Australia has among the highest UV radiation levels in the world. It also has vitamin D deficiency rates of 23–31% in adults, depending on the region and season. These two facts appear contradictory until you understand that UV exposure is only one step in a multi-stage biological process — and that the later steps in that process depend on minerals that most Australians are not getting enough of.

Table of Contents

  1. How Vitamin D Is Made and Activated
  2. Why Sun Exposure Is Not Enough
  3. Vitamin D Deficiency Symptoms: The Complete List
  4. The Magnesium-Vitamin D Connection
  5. Vitamin D and Hormonal Health in Women
  6. Testing and Optimal Levels
  7. Frequently Asked Questions

How Vitamin D Is Made and Activated

Vitamin D production begins in the skin when UVB radiation converts 7-dehydrocholesterol (a cholesterol precursor) into vitamin D3. This D3 is not yet active. It travels to the liver, where it is converted to 25-hydroxyvitamin D (the form measured in blood tests). From there it goes to the kidneys, where it is converted to 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D — the biologically active form.

Each conversion step requires enzyme cofactors. The liver conversion requires magnesium-dependent enzymes. The kidney conversion also requires magnesium. This is why magnesium deficiency can cause vitamin D deficiency even in people with abundant sun exposure — the conversion pipeline is blocked at the enzymatic level.

The Key Insight

You can sit in the sun every day and still be vitamin D deficient if your magnesium levels are low. The sun provides the raw material; magnesium runs the conversion process. This is why vitamin D and magnesium supplementation are consistently more effective together than either alone.

Why Sun Exposure Is Not Enough

Several factors reduce the practical effectiveness of Australian sun exposure for vitamin D production, even in people who spend time outdoors.

  • Sunscreen: SPF 15 sunscreen reduces vitamin D synthesis by approximately 93%. Australians are correctly encouraged to use sun protection — but this means the skin’s UV exposure for D3 synthesis is dramatically reduced.
  • Glass: UVB radiation does not penetrate glass. Time spent in cars or offices behind windows does not contribute to vitamin D synthesis.
  • Season and latitude: In southern Australia (Melbourne, Hobart), winter UVB radiation is too weak for adequate D3 synthesis, even on sunny days.
  • Age: Vitamin D synthesis in the skin declines by approximately 75% between age 20 and 70, regardless of sun exposure.
  • Skin tone: Darker skin contains more melanin, which provides natural sun protection but also reduces UVB absorption and D3 synthesis.

Vitamin D Deficiency Symptoms: The Complete List

Musculoskeletal Symptoms

  • Bone pain and tenderness (particularly in the back, hips, and legs)
  • Muscle weakness and aching
  • Increased fracture risk (vitamin D is required for calcium absorption and bone mineralisation)

Immune Symptoms

  • Frequent respiratory infections
  • Slow wound healing
  • Increased susceptibility to autoimmune flares

Neurological and Mood Symptoms

  • Depression and seasonal mood changes (vitamin D acts as a neuromodulator)
  • Fatigue and brain fog
  • Impaired cognitive function in older adults

Other Symptoms

  • Hair loss (vitamin D receptors in hair follicles regulate growth cycles)
  • Impaired insulin sensitivity
  • In children: rickets (bone deformity from mineralisation failure)

The Magnesium-Vitamin D Connection

As described above, magnesium is required for the enzymatic activation of vitamin D at both the liver and kidney stages. But the relationship goes further. Vitamin D also upregulates the expression of TRPM7 — a magnesium channel in cells. Higher active vitamin D means more magnesium enters cells. Lower vitamin D means less.

The result is a positive feedback loop when both are adequate: vitamin D helps cells absorb magnesium; magnesium helps activate vitamin D. And a negative feedback loop when both are low: low magnesium impairs vitamin D activation; low vitamin D impairs magnesium uptake.

Shilajit’s ionic magnesium content — delivered via fulvic acid transport for direct cellular uptake — addresses the magnesium side of this relationship. For people with both vitamin D and magnesium deficiency, improving magnesium status is often the intervention that allows vitamin D supplementation to actually work. Read more about ionic magnesium delivery.

Testing and Optimal Levels

  • Vitamin D status is measured via serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D) blood test. In Australia, this test is Medicare-rebatable when ordered by a GP with clinical indication.

    • Deficient: Below 50 nmol/L
    • Insufficient: 50–74 nmol/L
    • Sufficient: 75–150 nmol/L (optimal for most adults)
    • Potentially toxic: Above 250 nmol/L (vitamin D toxicity is rare but possible with very high-dose supplementation)

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best vitamin D supplement for Australians?

Vitamin D3 (cholecalciferol) — the form produced in the skin — is more effective than D2 at raising serum levels and should be the form chosen for supplementation. Doses of 1,000–2,000 IU daily are generally safe for maintenance. Higher doses (3,000–5,000 IU) may be appropriate for correction of deficiency but should be guided by blood test results and a healthcare provider.

Can I get enough vitamin D from food?

Dietary vitamin D is limited. The richest food sources are fatty fish (salmon, mackerel, sardines), egg yolks, and fortified foods. Diet alone typically provides 100–200 IU per day — far below the 600–800 IU recommended daily intake and insufficient for correcting deficiency.

Support Magnesium for Vitamin D Activation

Penantia Pure Himalayan Shilajit Resin delivers ionic magnesium via fulvic acid — the form required for vitamin D enzymatic activation.

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