Vitamin C, isolated and named more than 100 years ago, is crucial for good health. Even before it was discovered, vitamin C entered history. A lack of fresh fruits and vegetables on long sea voyages meant sailors were susceptible to scurvy. This sapped their energy and caused pain and shortness of breath. Bleeding gums made it difficult for them to eat the hardtack biscuits that were frequent fare. By the mid-18th century, James Lind of the Royal British Navy had figured out that a ration of citrus juice would prevent scurvy. Although it took decades before the navy implemented his findings, ultimately British sailors were issued lemon or lime juice, earning them the nickname “limeys.” But how much vitamin C do humans need?
How Do We Know? A Seminal Study from World War II:
For years, public health authorities have advised us how much vitamin C we need based on research conducted during World War II. The British navy had already ascertained that the vitamin was essential to prevent scurvy, but ascorbate-rich foods like lemons and oranges were in short supply during the war.
In one experiment, conscientious objectors were deprived of vitamin C for a lengthy period of time. Out of the 20 subjects, 2 developed life-threatening cardiac complications. Eventually they recovered, however, and the British government set the minimum vitamin C requirement at 10 mg per day. That was the amount needed to prevent frank signs of scurvy and wounds that would not heal.
A new analysis of the data from this study seven decades ago comes to a different conclusion (American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Aug. 16, 2021). The original study had included experimental wounds and reports on scar strength. Modern statistical analysis reveals that the study subjects needed more than 10 mg daily to get their wounds to heal properly. According to the researchers, most people would need 95 mg of vitamin C daily to foster healing. Moreover, recovery from vitamin C deprivation takes longer and calls for more vitamin C than the original study concluded.
Too Little Vitamin C Can Lead to Bleeding Gums:
People who have trouble with bleeding gums may not be getting enough vitamin C (ascorbic acid). A meta-analysis of 15 clinical trials shows that bleeding gums and retinal bleeds can be a red flag for low ascorbic acid blood levels (Nutrition Reviews, Feb. 1, 2021). Even when people have blood levels adequate to prevent scurvy (11 to 28 micromol/L), they may still experience bleeding gums that can be rectified with additional ascorbic acid. A supplement of 100 to 200 mg a day or extra servings of foods like peppers, kiwi or citrus fruits rich in ascorbic acid might help.
How Much Vitamin C Should You Get?
Q. My dad can’t drink any citrus juice because it does not agree with him. He eats green vegetables, but not every day. Could he be low in vitamin C? If so, how much vitamin C should he take in a supplement?
A. The recommended dietary allowance (RDA) for ascorbic acid is 90 mg for adult men and 75 mg for adult women. Smokers need more. So do women who are pregnant or breast feeding. (Here is the detailed breakdown.)
Where Was Your Ascorbic Acid Made?
Q. Where in the United States can I buy pure ascorbic acid powder that does not come from China? I like to use vitamin C powder, but I worry that what I buy, even if “organic,” may not be as pure as possible.
A. One of the loopholes in product labeling involves the sourcing of ingredients. In other words, a vitamin tablet or powder may be manufactured in the US, but the raw materials are often imported. Unless a company specifically confirms that it makes its ascorbic acid products from US sources, you can’t assume that it originates here.
How Much Vitamin C Is in Your Diet?
According to the CDC, nearly 16 million Americans get too little ascorbic acid, less than 30 mg a day. Some experts suggest supplementing with 200 to 300 mg a day to be safe. Citrus foods are a wonderful source, but not everyone can tolerate them. Other foods high in ascorbic acid include bell peppers, kiwifruit, broccoli, strawberries and Brussels sprouts. Cantaloupe, cabbage and cauliflower are also rich in this vitamin.
Why You Need Vitamin C:
This vitamin is critical for the immune system, skin and connective tissue and has anti-cancer activity. This vitamin also promotes the absorption of nonheme iron from plant foods, and thus helps prevent iron deficiency anemia. The RDA may protect people from deficiency (scurvy) but it might not dictate optimal levels for good health.
Many people believe that taking extra ascorbic acid can prevent colds. Scientists have not confirmed that, but they have found that people who take the vitamin when they catch a cold recover more quickly and suffer less. Researchers are also studying possible benefits of vitamin C against infections, including COVID-19.
You can read more about unusual uses for vitamin C, such as to calm a cough due to asthma or to protect the stomach from damage caused by aspirin or other NSAIDs. Tell us about your experience using ascorbic acid supplements.
Roy
I began taking 3 grams/day of vitamin C (2 x 500 mg chewable tablet with meals) about 3 years ago and have not suffered from a cold since then. Some would say this is a massive dose, but vitamin C is inexpensive and non-toxic with overdoses leading to diarrhea, so I will continue my regimen.
Joann
I take Vitamin C supplements to help prevent UTIs. A pharmacist told me that some nursing homes would give them to their residents who were prone to UTIs.
Mike
I’ve taken 3 grams a day of ascorbic acid for 55 years, now at 80, 10 grams.
Works for me.
RJ
A few years ago there was a study suggesting that you should get your vitamin C in foods, because vitamin C in supplemental form was linked to heart disease in women. Joe or Terry do you recall this study?
Terry Graedon
RJ, I didn’t remember it, but you prompted me to check PubMed. Confirmed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15531665/. Supplemental vitamin C is associated with cardiovascular mortality in postmenopausal women with diabetes. However, there are other studies that came to different conclusions. Here is an update, a bit technical but quite thorough: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7761826/
Allie
I have inhalant allergies causing sinus problems. When I have a runny nose I take 1000 mg chewable Vitamin C. Dries me up right away. Works for my husband too.
John
I used from 250-500 mg/day of vitamin C, every day, my whole adult life. Then during a stressful period of my 40’s I developed a lot of bleeding/infected gum issues. I did everything I could to improve my oral hygiene for 8 plus years. I got a lot of improvement, but never fully resolved things.
That is, until I tried taking 4000 mg/day of vit. C, as USP sodium ascorbate. In a few weeks I went from bleeding gums every few days, despite great oral hygiene, to perhaps once every few months.
A problem I’d battled intensely for years dramatically resolved by moving from what most would say was high level of vit. C supplementation to about ten times that dose.
I have maintained that dosing for over four years now and continue to have no problems with bleeding/infected gums.
Kathleen
For decades when I felt a cold coming on (maybe a tickle around my nose), I started taking 10 grams of Vitamin C a day, at a rate of about 1 gram every 2 hours, and within 2 days all symptoms were gone. This happened every single time. Vitamin C is water-soluble so what your body doesn’t use, it eliminates pretty quickly. It is also useful to get rid of accumulated water weight.
DD /
Vitamin C is excreted in the urine as the oxalate salt. An excessive amount of C has the potential for causing kidney stones. Limit supplemental intake to <2000 mg per day, and that is a lot.
Terry Graedon
There is not scientific consensus on the amount of supplemental ascorbic acid that may contribute to kidney stones in men, but apparently not so much in women.
Jeff
Wisconsin
I have read everything by Linus Pauling–and many other nutrition pioneers–on vitamin C. The body will get rid of vitamin C if one consumes too much. The *optimal* dose for everyone is different. What medical science gets wrong is that human beings are not “cookie cutter” beings–we’re all different, and may need different amounts of each nutrient for optimal health.
Bowel tolerance is the concept to keep in mind when finding one’s dose of C. And there is a huge difference between being water soluble and the RDA being wrong–2 different concepts.
RDAs are the minimum amount necessary to prevent the deficiency disease for the nutrient–in this case, scurvy. It’s only 10 mg so the government puts in what they believe is a reasonable fudge factor. The amounts needed to prevent illnesses, or even cure, are much higher. And even if those factors were’t relevant (and they are), who can say that they aren’t doing an enormous amount of good work in those higher doses on the way to the kidneys?
I took 18 grams daily for years and felt better and got fewer colds. Vitamin C is cheap and completely non-toxic. The worst thing that will happen if you get too much is some diarrhea that will quickly resolve once its cut back.
dzrlib
I read Dr. Pauling’s book and have been consuming 2-3 grams (2000-3000 mg) per day ever since. It is essential to take the Vitamin C crystals as the pills degrade overtime. Vitamin C is also extremely effetive against viruses.
Gin
Albuquerque, N M 87120
Recently you gave a recipe from Dr Low Dog for a thyme based cough reliever. I had jotted it down not realizing my husband would shortly be coughing, coughing from flu. Middle of the night found me mixing up her formula. Fortunately I had all the ingredients. It worked and hubby has been able to rest the night without coughing.
Marie
When I stayed within the recommended dose of Vitamin C, I was sick all the time – asthma, frequent bronchitis, strep, and pneumonia – and was on frequent prescriptions that did nothing to alleviate my illnesses. I had read about Linus Pauling taking 10,000 mg or 10 grams of Vitamin C every day so I gradually increased toward that amount over a period of years. Ten grams is now my maintenance level.
I have gone up to 12 grams when I was ill and didn’t suffer from loose stools until I once went beyond 13 grams. I have returned to 10 grams on a daily basis. I no longer have asthma and have fewer bouts of the other illnesses named above. And I do not take any prescription medications of any kind. I know this is not for everyone but I just seem to be one of those individuals with a larger need for Vitamin C that other people. I have learned to ignore medical professionals that say I am merely urinating it out. That’s for the general public; this is for me.
Sheleen
Florida
I take 9 grams of vitamin C every day. The recommended amounts are WAY too low. Vitamin C cured my dad of a terrible illness when traditional doctors wanted to give him painkillers and muscle relaxers. He said the more he took, the better he felt. At his worst he was taking 15-20 grams a day. Today, you would never know he was sick. I am a firm believer in Vitamin C.
SJ
Colorado
Back in my twenties I would get UTIs quite often. My doctor finally suggested I take 500 mg of Vitamin C, B-complex with extra B6 and acidophilus with pectin. I did as he suggested and stopped having the UTIs. It was such a relief.
Linda
USA
I have been taking 500mg daily *forever* in addition to whatever is in my multi-vitamin.
Never had any problems with 500mg. I don’t do citrus fruits but I know I need Vit C.
Only recently did I discover that Multi-Vitamins are totally lacking in too many vitamins :(
Dagny
Philadelphia, PA
My first thought in reading your article was, “Good luck finding a Vitamin C supplement in a small dose”. The minimum amount seems to be 500 mg. Why the overkill? I don’t understand this. (Vitamin B-12 is sold in huge doses too, I’ve noticed). I know the general wisdom is that Vitamin C is water soluble and therefore can’t build to toxic levels, but my experience is that it can. I was taking 2000 mg. a day of the time-released kind several years ago and experienced chronic stomach problems which I thought were due to too much magnesium. Now I get the minimum amount in a multi-vitamin and a bit extra from an occasional orange at breakfast or Vitamin C fortified canned fruit. Much better.