Vitamin A: Food Sources & Daily Intake

Vitamin A reaches your plate in two very different forms, and the distinction governs every number in the table below. Preformed vitamin A (retinol) comes from animal foods — liver, cod liver oil, dairy, eggs — and is absorbed efficiently and stored in the liver. Provitamin A (chiefly beta-carotene) comes from deeply colored plants — sweet potato, pumpkin, carrots, dark leafy greens — and your body converts it to retinol only as needed. Both are expressed in a common currency, micrograms of Retinol Activity Equivalents (mcg RAE), so the foods can be compared on one scale.

Vitamin A: Food Sources & Daily Intake
RankFood (serving)FormPer 100 g%DV / 100gGlucoseFructoseNotes
1Cod Liver Oil
1 tsp / 4.5 g
🥩 Retinol30,000 mcg RAE🟢 3,333%Also a top Vitamin D source.
2Beef Liver
3 oz / 85 g
🥩 Retinol9,440 mcg RAE🟢 1,049%00⚠ Exceeds adult upper limit (preformed) — limit in pregnancy.
3Chicken Liver
3 oz / 85 g
🥩 Retinol3,980 mcg RAE🟢 442%00⚠ Exceeds adult upper limit (preformed) — limit in pregnancy.
4Chicken Organ Meats
3 oz / 85 g
🥩 Retinol3,980 mcg RAE🟢 442%Nutrient-dense organ meat (giblets). ⚠ Exceeds adult upper limit (preformed) — limit in pregnancy.
5Sweet Potato (With Skin)
1 medium / 150 g
🌱 β-carotene961 mcg RAE🟢 107%0.60.5Eat with a little fat to absorb.
6Carrots
½ cup / 78 g
🌱 β-carotene852 mcg RAE🟢 95%0.40.4Cooking ↑ carotene availability.
7Carrots, Raw
1 cup / 128 g
🌱 β-carotene835 mcg RAE🟢 93%0.60.6
8Pumpkin, Canned
½ cup / 122 g
🌱 β-carotene778 mcg RAE🟢 86%
9Butter, Salted
1 tbsp / 14 g
🥩 Retinol684 mcg RAE🟢 76%
10Butternut Squash
½ cup / 102 g
🌱 β-carotene558 mcg RAE🟢 62%
11Spinach
½ cup / 90 g
🌱 β-carotene524 mcg RAE🟢 58%Oxalates present; pairs with fat.
12Beef Organ Meats
3 oz / 85 g
🥩 Retinol419 mcg RAE🟡 47%00Nutrient-dense organ meat.
13Collard Greens
½ cup / 95 g
🌱 β-carotene380 mcg RAE🟡 42%
14Cheddar Cheese
1 oz / 28 g
🥩 Retinol316 mcg RAE🟡 35%0.10
15Cantaloupe (Melon), Raw
1 cup / 160 g
🌱 β-carotene232 mcg RAE🟡 26%2.12.4
16Apricots, Dried
½ cup / 65 g
🌱 β-carotene180 mcg RAE🟡 20%33.112.5
17Pork Organ Meats
3 oz / 85 g
🥩 Retinol78 mcg RAE⚪ 9%Nutrient-dense organ meat.

Table of Contents

  1. How to Read These Tables
  2. Recommended Intakes & Upper Limits
  3. Bioavailability & Absorption
  4. Cooking & Storage
  5. Vegetarian & Vegan Sources
  6. Who Needs to Pay Attention
  7. Data Sources & References
  8. Connections
  9. Featured Videos

How to Read These Tables

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Recommended Intakes & Upper Limits

Your personal target depends on age, sex and pregnancy. The Daily Value used for the %DV column above is a single label figure; the table below is the age-specific guidance.

Recommended intakes and tolerable upper limits, NIH Office of Dietary Supplements (IOM Dietary Reference Intakes). * = Adequate Intake (AI) where no RDA is set. UL applies to preformed vitamin A only.
Life stageRDA / AI (mcg RAE/day)Upper limit (mcg/day)
Infants 0–6 mo400* (AI)600
Infants 7–12 mo500* (AI)600
Children 1–3 y300600
Children 4–8 y400900
Children 9–13 y6001,700
Males 14+ y9002,800 → 3,000
Females 14+ y7002,800 → 3,000
Pregnancy750–7702,800 → 3,000
Lactation1,200–1,3002,800 → 3,000

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Bioavailability & Absorption

The amount in the food is not the amount you absorb. Three factors matter most for vitamin A:

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Cooking & Storage

Unlike the water-soluble vitamins (C and the B group), vitamin A is heat-stable and is not leached away by boiling water, so ordinary cooking preserves it well. Gentle cooking of orange and green vegetables actually increases the beta-carotene your body can extract. The main losses come from prolonged high-heat frying and from light/oxygen exposure over time, so store oils (including cod liver oil) cool, dark and sealed.

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Vegetarian & Vegan Sources

There is no preformed vitamin A in any plant food — plants supply provitamin A carotenoids only. That is good news for plant-based eaters: the orange and dark-green vegetables at the top of the plant list (sweet potato, pumpkin, carrots, spinach, kale, butternut squash) easily cover the RDA, the body self-limits conversion so plant sources cannot cause toxicity, and excess simply tints the skin harmlessly (carotenemia). The one caution is the minority with reduced BCO1 conversion, who may need larger or more varied carotenoid intake to maintain status.

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Who Needs to Pay Attention

Groups who most need to prioritize vitamin A sources or testing: people with fat-malabsorption conditions (celiac disease, Crohn’s, cystic fibrosis, pancreatic insufficiency or after bariatric surgery), infants and young children in low-intake settings, and those with very low-fat diets. The opposite caution applies to preformed retinol: liver and cod liver oil are so concentrated that a single serving can exceed the daily upper limit, which matters especially in pregnancy — the table flags these. Beta-carotene from food carries no such limit.

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Data Sources & References

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Connections

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