Does vitamin D and home exercise slow epigenetic aging in older adults?
What the Evidence Shows
We analyzed one assertion on whether vitamin D supplements and home exercise slow epigenetic aging in older adults, and found no support for the idea. The evidence we’ve reviewed suggests that taking vitamin D pills and doing light exercise at home three times a week for three years doesn’t appear to make a measurable difference in how quickly the body ages at the molecular level, based on four different aging tests [1].
We looked closely at what happened in the study — participants followed this routine for three years, and researchers checked their biological age using four separate methods that measure changes in DNA patterns linked to aging. None of those methods showed a clear slowdown in aging. In fact, the results were consistent across all tests: no meaningful change.
This doesn’t mean vitamin D or exercise are useless — we’re only looking at this one specific question about epigenetic aging in older adults using this exact protocol. Other studies might explore different doses, longer timeframes, or different types of movement, but those aren’t part of what we’ve reviewed here.
What we’ve found so far leans toward the conclusion that this particular combination — daily vitamin D pills and light home exercise three times a week for three years — doesn’t influence molecular aging markers in older adults.
If you’re an older adult looking to stay healthy, this doesn’t mean you should stop taking vitamin D or exercising. But if your goal is specifically to slow down aging at the DNA level using this routine, the evidence we’ve seen so far doesn’t show it works.
Evidence from Studies
Update History
- May 20, 2026New topic created from assertion