Alkaline phosphatase (ALP) is an enzyme produced mainly in the liver, bile ducts and bones. A small change above or below normal is common and rarely urgent. Very high ALP can point to a problem with the liver, bile ducts or bone metabolism and is the kind of result clinicians follow up on. This guide explains what counts as normal, where the line moves from “mildly elevated” to “needs evaluation soon,” and what doctors look for next.
There is no single “dangerous” ALP number. The typical adult reference range is roughly 44 to 147 IU/L. Values up to about twice the upper limit are often non-serious. ALP more than four to five times the upper limit (for adults, roughly above 500-700 IU/L) is more likely to reflect liver, bile duct or bone disease and should be evaluated by a clinician promptly. The clinical picture and other lab results decide urgency, not the number alone.
ALP Ranges at a Glance (Drawing)
Reference Ranges (Adults)
The single biggest mistake when reading an ALP result is comparing it to a generic number on the internet instead of the reference range printed on your own lab report. Labs use different reagents and calibrations.
What Alkaline Phosphatase Actually Is
Alkaline phosphatase is an enzyme family that helps move phosphate around the body. The main sources of ALP measured in blood are:
- Liver and bile ducts: most adult ALP comes from here.
- Bone: second biggest source. High during growth, in pregnancy, and after fractures.
- Intestine: small contribution, can rise after a meal in some people.
- Placenta: rises in pregnancy, especially the third trimester.
- Kidney: small contribution.
Because ALP comes from several tissues, an elevated total ALP does not tell the doctor which tissue is the source. A follow-up test called isoenzyme fractionation or a related liver test (GGT) helps separate liver ALP from bone ALP.
Reference Ranges by Age and Group
| Group | Typical reference range (IU/L) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Infants (0-1 year) | up to ~470 | Very high in healthy babies due to bone growth |
| Children and adolescents (1-15 years) | ~100-400 | Higher during growth spurts, especially puberty |
| Adult men (over 18) | ~40-129 | Lab-specific. Often combined with ALT, AST and GGT |
| Adult women (non-pregnant) | ~35-104 | Lab-specific |
| Pregnant women (third trimester) | up to ~240 | Placental ALP raises the total physiologically |
| Adults over 60 | Often slightly higher than younger adults | Mild rise can be age-related |
Ranges above are illustrative. Always read the reference range your laboratory prints next to your result.
Common Causes of High ALP
How Doctors Sort Out the Cause
When ALP is high, the next step is usually not more ALP testing but tests that pinpoint the source. The standard pairing:
| Follow-up test | What it tells the doctor |
|---|---|
| GGT (gamma-glutamyl transferase) | High GGT with high ALP suggests a liver or bile duct source. Normal GGT with high ALP suggests a bone source. |
| ALT and AST | Liver enzymes; elevated together with ALP point to liver inflammation. |
| Bilirubin | Elevated bilirubin with high ALP suggests blocked bile flow (cholestasis). |
| Calcium, phosphate, vitamin D, PTH | Help evaluate bone causes (Paget disease, osteomalacia, vitamin D deficiency). |
| ALP isoenzymes / bone-specific ALP | Direct way to separate liver ALP from bone ALP if GGT is unclear. |
| Imaging (ultrasound, MRI) | Ordered when liver or bile duct disease is suspected. |
Causes of Low ALP
Low ALP is less common than high ALP but worth flagging.
- Severe malnutrition or protein deficiency
- Zinc deficiency or magnesium deficiency
- Hypothyroidism
- Severe anemia
- Wilson disease
- Celiac disease
- Hypophosphatasia (rare inherited disorder; can affect bones and teeth)
- Some hormone replacement and oral contraceptive use
Persistently low ALP should be discussed with a clinician, especially when paired with symptoms like dental problems, bone pain or fractures.
Symptoms That Should Prompt a Doctor Visit
Seek medical attention if ALP elevation is paired with any of the following
- Yellowing of the skin or eyes (jaundice)
- Dark urine or pale clay-colored stool
- Severe or persistent abdominal pain, especially in the upper right side
- Unexplained weight loss, fever or night sweats
- Persistent itching of the skin without a rash
- Bone pain, easy fractures or new bone deformities
- Severe nausea, vomiting or new confusion
These can indicate liver, bile duct or bone conditions that need timely evaluation. Severe symptoms (acute severe abdominal pain, jaundice with high fever, confusion) are an emergency.
What Doctors Use to Decide “How Dangerous”
Clinicians do not look at ALP in isolation. They consider:
- The full liver panel (ALT, AST, GGT, bilirubin, albumin) and how each one moves.
- How elevated the number is compared to the laboratory upper limit.
- The patient’s age and life stage (a high ALP in a 14-year-old growing fast is different from a high ALP in a 70-year-old).
- Symptoms (jaundice, pain, bone changes, recent fracture).
- Medications the person is taking.
- Trend over time: an ALP that doubles every six months is different from one that has sat slightly above the limit for years.
Authoritative References
- Mayo Clinic on liver function tests including ALP: Mayo Clinic, Liver function tests
- Cleveland Clinic alkaline phosphatase overview: Cleveland Clinic, Alkaline phosphatase
- U.S. National Library of Medicine MedlinePlus: MedlinePlus, ALP test
- NIH StatPearls clinical chapter on alkaline phosphatase: NIH StatPearls, Alkaline phosphatase
- Lab Tests Online (managed by the American Association for Clinical Chemistry): Testing.com, ALP test
FAQs
What is the normal range for alkaline phosphatase?
In adults the normal range is roughly 44 to 147 IU/L, but every laboratory sets its own reference range based on its method. Children and pregnant women are normally higher. Read the reference range printed on your lab report.
What ALP level is considered high?
Anything above your lab’s upper limit is flagged high. A mild rise is often non-serious. ALP at two times the upper limit usually prompts more testing, and ALP at four times or more often points to a specific condition that needs evaluation.
What ALP level is dangerous?
There is no universal “dangerous” number. ALP is a marker, not a disease. A markedly elevated result (often described as more than four to five times the upper limit) is more likely to reflect serious liver, bile duct or bone disease and should be reviewed by a clinician quickly. Severity also depends on symptoms, trend, age and other labs.
What causes elevated alkaline phosphatase?
Common causes include bile duct obstruction, hepatitis, cirrhosis, certain medications, Paget disease of bone, healing fractures, bone cancer or metastases, vitamin D deficiency, hyperthyroidism, pregnancy and rapid growth in children.
What does low alkaline phosphatase mean?
Low ALP is less common. It can relate to malnutrition, zinc or magnesium deficiency, hypothyroidism, severe anemia, celiac disease, Wilson disease and hypophosphatasia (a rare inherited condition). Persistently low results should be reviewed by a clinician.
Should I worry about a slightly elevated ALP?
A mild elevation is often not serious, particularly in children, adolescents, pregnant women and people with a recent fracture. The doctor usually repeats the test and orders related labs (ALT, AST, GGT, bilirubin, calcium, vitamin D) to find or rule out a cause.
Final Answer
There is no single ALP number that automatically means “dangerous.” A typical adult reference range is around 44 to 147 IU/L. Mild elevations are common and often non-urgent. Levels at two times the upper limit usually warrant follow-up testing, and levels at four to five times or more (roughly above 500-700 IU/L in adults) are more likely to indicate a serious liver, bile duct or bone condition that should be evaluated promptly. What matters is the cause, not the number alone, and that is what your healthcare provider is best placed to interpret using the full picture of your symptoms, history and other lab results.
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