Egg yolks are one of the few foods that naturally contain vitamin D. One large yolk provides about 41 IU, roughly 7% of the daily recommended value.
Vitamin D occupies an unusual position in human nutrition: it is technically a hormone precursor that the body synthesizes when skin is exposed to UVB radiation, yet most people are expected to obtain meaningful amounts from food. The problem is that vitamin D occurs naturally in very few foods. Egg yolks are one of them. A single large egg yolk provides approximately 41 IU of vitamin D, which represents roughly 5 to 7% of the 600 IU daily recommended intake for adults under 70, as set by the National Academies of Medicine.
## How Vitamin D Gets Into an Egg Yolk
The vitamin D content of an egg yolk is almost entirely dependent on the hen's exposure to sunlight and the composition of her feed. Hens raised outdoors with meaningful UVB exposure produce eggs with significantly higher vitamin D levels than hens kept in standard indoor commercial facilities. A 2013 study published in *Nutrients* found that pasture-raised hens produced eggs with vitamin D levels three to four times higher than conventionally housed hens. Some specialty eggs are produced from hens fed vitamin D-enriched feed, and these can contain up to 6 times the standard amount.
The vitamin D in egg yolks exists primarily as vitamin D3 (cholecalciferol), the same form produced by human skin during sun exposure. This is relevant because D3 is more effective at raising and maintaining serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D levels than D2 (ergocalciferol), the form found in most plant-based sources and many fortified foods. A 2012 meta-analysis in the *American Journal of Clinical Nutrition* confirmed that D3 supplementation raises blood levels approximately 87% more effectively than equivalent doses of D2.
## The Vitamin D Deficiency Problem
Vitamin D deficiency and insufficiency are widespread. The CDC's National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey has consistently found that large segments of the U.S. population have serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D levels below the 20 ng/mL threshold considered sufficient by the National Academies. Groups at highest risk include people with limited sun exposure, darker skin tones, older adults, and those with obesity or fat malabsorption conditions.
The consequences of insufficient vitamin D extend well beyond bone health, where its role in calcium absorption is well established. Research has linked low vitamin D status to impaired immune function, increased risk of certain cancers, cardiovascular disease, and depression, though the causality in many of these associations remains under active investigation. What is clear is that correcting deficiency through diet and supplementation has measurable effects on bone mineral density and immune markers.
Eggs alone cannot solve a vitamin D deficiency. Even an optimistic dietary scenario involving three eggs per day from pasture-raised hens would provide 300 to 400 IU, leaving a meaningful gap from the 600 IU daily target and well short of the 1,500 to 2,000 IU many researchers now consider optimal for maintaining adequate serum levels. The real value of eggs as a vitamin D source is as one contributor within a broader dietary pattern.
## Eggs in Context: Where Vitamin D Comes From
The foods that naturally contain meaningful vitamin D are a short list: fatty fish (salmon, mackerel, sardines), fish liver oils, beef liver, and egg yolks. Fortified foods, particularly cow's milk, orange juice, and breakfast cereals, account for a large share of dietary vitamin D intake in the United States. However, fortification levels vary by product and are generally in the range of 100 IU per serving.
The practical position of egg yolks in the vitamin D conversation is this: they are a reliable, consistent contributor of the preferred form of vitamin D, with a nutritional profile that makes them worth eating on other grounds as well. For people who eat eggs regularly, yolk consumption adds a meaningful increment toward adequacy. Choosing pasture-raised eggs when available amplifies that contribution. Removing yolks from the diet to reduce fat or cholesterol eliminates one of the few dietary sources of vitamin D that most people eat with any regularity.