Vitamin D deficiency affects 40% of adults in northern latitudes and is associated with higher all-cause mortality. But the longevity benefits of sunlight extend far beyond vitamin D synthesis — nitric oxide, serotonin, and circadian entrainment all play roles.
A 2016 study of 29,518 Swedish women followed for 20 years found that those who actively avoided sun exposure had a mortality rate 2× higher than those with the highest sun exposure. The authors concluded that sun avoidance is a risk factor for death of a similar magnitude to smoking. This counterintuitive finding is explained by the multiple biological pathways through which sunlight affects health beyond vitamin D synthesis.
The VITAL trial (2019, NEJM) — 25,871 participants, 5.3 years — found that vitamin D3 supplementation (2,000 IU/day) did not significantly reduce major cardiovascular events or cancer incidence in the overall population. However, subgroup analyses showed significant benefits in people with low baseline vitamin D levels and in those with BMI <25. The VITAL trial does not undermine the observational evidence linking low vitamin D to poor health outcomes — it suggests that supplementation may not fully replicate the benefits of adequate sun exposure.
Vitaei verdict
Moderate sun exposure has longevity benefits beyond vitamin D synthesis. The Swedish data suggests that sun avoidance carries a mortality risk comparable to smoking. Supplement with vitamin D3 in winter, but prioritise outdoor light exposure year-round for circadian, cardiovascular, and mood benefits.