Table of Contents

Eight vitamins, one family

The B vitamins are a group of eight water-soluble nutrients: thiamine (B1), riboflavin (B2), niacin (B3), pantothenic acid (B5), pyridoxine (B6), biotin (B7), folate (B9), and cobalamin (B12). Your body can't store them in meaningful amounts, so you need a steady daily supply from food or supplements. Together, they act as coenzymes in more than 300 enzymatic reactions, converting food into energy, building neurotransmitters, supporting DNA repair, and keeping your nervous system running [1].

Deficiency in even one B vitamin can cause cascading problems: fatigue, brain fog, anemia, numbness in hands and feet. And because these vitamins depend on each other, fixing a shortfall often means addressing several of them at once rather than supplementing just one.

How B vitamins power your cells

B1, B2, B3, and B5 work together in the mitochondria to extract ATP from carbohydrates, fats, and proteins. B1 feeds pyruvate into the citric acid cycle. B2 donates electron carriers (FAD) to the electron transport chain. B3 is the precursor to NAD+, a molecule that has gained enormous attention in longevity research because NAD+ levels decline with age, and restoring them appears to improve mitochondrial function in animal studies [2]. B5 builds coenzyme A, which is needed for fatty acid oxidation. Without adequate B vitamins, your mitochondria simply can't produce energy efficiently.

B6 has a different job. It forms pyridoxal-5-phosphate (PLP), the coenzyme behind serotonin, dopamine, GABA, and melatonin synthesis. Low B6 can show up as irritability, poor sleep, or depressed mood before any blood test flags a deficiency.

Methylation, homocysteine, and aging

Folate (B9) and B12 are the workhorses of one-carbon metabolism, the biochemical cycle that supplies methyl groups for DNA synthesis, gene regulation, and detoxification. When this pathway stalls, homocysteine accumulates. Elevated homocysteine is linked to increased cardiovascular risk, cognitive decline, and bone fractures [3].

About 10-15% of people carry the MTHFR C677T gene variant, which slows the conversion of dietary folate into its active form, methylfolate. For these individuals, standard folic acid supplements are less effective; methylfolate or folinic acid may work better. A 2024 study found that targeted supplementation with methylfolate, P5P (active B6), and methylcobalamin lowered homocysteine by 30% in MTHFR carriers over six months [4].

A 2025 meta-analysis of B vitamin supplementation in older adults found high-certainty evidence for a small but real cognitive benefit, particularly in regions without mandatory folic acid food fortification [5]. Combined B6, B9, and B12 supplementation also reduced stroke risk in a separate meta-analysis, especially at moderate doses [6].

B12 absorption declines with age

Of all the B vitamins, B12 deserves special attention for anyone over 50. Between 10% and 30% of older adults have reduced ability to absorb B12 from food, mainly because the stomach produces less acid and intrinsic factor with age [7]. Proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) and metformin make this worse. The tricky part is that standard serum B12 tests can look normal while functional deficiency is already present. Testing methylmalonic acid (MMA) and homocysteine alongside serum B12 gives a much clearer picture.

Untreated B12 deficiency damages the myelin sheath around nerves, leading to tingling, balance problems, and memory loss that can become permanent. Sublingual or injectable B12 bypasses the stomach entirely, making these forms more reliable for people with absorption issues.

B6 toxicity: the exception to "more is better"

Most B vitamins are safe even at high doses because you excrete what you don't need. B6 is the exception. Chronic intake above 100 mg per day can cause peripheral neuropathy, the very symptom that B6 deficiency also produces. Recent case reports have described nerve symptoms at doses as low as 25 mg per day taken over months [8]. The European Food Safety Authority lowered its tolerable upper limit to 12 mg per day in 2023. Stick to a B-complex supplement with physiologic doses rather than megadosing individual B vitamins.

Who benefits most from supplementation

  • Adults over 50 (impaired B12 absorption)
  • Vegans and vegetarians (B12 is found almost exclusively in animal products)
  • People on metformin, PPIs, or oral contraceptives (these drugs deplete B vitamins)
  • Those with MTHFR variants (methylated forms may be more effective)
  • Anyone with elevated homocysteine on blood work
  • Pregnant women (folate prevents neural tube defects; B6 can reduce nausea)
1.

Test homocysteine, not just B12

A serum B12 test alone can miss functional deficiency. Ask for homocysteine and methylmalonic acid (MMA) alongside it. If homocysteine is above 10 micromol/L or MMA is elevated, you may need more B12 or folate even if your serum B12 looks fine.
pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
2.

Check your MTHFR status

About 10-15% of people carry the MTHFR C677T variant that reduces folate activation. If you have this variant, methylfolate and methylcobalamin can be more effective than standard folic acid and cyanocobalamin.
pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
3.

Use sublingual B12 if you're over 50

Stomach acid production drops with age, making oral B12 pills less effective. Sublingual tablets or sprays dissolve under the tongue and enter the bloodstream directly, bypassing the stomach.
4.

Don't megadose vitamin B6

Unlike most B vitamins, B6 (pyridoxine) can cause nerve damage at high doses. The EFSA tolerable upper limit is 12 mg per day. If your B-complex contains more than 25 mg of B6, consider switching to a lower-dose formula.
pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
5.

Watch for drug interactions

Metformin depletes B12 over time. PPIs (omeprazole, pantoprazole) reduce stomach acid needed for B12 absorption. Oral contraceptives can lower B6 and folate. If you take any of these, regular B vitamin monitoring is worth it.
1.

What are the symptoms of vitamin B deficiency?

Symptoms depend on which B vitamin is low. General signs include fatigue, weakness, and brain fog. B12 deficiency specifically causes tingling or numbness in hands and feet, balance problems, and memory issues. B6 deficiency can show up as irritability and poor sleep. Folate deficiency causes a type of anemia with unusually large red blood cells. Many of these symptoms overlap with normal aging, which is why blood testing is the only reliable way to know.
2.

Should I take individual B vitamins or a B-complex?

A B-complex is the safer starting point for most people. B vitamins work together, and supplementing just one can create imbalances. For example, high-dose folate can mask a B12 deficiency. The exception is when blood tests reveal a specific deficiency that needs higher therapeutic doses, like B12 injections for pernicious anemia. In that case, treat the specific deficiency and take a B-complex as a baseline.
3.

Can B vitamins help with fatigue and low energy?

If your fatigue is caused by a B vitamin deficiency, then yes, supplementation can make a noticeable difference within weeks. B1, B2, B3, and B5 are directly involved in mitochondrial energy production. However, if your B vitamin levels are already adequate, taking extra won't give you more energy. The first step is getting tested rather than blindly supplementing.
4.

What is the connection between B vitamins and brain health?

B vitamins support the brain in several direct ways. B6 is needed to make serotonin, dopamine, and GABA. B12 maintains the myelin sheath that insulates nerve fibers. Folate and B12 together keep homocysteine levels in check, and high homocysteine is associated with faster cognitive decline and increased Alzheimer's risk. A 2025 meta-analysis confirmed that B vitamin supplementation has a small but measurable cognitive benefit in older adults [5].
5.

Do vegans need to supplement B vitamins?

B12 supplementation is non-negotiable for vegans. There is no reliable plant-based source of B12, and deficiency can cause irreversible nerve damage over time. Most vegans also benefit from supplementing B2 (riboflavin), which is concentrated in dairy and eggs. A standard B-complex covers both. Getting B12 levels checked annually is a good practice for anyone on a plant-based diet.

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This content was created and reviewed by the New Zapiens Editorial Team in accordance with our editorial guidelines.
Last updated: February 26, 2026

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