Vitamin D Deficiency: Symptoms, Causes, and Recovery

Vitamin D deficiency is one of the most common nutritional shortfalls in the world — by many estimates close to a billion people have levels that are too low. It is easy to miss because for a long time it causes nothing you can feel: no rash, no pain, no obvious sign. Then, quietly, it begins to show up as aching bones, muscles that tire and weaken, a higher chance of falls in older adults, low energy, and, for some, a flat or low mood that deepens through the dark winter months. In children a severe, long-standing lack can soften and bow the growing bones — the disease called rickets — while in adults the same softening is called osteomalacia. The reason one shortage reaches so far is that vitamin D is not really a simple vitamin at all: your body turns it into a hormone that controls how much calcium you absorb from food and how strong your bones and muscles become. The encouraging part is that this is one of the easiest deficiencies to find — a single blood test, the 25-hydroxyvitamin D level — and one of the easiest to fix, with sunlight, a few foods, and inexpensive supplements. This hub explains what the deficiency is, why one low number causes such different symptoms, who is most at risk, how it is diagnosed, and exactly how it is corrected — with deep-dive pages for each of the major symptoms.


Symptom Deep-Dive Pages

Bone Pain & Osteomalacia

The deep, aching bone pain and tenderness of osteomalacia — the adult softening of bone that low vitamin D can cause. What it feels like, why undermineralized bone hurts, and how it differs from arthritis and fibromyalgia.

Rickets in Children

How a long, severe shortage of vitamin D softens a child's growing bones, producing bowed legs, swollen wrists, delayed walking, and growth problems — and why rickets is both preventable and treatable.

Muscle Weakness & Falls

Why low vitamin D weakens the large muscles closest to the body's core, making it hard to climb stairs or rise from a chair, and how that proximal weakness raises the risk of falls and fractures in older adults.

Fatigue & Low Mood

The tiredness and flat, low mood that many people with low vitamin D describe — what the evidence actually shows, why winter and low sunlight matter, and how to tell a true deficiency from the many other causes of feeling worn down.


Table of Contents

  1. Symptom Deep-Dive Pages
  2. What Is Vitamin D Deficiency?
  3. Why One Low Number Causes So Many Symptoms
  4. Common Causes of Low Vitamin D
  5. Who Is Most at Risk
  6. How Vitamin D Deficiency Is Diagnosed
  7. How Low Vitamin D Is Corrected
  8. When to Seek Care / Red Flags
  9. Key Research Papers
  10. Connections
  11. Featured Videos

What Is Vitamin D Deficiency?

Vitamin D deficiency means your body does not have enough vitamin D to do its main jobs — chiefly absorbing calcium and keeping bones and muscles strong. Doctors do not measure vitamin D by how much you eat; they measure the form that circulates in your blood, called 25-hydroxyvitamin D (often written 25(OH)D). This is the storage form the liver makes, and it is the best single marker of your overall vitamin D status. The result is usually reported in nanograms per milliliter (ng/mL) in the United States, or in nanomoles per liter (nmol/L) elsewhere; to convert, multiply ng/mL by 2.5.

There is genuine, long-running debate among expert groups about exactly where "low" begins, and it is worth being honest about that rather than pretending there is one universal cutoff. Two influential frameworks bracket the discussion. The Institute of Medicine (now the National Academy of Medicine), focusing on what bones need across the whole population, judged that a level of 20 ng/mL (50 nmol/L) is sufficient for almost everyone, and that true deficiency — the level linked to rickets and osteomalacia — sits below about 12 ng/mL (30 nmol/L). The Endocrine Society, focusing on patients at risk, set a higher bar, defining deficiency as below 20 ng/mL and "insufficiency" as 21–29 ng/mL, and suggesting 30 ng/mL or above as a target for those being treated. In everyday clinical practice, most laboratories and clinicians use roughly these bands:

The key practical point is that mild and moderate shortfalls usually cause no symptoms at all — this is the most important thing to understand about vitamin D deficiency. Most low levels are found by chance on a blood test, not because the person felt unwell. Symptoms tend to appear only when the level is quite low and has stayed low for a long time, because it takes months of inadequate calcium handling for bones and muscles to noticeably suffer. That silence is exactly why deficiency is so common and so easy to overlook.

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Why One Low Number Causes So Many Symptoms

It can seem strange that a single low vitamin can be blamed for problems as different as aching bones, weak legs, falls, and low mood. The explanation is that vitamin D is not a typical vitamin that simply plugs into one chemical reaction. Once in the body it is converted, in two steps, into a hormone — first by the liver into 25-hydroxyvitamin D (the form we measure), then by the kidney into the active hormone calcitriol (1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D). That hormone travels through the blood and acts on receptors found in a remarkable range of tissues, which is why a shortage ripples outward.

The central job — the one that explains the bone and muscle symptoms — is calcium. Active vitamin D is the main signal that tells your gut to absorb calcium and phosphate from food. When vitamin D runs low, you absorb far less calcium, sometimes only 10–15% of what you eat instead of 30–40%. The body refuses to let blood calcium fall, because the heart and nerves depend on it, so it triggers a backup system: the parathyroid glands release more parathyroid hormone (PTH), which pulls calcium out of the bones to keep the blood level normal. This state — called secondary hyperparathyroidism — quietly drains the skeleton. (See Hyperparathyroidism for more on this hormone system, and Calcium and Phosphorus for the minerals involved.)

From that one disturbance, the different symptoms follow:

This is the unifying idea: vitamin D acts like a hormone that quietly manages calcium and supports bone, muscle, and other tissues. So a single, long-standing shortage is felt in several places at once — and correcting it tends to help those systems together.

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Common Causes of Low Vitamin D

Vitamin D is unusual among nutrients because most of it does not come from food at all — in most people, the majority is made in the skin when ultraviolet B (UVB) sunlight strikes it. That means low vitamin D usually traces back to one of three things: not making enough in the skin, not taking in enough from food or supplements, or, less often, a medical problem that interferes with how the body absorbs or processes it. Here are the causes worth knowing.

As with most deficiencies, these causes often stack. An older adult with darker skin who lives in a northern city, stays mostly indoors, and eats little fish can become deficient from the sum of several ordinary factors, none of which alone would be enough.

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Who Is Most at Risk

Because so many of the causes above are common, vitamin D deficiency is widespread — but some groups are far more likely to be affected and are the ones in whom doctors most often check a level. If you recognize yourself in this list, it is reasonable to ask about testing.

Worth a note: vitamin D screening is not recommended for the whole healthy population, and routine testing in people with no risk factors and no symptoms has uncertain value. Testing is most useful when you have a reason — symptoms that fit, a bone or malabsorption condition, or membership in one of the higher-risk groups above.

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How Vitamin D Deficiency Is Diagnosed

The good news, again, is how simple the diagnosis is. Vitamin D status is measured with a single, widely available blood test for 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D). It does not require fasting, it is inexpensive, and it is the one test that reliably reflects your overall vitamin D stores — combining what you make from sunlight and what you take in from food and supplements. (For a fuller explanation of the test, the result ranges, and how to read your report, see the dedicated Vitamin D Test (25-Hydroxyvitamin D) page.)

A few practical points make the test easier to understand:

When the level is found to be low — especially if it is very low, or if you have bone symptoms — a doctor may add a few related tests to understand the full picture and to look for the consequences of long-standing deficiency:

In children with suspected rickets, and occasionally in adults with severe osteomalacia, an X-ray may be added because softened, poorly mineralized bone has a characteristic appearance — the details are on the Rickets in Children page.

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How Low Vitamin D Is Corrected

Treating vitamin D deficiency is, for most people, straightforward, inexpensive, and effective. The general approach has three parts: raise the level with supplements (and food and sensible sun), make sure calcium intake is adequate so the corrected vitamin D has the raw material to work with, and address whatever caused the deficiency so it does not simply return.

A word of balance on expectations: vitamin D reliably prevents and treats the diseases of deficiency — rickets, osteomalacia, and, with adequate calcium, it supports bone strength and reduces falls and fractures in deficient older adults. But large trials such as the VITAL study found that giving extra vitamin D to people who are not deficient does not prevent cancer, heart disease, or most other conditions. The honest summary is that fixing a real deficiency is genuinely worthwhile; taking ever-higher doses beyond sufficiency is not, and can eventually cause harm (see the Vitamin D Toxicity hub).

For most people, the outlook is excellent: once a true deficiency is corrected and the cause addressed, bone pain eases, muscle strength returns, and energy often improves over weeks to a few months.

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When to Seek Care / Red Flags

Vitamin D deficiency itself is rarely an emergency — it develops slowly and is corrected at a measured pace. For most situations, the right step is a non-urgent visit to your doctor for a blood test: ask to be checked if you have ongoing bone aches, unexplained muscle weakness, frequent falls, or persistent low energy, especially if you fall into one of the higher-risk groups above. But a few signs deserve prompt medical attention, either because they point to severe or advanced deficiency or because they suggest a different, more serious problem that should not be missed.

One more piece of honest framing: feeling tired or low is extremely common and has many causes, and a low vitamin D level found on testing is not proof that vitamin D is the reason you feel that way — a point explored on the Fatigue & Low Mood page. It is reasonable to correct a genuine deficiency and see whether you improve, while keeping an open mind about other explanations. When symptoms are severe, persistent, or do not improve after the deficiency is corrected, that is the signal to look further. For general tiredness, see also Fatigue.

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Key Research Papers

  1. Holick MF (2007). Vitamin D Deficiency. New England Journal of Medicine;357(3):266-281. — DOI: 10.1056/NEJMra070553
  2. Holick MF, Binkley NC, Bischoff-Ferrari HA, Gordon CM, Hanley DA, et al. (2011). Evaluation, Treatment, and Prevention of Vitamin D Deficiency: an Endocrine Society Clinical Practice Guideline. Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism;96(7):1911-1930. — DOI: 10.1210/jc.2011-0385
  3. Rosen CJ, Abrams SA, Aloia JF, Brannon PM, Clinton SK, et al. (2012). IOM Committee Members Respond to Endocrine Society Vitamin D Guideline (2011 Report on Dietary Reference Intakes for Calcium and Vitamin D). Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism;97(4):1146-1152. — DOI: 10.1210/jc.2010-2704
  4. Pearce SH, Cheetham TD (2010). Diagnosis and management of vitamin D deficiency. BMJ;340:b5664. — DOI: 10.1136/bmj.b5664
  5. Pfotenhauer KM, Shubrook JH (2017). Vitamin D Deficiency, Its Role in Health and Disease, and Current Supplementation Recommendations. Journal of the American Osteopathic Association;117(5):301-305. — DOI: 10.7556/jaoa.2017.055
  6. Munns CF, Shaw N, Kiely M, Specker BL, Thacher TD, et al. (2016). Global Consensus Recommendations on Prevention and Management of Nutritional Rickets. Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism;101(2):394-415. — DOI: 10.1210/jc.2015-2175
  7. Reid IR, Bolland MJ, Grey A (2014). Effects of vitamin D supplements on bone mineral density: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Lancet;383(9912):146-155. — DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(13)61647-5
  8. Bolland MJ, Grey A, Gamble GD, Reid IR (2014). The effect of vitamin D supplementation on skeletal, vascular, or cancer outcomes: a trial sequential meta-analysis. Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology;2(4):307-320. — DOI: 10.1016/S2213-8587(13)70212-2
  9. Bischoff-Ferrari HA, Dawson-Hughes B, Staehelin HB, Orav JE, Stuck AE, et al. (2009). Fall prevention with supplemental and active forms of vitamin D: a meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials. BMJ;339:b3692. — DOI: 10.1136/bmj.b3692
  10. Ceglia L (2008). Vitamin D and its role in skeletal muscle. Molecular Aspects of Medicine;29(6):407-414. — DOI: 10.1016/j.mam.2008.07.002
  11. Anglin RES, Samaan Z, Walter SD, McDonald SD (2013). Vitamin D deficiency and depression in adults: systematic review and meta-analysis. British Journal of Psychiatry;202(2):100-107. — DOI: 10.1192/bjp.bp.111.106666
  12. Manson JE, Cook NR, Lee IM, Christen W, Bassuk SS, et al. (2019). Vitamin D Supplements and Prevention of Cancer and Cardiovascular Disease (VITAL trial). New England Journal of Medicine;380(1):33-44. — DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa1809944

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