The narrow safety range and associated toxicity risk of supplemental selenium
Selenium is an essential trace element, but the margin of safety between adequacy and excess leading to toxicity is small. Selenium toxicity is well documented in the medical literature and is not theoretical. Therefore, indiscriminate supplementation can pose a real risk over time.
Common reference values (adults):
- Recommended Dietary Allowance (RDA): ~55 µg/day
- Typical adequate intake range: ~55–100 µg/day
- Tolerable Upper Intake Level (UL): ~400 µg/day (chronic intake)
Importantly, the UL is not a target—it is the threshold above which toxicity becomes increasingly likely with sustained intake.
Chronic excess intake (often >200–300 µg/day for long periods, especially when combined with dietary selenium) has been associated with:
- Hair thinning or loss
- Brittle nails, nail ridging
- Garlic-like breath odor
- Gastrointestinal symptoms
- Peripheral neuropathy
- In some studies, increased risk of type 2 diabetes and adverse lipid effects
Now, consider if you are on a carnivore style diet, or similarly on a low vitamin A diet, and you consume something like 1.5 lbs of meat per day. Let’s say you’re getting that amount from either beef or turkey, both are meaningful sources of selenium. Let’s do the math on it.
The typical approximate selenium values are:
- Beef: ~25–35 µg per 100 g
- Turkey breast: ~30–40 µg per 100 g
At 1.5 lb (~680 g) per day, your estimated intake of selenium would be approximately:
- Beef: ~170–230 µg/day
- Turkey: potentially similar or slightly higher
This already places you well above the RDA and in a range that many clinicians would consider fully sufficient. Therefore, your current diet likely already provides adequate to high selenium intake.
Now, consider stacking on top of that food sourced selenium taking a daily supplement such as one that includes 150 µg/day. That could reasonably place your total daily selenium intake near or above 350 µg/day, which is uncomfortably close to the UL—particularly for chronic use.
While it would not immediately exceed the UL on paper, the real concern is chronic accumulation, and factoring in the individual variability in selenium metabolism. Therefore, in the absence of clear clinical need or any upside benefit, why take it? Supplements are not risk free.
If you have been supplementing with selenium for a while, and find that you’re not doing so great, you might want to consider this as a reason.