Pantothenic Acid (Vitamin B5)
What it does
Pantothenic acid, also called vitamin B5, helps the body make coenzyme A, or CoA. CoA is used throughout energy metabolism, especially in the way the body breaks down and builds fats, processes carbohydrates and amino acids, and makes certain compounds the body needs. B5 is found in so many foods that deficiency is rare, but very limited or heavily processed diets can still lower the baseline.
Pantothenic acid is found in many plant and animal foods, so intake is usually covered when the diet has basic variety. The recommended adequate intake is 5 mg, the ideal range shown here is 5 to 10 mg, and no tolerable upper limit has been established. Low intake is uncommon, but heavily processed or very limited diets can provide less.
Coenzyme A production. Pantothenic acid is needed to make CoA, a molecule used in many reactions that move carbon, acetyl, and acyl groups through metabolism.
Energy metabolism. CoA helps the body process carbohydrates, fats, and proteins for energy. This makes B5 part of normal energy metabolism, not a stimulant.
Fat metabolism and synthesis. CoA is needed to break down fatty acids and also to build fatty acids, cholesterol, and other lipid-related compounds.
Acetylcholine production. CoA is involved in making acetylcholine, a neurotransmitter used in nerve signaling and muscle function.
Why pantothenic acid can be inconsistent
Pantothenic acid is named from a word meaning “from everywhere,” and that is mostly accurate. The issue is usually not that B5 is rare; it is that food variety and processing still matter.
Most whole-food patterns cover it. Meat, poultry, fish, eggs, dairy, mushrooms, avocado, potatoes, legumes, whole grains, seeds, and vegetables can all contribute. People eating a varied diet usually cover B5 without thinking about it.
Processing can reduce it. Pantothenic acid is water-soluble, and food processing can cause meaningful losses. Diets built mostly around highly refined foods can provide less than the same diet built around less processed versions.
Severe deficiency is rare. True pantothenic acid deficiency is unusual and usually appears with severe malnutrition or other nutrient deficiencies, not as an isolated everyday problem.
Who may need to pay closer attention
Some people are more likely to have low pantothenic acid intake than others:
- people eating very limited or very low-variety diets
- people whose diets rely heavily on highly refined foods
- people with severe malnutrition or broader nutrient deficiencies
- people with rare pantothenate kinase-related disorders who are already under medical care
None of these factors proves a pantothenic acid problem. They are reasons the overall food pattern or medical context may deserve a closer look.
Best food sources
Liver, fortified cereals, mushrooms, sunflower seeds, chicken, tuna, avocado, dairy, potatoes, eggs, and broccoli all provide pantothenic acid.
| Food | Pantothenic acid per serving |
|---|---|
| Beef liver, boiled (3 oz) | ~8.3 mg |
| Fortified breakfast cereal (1 serving) | ~5.0 mg |
| Shiitake mushrooms, cooked (1/2 cup) | ~2.6 mg |
| Sunflower seeds (1/4 cup) | ~2.4 mg |
| Chicken breast, roasted (3 oz) | ~1.3 mg |
| Tuna, bluefin, cooked (3 oz) | ~1.2 mg |
| Avocado (1/2 raw) | ~1.0 mg |
| Milk, 2% (1 cup) | ~0.9 mg |
| Potato, baked with skin (1 medium) | ~0.7 mg |
| Egg, hard-boiled (1 large) | ~0.7 mg |
| Broccoli, boiled (1/2 cup) | ~0.5 mg |
The variety pattern. Pantothenic acid is not locked inside one special food. Liver and fortified cereal are high outliers, but everyday foods like mushrooms, sunflower seeds, chicken, tuna, avocado, milk, potatoes, eggs, and broccoli can all contribute. The practical gap is more likely low food variety than avoiding one specific source.
How much do you need?
Standard AI
Pantothenic acid has an Adequate Intake rather than an RDA. The AI is 5 mg per day for adults. Pregnancy raises the recommendation to 6 mg, and lactation raises it to 7 mg.
Individual context matters
Most people appear to get enough pantothenic acid through normal food variety. Very limited diets, severe malnutrition, or medical conditions affecting CoA metabolism are the situations where B5 becomes more worth checking.
No established upper limit
No tolerable upper limit has been established for pantothenic acid because toxicity has not been reported at normal or even high intakes. Very large supplemental doses can still cause mild diarrhea or GI discomfort, so “no upper limit” does not mean unlimited benefit.
Forms and supplements
Pantothenic acid supplements are usually straightforward. Most people do not need extra B5 for basic coverage when food variety is decent.
Calcium pantothenate
The most common supplemental form. It is stable and widely used in multivitamins, B-complex products, and standalone B5 supplements.
Pantethine
A derivative related to pantothenic acid. It has been studied mostly in lipid-management contexts, but that is a targeted medical-use conversation, not basic daily B5 coverage.
Dose matters more than form
Because B5 deficiency is rare and food sources are widespread, the main question is usually whether a supplement is needed at all, not whether one form is “premium.”
Nutrient context
Biotin
Biotin and pantothenic acid share the sodium-dependent multivitamin transporter in the intestine. This is usually not an issue at food-level intakes, but it is one reason very high-dose single-nutrient supplement stacks should be handled thoughtfully.
Closing the gap
Pantothenic acid is usually one of the easier B vitamins to cover because it shows up in so many foods. A routine that includes meat, fish, eggs, dairy, mushrooms, avocado, potatoes, legumes, whole grains, seeds, or vegetables will usually bring B5 along with it.
The useful check is not whether one special B5 food is missing. It is whether the diet has enough variety, or whether most of the routine is built around highly refined foods that have lost some of what whole foods provide.
See how pantothenic acid shows up in your usual diet →
The information on this page is educational and does not constitute medical advice. Talk to a qualified healthcare provider before making changes to your diet or interpreting lab results.
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