Health & Wellness Plan

Lab tests › Calcium

Metabolic

Blood Calcium: Normal Range and What High or Low Means

Calcium keeps bones, muscles and nerves working. Your blood calcium is tightly controlled, so an abnormal level is worth understanding — and it's closely linked to vitamin D.

Normal Calcium range

A typical total calcium range is about 8.5–10.5 mg/dL (ionised calcium ~1.15–1.35 mmol/L). Use your report's range.

What a high Calcium means

High calcium (hypercalcemia) can cause tiredness, thirst, constipation and kidney stones. It often relates to the parathyroid glands or too much vitamin D.

Common causes:

What a low Calcium means

Low calcium (hypocalcemia) can cause tingling, muscle cramps and, if severe, spasms. Vitamin D deficiency is a common contributor.

Food & lifestyle that help

Favour

  • Milk, curd and paneer
  • Ragi (finger millet) and sesame (til)
  • Leafy greens
  • Enough vitamin D to absorb calcium

Limit

  • Very high-dose calcium supplements without advice
  • Excess salt and fizzy drinks

When to see a doctor

See a doctor to interpret an abnormal calcium together with vitamin D and kidney function, and before starting high-dose supplements.

See what your whole report means

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Frequently asked questions

What is a normal calcium level?

Roughly 8.5–10.5 mg/dL for total calcium, though labs differ.

Does low calcium mean weak bones?

Blood calcium and bone strength aren't the same. Low blood calcium often points to vitamin D or other issues; bone health is assessed differently.

Not medical advice. This is general information. Calcium 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.

Other lab tests