Posted on 04/04/2026 3:53:04 AM PDT by daniel1212
It varies a lot by nutrient, form, dose, and whether the person is deficient, but the short answer is: some synthetic vitamins/minerals are absorbed about as well as natural ones, while others are less well utilized unless the form is chosen carefully.pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih+2
Water-soluble vitamins like vitamin C and many B vitamins are often absorbed well in synthetic form, and in human studies synthetic vitamin C has shown no meaningful difference from natural vitamin C at steady state.pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih
Minerals can be absorbed anywhere from about 25% to 90%+, depending on the mineral and the chemical form; for example, calcium is often around 25%–35%, while iodine can be much higher.askthescientists
Fat-soluble vitamins and some specific forms can differ more in bioavailability, and the natural form may sometimes outperform the synthetic one.ethical-nutrition+1
Absorption depends on:
the exact nutrient form,
whether it is taken with food,
gut health,
other nutrients present,
and whether the person is already deficient.extension.uconn+1
A deficient person may absorb more than a person who already has adequate levels, because the body regulates intake differently.askthescientists
If a supplement is well-formulated, a lot of it can be assimilated, but not always all of it. For many common nutrients, the body may absorb a meaningful fraction rather than 100%, and some synthetic forms are excellent, while others are weaker or need conversion.pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih+2
Vitamin C: synthetic and natural are often comparable in humans.pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih
B vitamins: generally well absorbed, though specific forms matter.pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih
Minerals: highly variable; often partial absorption, not complete.askthescientists
Bottom line: “synthetic” does not automatically mean “useless,” but it also does not guarantee full assimilation.pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih+1
I can make you a nutrient-by-nutrient table showing typical absorption ranges for vitamin C, A, D, E, K, B-complex, calcium, magnesium, iron, zinc, and selenium.
Here's a nutrient-by-nutrient table of typical absorption/bioavailability rates for synthetic supplements (compared to natural/food sources where data differs). Rates vary by form, dose, diet, and deficiency status, but these are representative ranges from reviews and studies.healthiton+7
| Nutrient | Synthetic Absorption Rate | Notes/Comparison to Natural |
|---|---|---|
| Vitamin A | 70-90% | Synthetic retinyl esters comparable to food; fat needed for absorption pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih+1 |
| Vitamin B1 (Thiamine) | 90-100% (HCl form) | ~1.38x better blood absorption natural vs synthetic in some animal studies healthiton |
| Vitamin B12 | 1-2% oral (high dose); 50-90% sublingual | Natural ~2.56x better blood absorption; poor oral bioavailability common healthiton |
| Vitamin C | 80-100% (low dose); <50% (high dose) | Synthetic = natural in humans; saturable absorption pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih+1 |
| Vitamin D | 80-100% | Synthetic D3 comparable or better than food; fat-soluble pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih+1 |
| Vitamin E | 10-50% (synthetic); 20-100% (natural) | Natural ~2x better absorbed healthline+1 |
| Vitamin K | 80-90% | Synthetic K1/K2 comparable to food pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih |
| Calcium | 25-35% | Citrate better (~30%) than carbonate (~25%); food similar askthescientists+1 |
| Iron | 5-20% (non-heme); 20-30% (chelated) | Ferrous sulfate ~10%; vitamin C boosts; heme iron (food) 15-35% journals.sagepub |
| Magnesium | 4-10% (oxide); 30-90% (glycinate/taurate) | Poor for cheap forms; food often better askthescientists+1 |
| Zinc | 20-40% | Picolinate/gluconate best; phytates inhibit journals.sagepub |
| Selenium | 50-90% (selenomethionine) | Comparable to food journals.sagepub |
Key caveats:
Rates drop with high doses (e.g., vitamin C <50% >1g).pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih
Food often superior due to cofactors, but good synthetic forms match or exceed.pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih+1
Individual factors: age, gut health, deficiencies boost absorption.journals.sagepub+1
Bottom line: Synthetic supplements can be highly effective (e.g., B vitamins, D, C), but choose chelated/bioavailable forms for minerals; food is ideal when possible.askthescientists+2
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Calcium is a common deficiency and leads to Osteoporosis. But it is largely unavailable unless or until combined with fat. “Skim” Milk is useless in that regard.
There could be a problem with vitamin overdoses.
Water soluble vitamins are quicky removed by urine, so taking too much of them does not harm (or help).
However the fatty vitamins cannot be easily removed from body so you can actually take too much of them and get sick!
The most common are vitamin D overdoses!
Vitamin D has been lately popularized as a panacea for lots of things, but please, be careful not to take too much of it!
You can get into a lot of trouble!
And if you are going to buy milk, why not get more for your $ by choosing whole milk? Add water to make skim. As you likely know, may years ago milk was delivered, and without being homogenized then the cream was at the top, and our parents would take that cream for their coffee (which was believed to stunt growth) and us 5 kids (b4 contraception and its costs became the norm) go the skim. Literally skimmed.
Since I only take about 2 or 3 of these a week, then too little is the issue.
I take methylated vitamins - that bypass the need for conversion in the body.
I can still outwork, out play anyone a third of my age.
I realize that's not saying much with today's basement dwelling 'youth'.
I cannot take vitamin D in any form other than cod liver oil, but try to get sunshine when I can instead.
The one vitamin I am trying to get right is folate (b9). I have the MTHFR gene which means I don’t process folic acid well. Methylated folate is supposed to be better but even one pill makes me extremely jittery to the point I feel like I’m having a panic attack! Bloated too.
I think the amounts in most of these B supplements are just way too high for me. I also don’t think they should be taken daily like some other supplements.
I take 9 vitamins a day and no prescription drugs and I’m 71. Wife’s the same way. Not saying the vitamins help but we’re rarely sick, don’t do vaccines anymore and never did the COVID crap and as far as we know we never had it.
Aches and pains are a bxtch..on a heating pad now 🤣 but we exercise regularly and walk a lot. I played basketball with the 15yo grandson yesterday....played 21. I lost 21 to 16. He thought he was going to kick my azz. I was up 16 to 15 but age kicked in and I was worn out. Probably a 3 to 4 week recovery period but worth it.
Bingo! Not only is there a genetic component at play, I had at least 2 gr-grandparents that suffered with pellegra before grains were enriched, so I guess certain B vitamins have been a problem in my genetic lines for a long time. Allow me to ask, do you take a standard B complex vitamin and add a methylated folate?
Amen..... amen
When I began taking B12 It was an amazing transformation to normal from old.
I take large doses of D3, C, B12. I take a mixed vitamin and mineral supplement containing iron. My doctor prescribed a large dose of D2.
Mostly, the D2 excepted, vitamins are cheap. The cost to benefits is trivial.
I cannot exaggerate the actual benefits for an octogenarian resulting from the vitamins
Thanks!
Bookmarking for later.
God bless,
Tatt
People are generally not deficient in calcium, they are deficient in magnesium which is required for calcium absorption. Supplementing with calcium can be quite dangerous especially when you’re low and magnesium. Get on a good glycinate malate or taurate magnesium supplement. Avoid oxide at all costs
Do you take any fish oil? I am older than you and basically have no pains (yes, I exercise, garden, etc).
HOW the material is ....... “made” is irrelevant. The path to the final product never has any impact, except on cost.
If some fool insists that a final product is better/more effective if done by path B, then path B is introducing something else.
Apples and oranges.
This time of year in Michigan I begin sitting in the sun with my shirt off and wearing shorts. My skin is ready for summer. When one has no exposure to sunlight till July 4th parties, sunburns are sure to follow.
Bookmarking
Me too.
I am 78, have never taken prescription drugs except rarely for antibiotics for infection.
I find that I need sublingual B12, B6, Potassium.
My Doctors visits generally only happen after 1-2-or 3 years.
Lately I have been supplemented with tablespoon of honey with teaspoon of (real thing) cinnamon. My memory improves with that. (my Random Access Memory, smile) Actually my memory on a lot of things are still very good, but I occasionally have a moment of fog with recall.
Tried fish oils but didn’t see/feel any benefits after several months.. I do take tumeric but not sure if that helps or not either. The aches and pains have been around for years !!
How much is too much?
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