Health & Wellness Plan

Lab tests › Bilirubin

Liver

Bilirubin: Normal Range and What High Bilirubin Means

Bilirubin is a yellow pigment made when old red blood cells break down; the liver clears it. When it builds up, the eyes and skin can turn yellow — jaundice.

Normal Bilirubin range

A typical total bilirubin range is about 0.1–1.2 mg/dL. Use your report's range.

What a high Bilirubin means

High bilirubin can cause yellowing of the eyes and skin, dark urine and pale stools. Causes range from a harmless inherited trait to liver or bile-duct problems.

Common causes:

What a low Bilirubin means

A low bilirubin is not a health concern.

Food & lifestyle that help

Favour

  • A liver-friendly diet with vegetables and whole grains
  • Plenty of water

Limit

  • Alcohol
  • Fried and very oily food

When to see a doctor

See a doctor promptly if you have yellow eyes or skin, dark urine or pale stools — the cause needs to be identified.

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Frequently asked questions

What is a normal bilirubin level?

Total bilirubin is usually about 0.1–1.2 mg/dL, varying by lab.

Is mildly high bilirubin dangerous?

Often not — a mild rise can be Gilbert's syndrome, a harmless inherited trait. But new jaundice should always be checked by a doctor.

Not medical advice. This is general information. Bilirubin results must be interpreted alongside your other results and history by a qualified doctor. Reference ranges vary by lab — use the range on your own report.

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