Researchers studied nearly 1,500 women trying to have babies through fertility treatments to see if vitamin D levels affected their egg health. They measured vitamin D in the blood and checked three markers of ovarian reserve—basically, how many healthy eggs a woman has available. The study found that women with higher vitamin D levels had more developing eggs, especially if they had a lower body weight. However, the relationship wasn’t straightforward for all women, suggesting that body weight might play an important role in how vitamin D affects egg health.

The Quick Take

  • What they studied: Whether vitamin D levels in the blood are connected to how many healthy eggs women have available for reproduction
  • Who participated: 1,488 women between ages 20 and 50 who were undergoing fertility treatments to help them get pregnant
  • Key finding: Women with higher vitamin D levels had more developing eggs visible on ultrasound, but this connection was strongest in women with lower body weight. The relationship with another egg-health marker (FSH) followed an unusual pattern—too little or too much vitamin D wasn’t ideal
  • What it means for you: If you’re trying to get pregnant or concerned about egg health, maintaining adequate vitamin D levels may be helpful, especially if you’re at a healthy weight. However, this study doesn’t prove vitamin D alone will improve fertility—it just shows a connection. Talk to your doctor about your vitamin D levels and fertility concerns

The Research Details

This was a cross-sectional study, which means researchers took a snapshot in time of 1,488 women undergoing fertility treatments. They measured vitamin D levels in each woman’s blood and then looked at three different markers of egg health: the number of developing eggs visible on ultrasound (called antral follicle count), a hormone level called AMH that indicates egg quantity, and another hormone called FSH that also relates to egg health. The researchers used several statistical methods to look for connections between vitamin D levels and these egg-health markers, including checking whether body weight changed how vitamin D affected egg health.

This approach is important because it allowed researchers to study a large group of real women in actual fertility clinics, rather than just lab studies. By looking at multiple markers of egg health at the same time, they could get a more complete picture. The study also checked whether body weight mattered—an important detail because body weight affects many hormones and health markers

This study has several strengths: it included a large number of women (1,488), used standard medical markers of egg health, and looked for patterns that other factors like body weight might influence. However, because it’s a snapshot in time rather than following women over months or years, we can’t be completely sure vitamin D causes better egg health—it might just be associated with it. The study also only included women seeking fertility treatment, so results might not apply to all women

What the Results Show

The main finding was that higher vitamin D levels were connected to more developing eggs visible on ultrasound. For every increase in vitamin D, there was a small but measurable increase in the number of eggs. However, this positive connection only appeared clearly in women with lower body weight. In women with higher body weight, vitamin D levels didn’t show the same relationship with egg count. This suggests that body weight is an important factor in how vitamin D affects egg health. The researchers also found that the relationship between vitamin D and FSH (another egg-health marker) wasn’t a simple straight line—instead, it followed an unusual pattern where very low or very high vitamin D levels weren’t ideal, but moderate levels seemed better

The study looked at whether vitamin D was connected to diminished ovarian reserve (when women have fewer healthy eggs available). While the individual markers showed some connections to vitamin D, the overall pattern suggests that vitamin D’s effect on egg health is complex and depends on other factors like body weight. The nonlinear relationship with FSH is particularly interesting because it suggests there may be an optimal vitamin D range rather than ‘more is always better’

Previous laboratory studies had suggested vitamin D helps egg health, but real-world studies in actual patients had shown mixed results. This study helps explain why—it shows that the connection between vitamin D and egg health isn’t the same for everyone. Body weight appears to be a key factor that earlier studies might not have fully considered. This finding helps bridge the gap between what lab studies suggested and what researchers were seeing in actual patients

This study only looked at women already seeking fertility treatment, so we don’t know if the same patterns would apply to women trying to get pregnant naturally. Because it’s a snapshot rather than following women over time, we can’t prove that vitamin D causes better egg health—only that they’re connected. The study didn’t measure other factors that might affect both vitamin D and egg health, like diet, sun exposure, or exercise. Additionally, the study was observational, meaning researchers couldn’t control all the variables like they could in an experiment

The Bottom Line

If you’re trying to get pregnant or concerned about egg health, maintaining adequate vitamin D levels (typically 30 ng/mL or higher according to most health guidelines) appears to be reasonable based on this research. This is especially important if you’re at a healthy weight. However, vitamin D alone isn’t a fertility treatment—it’s one piece of overall health. Discuss your vitamin D levels with your doctor, especially if you’re undergoing fertility treatment. Moderate confidence in this recommendation because the study shows association, not definitive cause-and-effect

Women trying to get pregnant, especially those undergoing fertility treatments, should pay attention to these findings. Women with lower body weight may see more benefit from optimizing vitamin D levels. This is less clear for women with higher body weight, though maintaining adequate vitamin D is still important for overall health. Men and women not trying to conceive should focus on vitamin D for its other well-established health benefits

If you start optimizing your vitamin D levels, it typically takes 2-3 months for blood levels to stabilize at a new level. If vitamin D does help egg health, you’d likely need to maintain adequate levels for several months before seeing potential benefits, since eggs develop over a 3-4 month cycle. Don’t expect immediate changes—this is a long-term health optimization strategy

Want to Apply This Research?

  • Track your vitamin D supplementation or sun exposure daily, and log your vitamin D blood test results when available (typically checked every 3-6 months). Note your body weight monthly to see if changes correlate with vitamin D levels
  • Start taking a vitamin D supplement (1,000-2,000 IU daily is typical, but ask your doctor for your specific needs) or increase sun exposure to 10-30 minutes daily. Log this consistently in the app to build the habit and track compliance
  • Set a reminder to take vitamin D daily. Every 3 months, log your vitamin D blood test results if available. Track body weight monthly. If undergoing fertility treatment, note any changes in fertility markers (AMH, FSH, follicle count) and correlate with vitamin D levels over time

This research shows an association between vitamin D levels and egg health markers in women undergoing fertility treatment, but does not prove that vitamin D supplementation will improve fertility or pregnancy outcomes. Vitamin D is not a fertility treatment. Before starting any supplement regimen or making changes based on this research, consult with your doctor or reproductive endocrinologist, especially if you’re pregnant, breastfeeding, taking medications, or have existing health conditions. Individual vitamin D needs vary based on age, location, skin tone, and other factors. This information is for educational purposes and should not replace professional medical advice.