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Vitamins in Matcha: What Actually Gets Into Your Body

Most discussions of matcha's vitamin content follow a familiar pattern. They list what the leaf contains, attach some impressive-sounding numbers, and move on. What they rarely explain is the gap between what is in the leaf and what your body can actually absorb and use. That gap is the more interesting story and important when it comes to the health benefits of Japanese green tea.

What Bioavailability Means

Bioavailability is a term from nutrition science that simply means: of the nutrient that enters your mouth, how much actually makes it into your bloodstream and gets used by your body?


A food can be technically rich in a vitamin while delivering very little of it in practice. The reasons vary. Some vitamins require fat to be absorbed. Some break down before you even finish your drink. Some are present in a form the body cannot efficiently convert. Understanding bioavailability is the difference between knowing what is in your tea and knowing what your tea actually does for you.


Matcha contains vitamins A, C, E, K, and a range of B vitamins including B1, B2, B3, B6, and folate. The question worth asking for each one is not just how much is there, but how much of it reaches your body.

Vitamin K: The Clearest Real Advantage

Vitamin K is a fat-soluble vitamin with two well-established roles in the body: it is essential for blood clotting, and it plays an important role in bone health. Research has shown that adequate vitamin K intake can increase bone mineral density in people with osteoporosis and reduce fracture rates.12 In fact, the letter K in its name comes from the German word koagulation, a nod to its role in blood clotting.


The adequate daily intake for adults is 120 micrograms for men and 90 micrograms for women. To put this in everyday terms, half a cup of cooked broccoli delivers around 110 micrograms, which covers roughly a full day's requirement.3 One serving of matcha using one to two grams of matcha powder yields approximately 30 to 60 micrograms, covering 25 to 50 percent of your daily need.4


But the more important number is not the amount in the leaf. It is the amount your body actually absorbs.


Vitamin K does not dissolve in water. This means that in any brewed tea, the vitamin K present in the leaf stays in the leaf and is discarded with it. Your cup contains almost none.5 Matcha, because you consume the entire ground leaf rather than steeping and discarding it, is the exception. The vitamin K in matcha is genuinely available to your body in a way that no brewed tea can match.


This is one of the few cases where the whole-leaf format of matcha creates a real, measurable nutritional advantage rather than just a marketing claim.

Vitamin A (Beta-Carotene): Real, but Smaller Than It Looks

Matcha contains beta-carotene, which is the plant-based form of vitamin A. The body converts beta-carotene into retinol, the active form of vitamin A that supports immune function, eye health, and cell growth.


The daily recommended intake is 900 micrograms of retinol activity equivalents for adult men and 700 micrograms for adult women.6 One gram of matcha contains approximately 595 micrograms of beta-carotene. At first glance this sounds significant.


Here is where bioavailability changes the picture. The body does not convert dietary beta-carotene at anything close to a 1:1 ratio. When beta-carotene comes from whole food rather than a supplement, your body requires approximately 12 micrograms of it to produce 1 microgram of usable vitamin A.7 After that conversion, one gram of matcha yields around 50 micrograms of retinol activity equivalents. A typical one to two gram serving covers roughly 5 to 15 percent of your daily vitamin A requirement.


That is a genuine, meaningful contribution. But it is far smaller than claims suggesting matcha rivals multiple carrots' worth of vitamin A. Those comparisons cite raw beta-carotene content in the leaf, not what the body converts. The benefit is real. The scale of the benefit is routinely overstated.

Vitamin C: Not Matcha's Strength

Matcha does contain vitamin C, but in very modest amounts. One gram of matcha powder provides approximately 0.6 milligrams.8 The daily recommended intake is 75 to 90 milligrams for most adults. A typical matcha serving covers less than 2 percent of your daily need.
Vitamin C is not a meaningful reason to drink matcha. If vitamin C is what you are after, whole fruits and vegetables are a far more efficient source.

Vitamin E: A Quiet Contributor

Vitamin E is a fat-soluble antioxidant that protects cells from oxidative damage. Like vitamin K, it stays in the leaf rather than dissolving into brewed tea. Consuming matcha as the whole leaf means you actually absorb what is there.


One gram of matcha contains approximately 0.28 milligrams of vitamin E against a daily recommended intake of 15 milligrams for most adults.8 A serving covers less than 4 percent of your daily need. It is a contribution, not a solution, but it is a contribution that brewed tea cannot make.

Folate: High Content, With a Twist

Folate, also known as vitamin B9, is essential for cell production and DNA repair. It is most widely known for its critical role in early pregnancy, where deficiency is linked to serious developmental problems in newborns. Outside of pregnancy it supports cardiovascular health and cognitive function.


Matcha's folate content is genuinely impressive. Both matcha and sencha contain reported levels five times higher than spinach and parsley, comparable to dried seaweed, which is among the highest folate concentrations found in any food.9 The daily recommended intake for most adults is 400 micrograms.10


Here is the twist. Research has found that EGCG, the primary catechin in matcha, inhibits folate absorption at the intestinal level. A human clinical study found that drinking green tea alongside a folate dose reduced peak serum folate levels by approximately 27 to 39 percent compared to taking folate with water alone.11 That is a meaningful reduction, not a negligible one.


What this means in practice: matcha's folate content is high enough that even after this reduction, the net contribution to your daily intake remains positive. But the raw folate numbers you may see cited for matcha overstate what your body actually absorbs. The realistic picture is a moderate folate contribution, not an exceptional one.


The takeaway is this: matcha contributes folate, but the catechins that make it valuable work partly against its own folate delivery. If folate is a specific health priority for you, do not rely on matcha as your primary source.

The Honest Summary

Matcha's strongest vitamin story is vitamin K. The whole-leaf format turns a nutrient that brewed tea effectively wastes into something your body can actually use, covering up to half your daily requirement in a single serving.


Vitamin A is real but routinely overstated once you account for how the body processes beta-carotene from food. Vitamin C is negligible. Vitamin E contributes quietly. Folate is a genuine strength, and the catechin-absorption concern, while scientifically interesting, does not appear to matter at normal intake levels.


Vitamins are not why most people drink matcha, and they should not be the headline. The catechins and L-theanine are where the research is strongest. But within the vitamin story, understanding what actually reaches your body gives you a far more useful picture than any number on a label.

At a Glance: Vitamins in Matcha
Vitamin
% of Daily Requirement (per 2g serving)
Meaningfulness
Vitamin K
~50%
Meaningful
Vitamin A (beta-carotene)
~11%
Moderate
Folate (B9)
High content, absorbed amount varies
Moderate
Vitamin E
~4%
Negligible
Vitamin C
~1%
Negligible
Meaningful: A single daily serving delivers a portion of your requirement significant enough to make a real difference to your intake.
Moderate: The contribution is real and adds up over time, but matcha alone is not a primary source.
Negligible: Present in the leaf, but too small per serving to rely on matcha for this vitamin.
References
Tealife is a Singapore-based distributor of premium Japanese tea brands including Marukyu Koyamaen and Ippodo. The information in this article is for educational purposes and does not constitute medical advice.
  • Booth, S.L. (2001). "Human intervention studies have demonstrated that vitamin K can increase bone mineral density in osteoporotic people and reduce fracture rates." PubMed. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/11684396/ ↩


  • Rodríguez-Olleros Rodríguez, C. & Díaz Curiel, M. (2019). "Vitamin K is essential for bone health, taking part in the carboxylation of bone-related proteins and regulating osteoblastic genetic transcription." PMC / Journal of Osteoporosis. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6955144/ ↩


  • U.S. Department of Agriculture. "Vitamin K content of foods: cooked broccoli, half cup, approximately 110 micrograms." USDA Nutrient Database. https://www.ars.usda.gov/ARSUserFiles/80400525/Articles/ift2002_vitk.pdf ↩


  • Office of Dietary Supplements, NIH. "Adequate intake for vitamin K is 120 micrograms for adult men and 90 micrograms for adult women." https://ods.od.nih.gov/factsheets/VitaminK-HealthProfessional/ ↩


  • Lim, L.S. et al. (2005). "Vitamins A, D, E, and K are fat-soluble and do not dissolve in water; vitamin K1 is synthesized primarily in green plant leaves and is not extracted into tea infusions during brewing." ScienceDirect / Food Chemistry. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0308814605007892 ↩


  • Office of Dietary Supplements, NIH. "The RDA for vitamin A is 900 micrograms RAE for adult men and 700 micrograms RAE for adult women." https://ods.od.nih.gov/factsheets/VitaminA-HealthProfessional/ ↩


  • Linus Pauling Institute, Oregon State University. "12 micrograms of dietary beta-carotene from food are required to produce 1 microgram of usable retinol." https://lpi.oregonstate.edu/mic/dietary-factors/phytochemicals/carotenoids ↩


  • Jakubczyk, K. et al. (2020). "Matcha tea is characterized by high levels of antioxidant substances including polyphenols, flavonoids, and vitamin C." PubMed / Nutrients. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32290537/ ↩ ↩2


  • Standard Tables of Food Composition in Japan (Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology). Cited in: Ikeda, R. et al. "Matcha and sencha contain notably high folate levels, reported at five times the concentration of spinach and parsley, comparable to dried seaweed." Journal of Food Composition and Analysis. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0889157507001828 ↩


  • Office of Dietary Supplements, NIH. "The RDA for folate is 400 micrograms dietary folate equivalents per day for most adults." https://ods.od.nih.gov/factsheets/Folate-HealthProfessional/ ↩


  • Alemdaroglu, N.C. et al. (2008). "A human clinical study found that drinking green tea alongside a folate dose reduced peak serum folate levels by approximately 27 to 39 percent compared to water alone, suggesting a meaningful in vivo interaction between tea catechins and folate absorption." PubMed. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/17117344/ ↩

  • About the author:

    Yuki Ishii

    Founder & CEO of Tealife

    LinkedIn | YouTube

    Yuki is the founder of Tealife, a Singapore-based Japanese tea company. He’s passionate about Japanese tea and spends his time testing, trying, and experimenting - then sharing what he learns through content to help people discover the depth of Japanese tea beyond just matcha.