Can I Take Calcium and Vitamin A Together? Dosage Guide
No major interaction is listed for Calcium and Vitamin A. The bigger question is total dose, body conditions, and regional upper limits.
Interaction Summary
No major interaction is listed between Calcium and Vitamin A in the current NutriAudit database, so dose stacking matters more than the pair itself.
Absorption Competition
Calcium and Vitamin A do not have a known direct absorption-competition warning in our current rules. Focus on total dose and tolerance instead.
Safety Warning
The main warning is false confidence. “No known interaction” does not mean every dose is safe once multiple products and body conditions are layered together.
Best Timing
Calcium and Vitamin A can usually be taken in the same day and often in the same meal. Split them only if your stomach, schedule, or clinician guidance says otherwise.
Body Condition Filter
The default view is general. Switch the condition below if your body context changes the safe range.
Default view: No major interaction is listed between Calcium and Vitamin A in the current NutriAudit database, so dose stacking matters more than the pair itself. If you have kidney-stone history, pregnancy needs, or high blood pressure, switch the condition above for a more conservative read.
Regional Safety Limits
| Standard | Calcium | Vitamin A |
|---|---|---|
| US (FDA) | 1000 / 2500 mg | 900 / 3000 mcg |
| EU (EFSA) | 1000 / 2500 mg | 900 / 3000 mcg |
| AU (TGA) | 1000 / 2500 mg | 900 / 3000 mcg |
| CN (CNS) | 800 / 2000 mg | 800 / 3000 mcg |
| JP (MHLW) | 800 / 2300 mg | 900 / 2700 mcg |
Values are shown as RDA / UL. Even when the pair itself looks fine, total intake can still cross regional upper limits.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Can I take calcium and vitamin a together?
No major interaction is listed in our current database, so the next audit question is whether your total doses and body conditions still make sense.
If there is no known interaction, what should I check next?
Look at upper limits, duplicate intake from multiple products, and whether pregnancy, kidney-stone history, or cardiovascular issues change the safe range.