You started taking vitamin D and now you feel more tired — or you have been deficient for months and fatigue has become your baseline. The relationship between vitamin D and sleep is genuinely more complicated than most articles let on: deficiency causes fatigue, but supplementation does not always fix it, and high doses can actually make things worse through a different mechanism entirely. Your blood levels are the only way to sort out what is actually happening.
Fatigue has multiple biomarker-identifiable causes that overlap with vitamin D deficiency — including low iron, thyroid dysfunction, and B12 deficiency. Superpower's Baseline Blood Panel tests all of them in a single draw, so you can pinpoint what is actually driving your symptoms.
What Vitamin D Actually Does
Beyond bone: vitamin D as a regulatory hormone
Vitamin D is not a conventional vitamin in the dietary sense. It is a secosteroid, a hormone precursor synthesized in the skin from cholesterol under UV-B radiation. After conversion in the liver and kidney to its active form (1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D), it binds to vitamin D receptors (VDRs) found in nearly every tissue in the body. These receptors are present in the brain, immune cells, muscle tissue, the gut, and, relevant to sleep, in regions of the brainstem involved in sleep-wake regulation.
The presence of VDRs in areas of the brain governing circadian rhythm and sleep architecture suggests a direct mechanistic role for vitamin D in sleep regulation, independent of its well-known roles in calcium absorption and bone metabolism.
Vitamin D and fatigue: what the research shows
A 2024 narrative review in Nutrients found that vitamin D plays a significant role in regulating fatigue mechanisms, including oxidative stress, inflammation, neurotransmitter imbalances, and calcium and chloride channel function. These pathways help explain why deficient individuals commonly report fatigue even in the absence of other obvious causes, and why repletion of vitamin D in deficient individuals is associated with meaningful improvements in fatigue scores across multiple clinical studies.
The relationship is most clearly established in deficient populations. Vitamin D supplementation in individuals who are not deficient does not consistently produce fatigue reduction, which is consistent with a threshold-dependent biological mechanism rather than a dose-response one.
Does Vitamin D Supplementation Cause Drowsiness?
At typical supplemental doses: generally no
Standard supplemental doses of vitamin D3, typically 1,000 to 4,000 IU per day, do not reliably produce drowsiness as a direct pharmacological effect. There is no established mechanism by which vitamin D at these doses would cause sedation. People who take vitamin D and notice fatigue are more likely experiencing one of the following: a pre-existing fatigue state that happens to coincide with supplementation, a nocebo effect (the expectation of side effects producing them), or a response to something else in the supplement formulation.
At high doses: possible indirect effects
At very high supplemental doses (above 10,000 IU daily for extended periods), vitamin D toxicity becomes a risk. Vitamin D toxicity is mediated through hypercalcemia: excessive vitamin D drives calcium absorption beyond capacity, raising serum calcium to levels that can produce fatigue, nausea, muscle weakness, and cognitive symptoms. This is a pharmacological toxicity, not a normal physiological response, and it is reliably detectable through blood testing. If you are supplementing high-dose vitamin D and experiencing unexplained fatigue, checking both 25-OH vitamin D and serum calcium is medically prudent.
Timing of supplementation
There is growing interest in whether the timing of vitamin D supplementation (morning versus evening) affects sleep quality. Vitamin D is involved in the regulation of melatonin, the hormone that signals darkness and promotes sleep onset. Some researchers have suggested that evening vitamin D supplementation could interfere with melatonin signaling, though the clinical evidence for this effect is limited and inconsistent. Morning supplementation is the more commonly recommended approach, though definitive timing data are lacking.
Vitamin D Deficiency, Sleep, and Fatigue
The deficiency-sleep connection
Population studies consistently link low serum 25-OH vitamin D to poor sleep quality, shorter sleep duration, and higher rates of sleep disorders including sleep apnea. The proposed mechanisms include vitamin D's role in serotonin synthesis (serotonin is a precursor to melatonin), its direct action on VDRs in sleep-regulating brain regions, and its anti-inflammatory effects (chronic inflammation disrupts sleep architecture). Research supports that in deficient individuals, nutrient therapy including vitamin D may meaningfully reduce fatigue symptoms in both healthy adults and those with chronic illness.
Who is most likely to be deficient
Vitamin D deficiency is highly prevalent, affecting an estimated 40% of the U.S. adult population. At-risk groups include individuals who spend limited time outdoors, those with darker skin (which requires more UV-B exposure for equivalent vitamin D synthesis), people living at higher latitudes, older adults, those with obesity (vitamin D is sequestered in adipose tissue), and individuals with fat malabsorption disorders. Testing is the only reliable way to know your status.
What Your Vitamin D Test Result Means
The standard test for vitamin D status is serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25-OH vitamin D). The Endocrine Society defines sufficiency as above 30 ng/mL; many functional medicine practitioners prefer 40 to 60 ng/mL as an optimal range, though this threshold is not universally agreed upon across clinical guidelines. Values below 20 ng/mL are generally classified as deficient; values between 20 and 30 ng/mL are often called insufficient.
Values above 100 ng/mL with symptoms of hypercalcemia suggest toxicity and warrant clinical evaluation. Reference ranges vary by laboratory and individual; your provider should interpret results in context of your symptoms and supplementation history.
Which Biomarkers Are Worth Testing?
- 25-OH vitamin D — Current vitamin D status; standard screening test
- Ferritin — Iron stores; iron deficiency is a common concurrent cause of fatigue
- TSH — Thyroid function; hypothyroidism produces fatigue similar to vitamin D deficiency
- Vitamin B12 — B12 deficiency is a common cause of fatigue, often co-occurring with vitamin D deficiency
- Fasting glucose + HbA1c — Blood sugar dysregulation as a cause of fatigue
Superpower's Baseline Blood Panel includes 25-OH vitamin D, ferritin, TSH, B12, fasting glucose, and HbA1c in a single draw, covering the most common biomarker-identifiable causes of fatigue and sleep disruption simultaneously.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before making changes to your health routine. Superpower offers blood panels that include the biomarkers discussed in this article. Links to individual tests are provided for informational context.

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