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Liver Function

ALT Normal Range: What Your Levels Mean

REVIEWED BY
William Maish, MD MBA MPH
Clinical Product Lead
Published
April 18, 2026
Last updated
June 4, 2026
Key takeaway:

ALT is a liver enzyme that leaks into the bloodstream when liver cells are damaged. Labs typically flag 7–56 U/L as normal, but research links levels above 30 U/L in men and 19 U/L in women to elevated metabolic syndrome risk. Fatty liver disease, affecting up to 30% of adults, is the most common driver of elevated ALT.

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Table of contents

What ALT normal range actually measures

ALT is like a security alarm for your liver. This enzyme lives primarily inside liver cells (hepatocytes), quietly doing its job of processing amino acids. When liver cells get damaged, stressed, or die, they leak ALT into your bloodstream.

Think of it this way: if your liver cells were houses and ALT was furniture inside, you'd only see furniture on the street if something happened to the house. The more furniture (ALT) you see outside, the more damage occurred inside.

Your body produces ALT constantly as part of normal protein metabolism. Even healthy livers release small amounts into circulation as cells naturally turn over. But when ALT levels spike above normal range, it signals your liver is under stress.

Laboratory reference ranges typically show 7-56 U/L as normal for adults, though some labs use 0-40 U/L. Men often have slightly higher baseline ALT than women, and levels can vary by age and ethnicity. The key is understanding what your specific number means in context.

Normal versus optimal ALT normal range levels

Reference ranges tell you what's statistically normal in the population, but optimal health often requires tighter targets. While labs might flag ALT as normal up to 56 U/L, many health experts consider levels above 40 U/L worth investigating.

Research suggests that ALT levels in the upper normal range may still indicate early liver stress, particularly fatty liver disease. Studies show that ALT levels above 30 U/L in men and 19 U/L in women are associated with increased metabolic syndrome risk.

Your optimal ALT range depends on your individual health picture. A 25-year-old athlete might have different optimal levels than a 55-year-old with prediabetes. This is why tracking your personal trend matters more than comparing to population averages.

Consider your ALT in context with other biomarkers. If your ALT is 45 U/L but your AST, triglycerides, and glucose are all optimal, the interpretation differs from having elevated levels across multiple liver and metabolic markers.

What high ALT normal range levels can mean

When ALT climbs above normal range, your liver is telling you something important. The most common cause is non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD, now also known as MASLD — metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease), which affects up to 30% of adults in developed countries.

Fatty liver develops when excess fat accumulates in liver cells, often linked to insulin resistance, obesity, and metabolic syndrome. ALT levels in fatty liver typically range from mildly elevated (50-150 U/L) to moderately high, depending on the degree of inflammation.

Medications can also drive ALT elevation. Common culprits include acetaminophen (especially with alcohol), statins, antibiotics, and anti-seizure drugs. Even supplements like high-dose niacin or green tea extract can stress the liver in some people.

Other causes include viral hepatitis (hepatitis A, B, or C), autoimmune liver diseases, excessive alcohol consumption, and muscle breakdown from intense exercise or injury. Severe ALT elevation (above 1000 U/L) suggests acute liver injury requiring immediate medical attention.

What low ALT normal range levels can mean

In the general adult population, low ALT levels are usually not a health concern and often indicate good liver health and efficient cellular function. Some people naturally have lower baseline ALT due to genetics, age, or excellent metabolic health. In adults over 65, however, persistently very low ALT can also reflect reduced muscle mass or frailty rather than liver health, and is worth discussing with your care team in context.

Very low ALT (below 10 U/L) might occur in people with vitamin B6 deficiency, since ALT requires this vitamin as a cofactor. However, this is uncommon in people eating varied diets.

Certain medications like corticosteroids can suppress ALT levels. Kidney disease might also lower ALT since the kidneys help clear some enzymes from circulation. But these scenarios typically involve other obvious health issues.

If your ALT is consistently low while other liver markers remain normal, consider it a positive sign. Your liver is likely functioning well without significant inflammation or damage. Focus on maintaining the lifestyle factors that support this healthy state.

How ALT is tested

ALT testing requires a simple blood draw from a vein in your arm. No special preparation is needed - you can eat normally beforehand since food doesn't significantly affect ALT levels.

The blood sample gets analyzed using automated chemistry analyzers that measure enzyme activity. Results are typically available within 24-48 hours and reported in units per liter (U/L) or international units per liter (IU/L).

Timing has only a minor influence on results. Clinically significant diurnal variation in ALT has not been demonstrated in the general population, though a small evening shift has been reported in women at a magnitude unlikely to affect interpretation. Intense exercise within 24 hours before testing can elevate levels temporarily.

For monitoring liver health, most experts recommend retesting ALT every 3-6 months if levels are elevated, or annually as part of routine health screening if levels are normal. If you're taking medications that can affect the liver, more frequent monitoring may be necessary.

What can change ALT

Diet significantly influences ALT levels. High sugar intake, particularly fructose from sodas and processed foods, can drive fatty liver development and ALT elevation. Studies show that reducing added sugars can lower ALT within weeks.

Weight loss is one of the most effective ways to reduce elevated ALT. Even modest weight reduction (5-10% of body weight) can significantly improve fatty liver and normalize ALT levels in many people.

Alcohol affects ALT in dose-dependent fashion. While moderate consumption may not elevate levels in healthy people, regular heavy drinking or binge drinking can cause significant spikes. Even stopping alcohol for 2-4 weeks can lead to noticeable ALT improvement.

Exercise helps reduce ALT through multiple mechanisms: improved insulin sensitivity, weight management, and direct anti-inflammatory effects on liver tissue. Both aerobic exercise and resistance training show benefits for liver enzyme levels.

Connecting ALT to related biomarkers

ALT rarely tells the whole story alone. AST (aspartate aminotransferase) is ALT's partner enzyme, found in liver, heart, and muscle tissue. The ALT-to-AST ratio helps pinpoint the source of elevation - liver issues typically show higher ALT than AST.

ALP (alkaline phosphatase) and GGT (gamma-glutamyl transferase) complete the liver enzyme panel. Elevated ALP with normal ALT might suggest bile duct problems, while high GGT often indicates alcohol-related liver stress or fatty liver.

Metabolic markers provide crucial context. Elevated ALT alongside high triglycerides, glucose, and insulin suggests metabolic dysfunction driving fatty liver. Normal metabolic markers with isolated ALT elevation point toward other causes.

Bilirubin levels help assess liver function beyond just enzyme elevation. Normal bilirubin with high ALT suggests liver inflammation without impaired function, while elevated bilirubin indicates more serious liver compromise requiring immediate attention.

Why testing ALT is worth it

Liver disease often develops silently. Your liver can lose significant function before you feel symptoms like fatigue, abdominal pain, or jaundice. ALT testing catches problems early, when interventions are most effective.

Fatty liver disease, now the leading cause of chronic liver disease worldwide, often shows no symptoms until advanced stages. Regular ALT monitoring helps identify this condition years before symptoms appear, when lifestyle changes can still reverse the damage.

ALT trends provide powerful health insights. Rising levels over time might indicate developing metabolic problems, medication effects, or lifestyle factors affecting liver health. Declining levels confirm that interventions are working.

The cost-benefit ratio strongly favors ALT testing. It's an inexpensive test that can detect potentially serious conditions early, guide medication safety decisions, and monitor treatment effectiveness. Given that liver disease often progresses silently, this simple biomarker offers valuable protection for long-term health.

Understanding your ALT levels empowers you to make informed decisions about your health, but these numbers only tell part of your story. Comprehensive biomarker testing reveals how ALT fits into your broader health picture, showing patterns that single markers might miss. Superpower's Superpower Blood Panel includes ALT alongside 97+ other biomarkers, giving you the complete metabolic and liver health assessment you need to optimize your wellbeing. Take control of your health data today.

FAQs

ALT levels above 56 U/L are typically considered high, though some experts consider levels above 40 U/L worth investigating. Mildly elevated ALT (50-150 U/L) often indicates fatty liver disease, while severe elevation above 1000 U/L suggests acute liver injury requiring immediate medical attention.

Normal ALT ranges are generally consistent across adult age groups (7-56 U/L), though older adults may have slightly lower baseline levels. Men typically have higher ALT than women regardless of age. Individual trends matter more than age-specific ranges.

Yes, 63 U/L is above the typical normal range of 7-56 U/L. This level suggests mild liver cell damage or inflammation, commonly from fatty liver disease, medications, or other liver stressors. It is worth investigating with your care team, especially if levels remain elevated on repeat testing.

ALT of 200 U/L is significantly elevated and requires prompt medical evaluation. This level indicates substantial liver cell damage and could result from acute hepatitis, medication toxicity, fatty liver disease, or other serious liver conditions. Your care team will likely recommend additional testing and investigation.

Many health experts consider ALT levels below 30 U/L for men and 19 U/L for women to be more reflective of optimal liver health, even though laboratory reference ranges extend higher. Values in the upper-normal range (30-40 U/L) are associated with increased metabolic syndrome risk in some research, making your personal trend over time important to track.

ALT responds relatively quickly to changes in liver health. Stopping a liver-stressing medication or alcohol for 2-4 weeks can produce noticeable improvements. Dietary changes and weight loss of 5-10% of body weight can significantly lower elevated ALT within weeks to months. Rising ALT from an acute injury like viral hepatitis can spike within days and then gradually normalize.

References

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