Vitamin E: Food Sources & Daily Intake

Vitamin E is a family of fat-soluble antioxidants, but the only form your body actively keeps and uses is alpha-tocopherol — which is why intake is measured in milligrams of it. Its main job is to protect cell membranes and the fats in your blood from oxidation. The richest sources are plant fats: vegetable oils (above all wheat germ oil), seeds and nuts, with smaller amounts from avocado and leafy greens. Meat, fish and dairy contribute relatively little.

Vitamin E: Food Sources & Daily Intake
RankFood (serving)Per 100 g%DV / 100gGlucoseFructoseNotes
1Wheat Germ Oil
1 tbsp / 14 g
149 mg🟢 993%00By far the richest source — one spoonful covers more than a day.
2Sunflower Oil
1 tbsp / 14 g
41 mg🟢 274%00
3Sunflower Seeds (Kernels)
1 oz / 28 g
35 mg🟢 235%A handful is one of the easiest ways to hit your target.
4Safflower Oil
1 tbsp / 14 g
34 mg🟢 227%00
5Almonds
1 oz / 28 g
26 mg🟢 171%0.20.1About 23 almonds.
6Peanut Oil
1 tbsp / 14 g
16 mg🟢 105%00
7Hazelnuts
1 oz / 28 g
15 mg🟢 100%0.10.1
8Olive Oil
1 tbsp / 14 g
14 mg🟢 96%00
9Pine Nuts
1 oz / 28 g
9.3 mg🟢 62%0.10.1
10Peanut Butter
2 tbsp / 32 g
9.1 mg🟢 61%0.10.1
11Peanuts
1 oz / 28 g
8.3 mg🟢 56%
12Spinach
½ cup / 90 g
2.1 mg🟡 14%Cooking concentrates the leaves so a serving counts.
13Avocado
1 cup, cubed / 150 g
2.1 mg🟡 14%0.40.1Whole-food fat that also carries its own vitamin E.
14Swiss Chard
½ cup / 88 g
1.9 mg🟡 13%
15Beet Greens
½ cup / 72 g
1.8 mg🟡 12%
16Broccoli
½ cup / 78 g
1.4 mg⚪ 10%0.50.7
17Brown Rice
1 cup / 195 g
0.2 mg⚪ 1%00Common staple.
18Beef Organ Meats
3 oz / 85 g
0.1 mg⚪ 1%00Nutrient-dense organ meat.
19Pork Organ Meats
3 oz / 85 g
0.1 mg⚪ 1%00Nutrient-dense organ meat.
20Chicken Organ Meats
3 oz / 85 g
0.5 mg⚪ 3%00Nutrient-dense organ meat (giblets).

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

Back to Table of Contents


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. The UL applies only to supplemental alpha-tocopherol (and fortified foods) because of a bleeding risk at high doses — it does not apply to vitamin E from ordinary food. No UL has been set for infants.
Life stageRDA / AI (mg/day)Upper limit (mg/day)
Infants 0–6 mo4* (AI)Not set
Infants 7–12 mo5* (AI)Not set
Children 1–3 y6200
Children 4–8 y7300
Children 9–13 y11600
Males 14–18 y15800
Males 19+ y151,000
Females 14–18 y15800
Females 19+ y151,000
Pregnancy15800–1,000
Lactation19800–1,000

Back to Table of Contents


Bioavailability & Absorption

Vitamin E is fat-soluble, so it is absorbed best when eaten with some fat — which is convenient, because almost every rich source (oils, nuts, seeds, avocado) is itself a fat. People on very low-fat diets, or with conditions that impair fat absorption (cystic fibrosis, Crohn’s disease, certain liver and pancreatic disorders), absorb less and are the main group at real risk of deficiency. Only the 2R forms of alpha-tocopherol — the natural one and part of the synthetic blend — are retained by the body; the other synthetic forms are largely discarded.

Back to Table of Contents


Cooking & Storage

Vitamin E is more stable to heat than vitamin C, but it is still an antioxidant, which means it is sacrificed to protect the fats around it. It is degraded by prolonged high heat, repeated frying, light and air — so deep-frying oils and long storage of opened oils lose value, while gentle cooking keeps most of it. Buying nuts, seeds and oils fresh, storing them cool and dark, and using them before they turn rancid preserves the most. Cooking greens like spinach actually concentrates the vitamin per serving as the leaves shrink.

Back to Table of Contents


Vegetarian & Vegan Sources

This is an easy vitamin for plant-based eaters. Almost every top source is a plant — vegetable oils, sunflower seeds, almonds, hazelnuts, peanuts, avocado and leafy greens — while meat, fish and dairy supply comparatively little. Anyone eating nuts, seeds and a little plant oil through the week comfortably meets the 15 mg target, with no animal-source gap to plan around.

Back to Table of Contents


Who Needs to Pay Attention

Outright vitamin E deficiency is rare in healthy people and is almost always caused by fat-malabsorption disorders or rare genetic conditions rather than by diet. When it does occur it can cause nerve and muscle damage — weakness, poor coordination and numbness. The bigger practical concern is the other direction: high-dose supplements. Doses approaching the 1,000 mg/day upper limit can interfere with blood clotting and raise bleeding risk, especially for people taking blood thinners; this is why the UL applies to supplements and fortified foods, not to vitamin E from ordinary food, which is safe.

Back to Table of Contents


Data Sources & References

Back to Table of Contents


Connections

Back to Table of Contents