs, avocado, or olive oil, closes most of that gap. Oil-based softgels give you more flexibility with timing.

Why a Fixed Dose Doesn’t Work for Everyone

Body weight plays a real role in how vitamin D is distributed. The vitamin is fat-soluble, so it gets stored in fatty tissue. Someone carrying more body fat needs a higher dose to reach the same blood level as a leaner person taking the same supplement. A 150-pound person and a 250-pound person will respond differently to the same daily capsule.

This is why blood testing matters. Without knowing your current 25-hydroxyvitamin D level, a fixed dose is a guess. That’s true for anyone, but especially relevant in northern New England, where sunlight at 44 degrees north produces little usable vitamin D from roughly October through April and outdoor time drops significantly during winter months. A blood test gives you a baseline so you and your healthcare provider can figure out what you actually need.

What to Look for on the Label

A few things worth checking before you buy:

  • Form listed as D3 (cholecalciferol), not just “vitamin D”
  • Oil-based delivery (softgel or liquid drops with olive oil or MCT oil listed as an ingredient)
  • Third-party testing seal (USP, NSF International, or Informed Sport)

Third-party testing confirms what’s on the label is actually in the bottle at the stated amount. Supplement quality varies widely, and a seal from an independent testing organization is the clearest signal of a reliable product. The same label-reading approach applies when evaluating fish oil supplements or magnesium formulations, where form and purity vary just as much between brands.

Choosing a supplement is one step. For the whole picture, see our complete guide to vitamin D in Maine.

Sources

  • Tripkovic L, et al. Comparison of vitamin D2 and vitamin D3 supplementation in raising serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D status. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. 2012;95(6):1357-1364.
  • Mulligan GB, Licata A. Taking vitamin D with the largest meal improves absorption and results in higher serum levels of 25-hydroxyvitamin D. Journal of Bone and Mineral Research. 2010;25(4):928-930.
  • U.S. Office of Dietary Supplements, National Institutes of Health. Vitamin D Fact Sheet for Consumers. ods.od.nih.gov

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Consult a qualified healthcare provider before making any health decisions.

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