Foods high in Vitamin K (phylloquinone)
Top food sources of Vitamin K (phylloquinone) ranked from USDA FoodData Central — per 100 g and per serving.
Showing top 50 foods
Per 100 g: µg
- 1
Spices, sage, ground
1 714,5 µg/ 100 g12 µg (1 g serving)1429% DV - 2
Spices, thyme, dried
1 714,5 µg/ 100 g17,15 µg (1 g serving)1429% DV - 3
Spices, basil, dried
1 714,5 µg/ 100 g12 µg (1 g serving)1429% DV - 4
Parsley, fresh
1 640 µg/ 100 g984 µg (60 g serving)1367% DV - 5
Parsley, raw
1 640 µg/ 100 g984 µg (60 g serving)1367% DV - 6
Spices, coriander leaf, dried
1 359,5 µg/ 100 g8,16 µg (1 g serving)1133% DV - 7
Spices, parsley, dried
1 359,5 µg/ 100 g6,8 µg (1 g serving)1133% DV - 8
Amaranth leaves, raw
1 140 µg/ 100 g319,2 µg (28 g serving)950% DV - 9
Chard, cooked
866,2 µg/ 100 g1 299,3 µg (150 g serving)722% DV - 10
Chard, swiss, raw
830 µg/ 100 g298,8 µg (36 g serving)692% DV - 11
Chard, raw
830 µg/ 100 g298,8 µg (36 g serving)692% DV - 12
Dandelion greens, cooked
812,5 µg/ 100 g893,75 µg (110 g serving)677% DV - 13
Spices, poultry seasoning
805,4 µg/ 100 g12,08 µg (2 g serving)671% DV - 14
Dandelion greens, raw
778,4 µg/ 100 g428,12 µg (55 g serving)649% DV - 15
Dandelion greens, raw
778,4 µg/ 100 g428,12 µg (55 g serving)649% DV - 16
Collards, frozen, boiled
623,2 µg/ 100 g1 059,44 µg (170 g serving)519% DV - 17
Collards, frozen, boiled
623,2 µg/ 100 g1 059,44 µg (170 g serving)519% DV - 18
Spices, marjoram, dried
621,7 µg/ 100 g3,73 µg (1 g serving)518% DV - 19
Spices, oregano, dried
621,7 µg/ 100 g6,22 µg (1 g serving)518% DV - 20
Collards, frozen, cooked
621,3 µg/ 100 g1 056,21 µg (170 g serving)518% DV - 21
Collards, frozen, cooked with oil
606,2 µg/ 100 g1 060,85 µg (175 g serving)505% DV - 22
Collards, frozen, cooked
605,4 µg/ 100 g1 059,45 µg (175 g serving)505% DV - 23
Collards, frozen, cooked with butter or margarine
604,6 µg/ 100 g1 058,05 µg (175 g serving)504% DV - 24
Mustard greens, cooked, boiled
592,7 µg/ 100 g829,78 µg (140 g serving)494% DV - 25
Mustard greens, cooked, boiled
592,7 µg/ 100 g829,78 µg (140 g serving)494% DV - 26
Spinach, cooked
568,1 µg/ 100 g473% DV - 27
Spinach, fresh, cooked
566,4 µg/ 100 g1 019,52 µg (180 g serving)472% DV - 28
Cress, cooked
566,3 µg/ 100 g792,82 µg (140 g serving)472% DV - 29
Spinach, fresh, cooked with oil
553,4 µg/ 100 g1 023,79 µg (185 g serving)461% DV - 30
Spinach, NS as to form, cooked
552,4 µg/ 100 g1 021,94 µg (185 g serving)460% DV - 31
Spinach, fresh, cooked
552,4 µg/ 100 g1 021,94 µg (185 g serving)460% DV - 32
Spinach, fresh, cooked with butter or margarine
551,5 µg/ 100 g1 020,28 µg (185 g serving)460% DV - 33
Dandelion greens, cooked, boiled
551,4 µg/ 100 g578,97 µg (105 g serving)460% DV - 34
Cress, garden, raw
541,9 µg/ 100 g270,95 µg (50 g serving)452% DV - 35
Cress, raw
541,9 µg/ 100 g270,95 µg (50 g serving)452% DV - 36
Spinach, frozen, boiled
540,7 µg/ 100 g513,67 µg (95 g serving)451% DV - 37
Spinach, frozen, boiled
540,7 µg/ 100 g513,67 µg (95 g serving)451% DV - 38
Spinach, frozen, cooked
539,1 µg/ 100 g1 159,07 µg (215 g serving)449% DV - 39
Spinach, frozen, cooked with oil
526,3 µg/ 100 g1 157,86 µg (220 g serving)439% DV - 40
Spinach, frozen, cooked
525,5 µg/ 100 g1 156,1 µg (220 g serving)438% DV - 41
Spinach, frozen, cooked with butter or margarine
524,7 µg/ 100 g1 154,34 µg (220 g serving)437% DV - 42
Turnip greens, frozen, boiled
518,9 µg/ 100 g425,5 µg (82 g serving)432% DV - 43
Turnip greens, frozen, boiled
518,9 µg/ 100 g851 µg (164 g serving)432% DV - 44
Turnip greens, frozen, cooked
517,3 µg/ 100 g853,55 µg (165 g serving)431% DV - 45
Turnip greens, frozen, cooked
504,4 µg/ 100 g857,48 µg (170 g serving)420% DV - 46
Greens, frozen, cooked
500,4 µg/ 100 g850,68 µg (170 g serving)417% DV - 47
Stinging Nettles, blanched (Northern Plains Indians)
498,6 µg/ 100 g443,75 µg (89 g serving)416% DV - 48
Lambsquarters, cooked, boiled
494,2 µg/ 100 g889,56 µg (180 g serving)412% DV - 49
Lambsquarters, cooked, boiled
494,2 µg/ 100 g889,56 µg (180 g serving)412% DV - 50
Spinach, cooked, boiled
493,6 µg/ 100 g888,48 µg (180 g serving)411% DV
Why Vitamin K (phylloquinone) matters
Vitamin K (phylloquinone) is an essential vitamin. It appears naturally in a range of whole foods and is catalogued by USDA FoodData Central with per-100 g values for thousands of ingredients. The ranked list above surfaces the highest-density food sources in the USDA dataset.
Daily intake reference
| Adult Daily Value (DV) | 120 µg per day |
|---|
Best for these diets
The highest-ranking Vitamin K (phylloquinone) foods fit naturally into these dietary patterns:
Explore other nutrients
Browse top food sources for other vitamins and minerals:
Build a plan that hits your Vitamin K (phylloquinone) target
Melio generates personalized meal plans tuned to your macro, vitamin, and mineral goals — Vitamin K (phylloquinone) included.
Create my meal plan