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Vitamin D is a pleiotropic hormone with an established role in skeletal integrity and broader actions in immune regulation, inflammation, cellular proliferation, and energy homeostasis. Despite decades of research, its extra-skeletal effects remain controversial, largely due to discordant findings across observational studies, Mendelian randomization studies (MRS), and randomized controlled trials (RCTs). Unlike many prior reviews, this state-of-the-art review synthesizes triangulated evidence across these study designs to clarify outcome-specific causal relationships and ongoing controversies. Triangulated evidence provides strong and consistent support for a causal role of vitamin D in skeletal health, particularly in the prevention and treatment of rickets and osteomalacia, and in fracture risk reduction among vitamin D–deficient and older populations. For selected extra-skeletal outcomes, modest and threshold-dependent benefits are observed, including reductions in cancer mortality, protection against autoimmune disorders, most convincingly multiple sclerosis, and decreased risk of acute respiratory infections, including COVID-19, primarily in individuals with low baseline 25(OH)D concentrations. In contrast, associations with cardiovascular disease, metabolic disorders, obesity, and most neuropsychiatric outcomes are not consistently supported by genetic or interventional evidence, suggesting limited or non-causal effects. Across outcomes, evidence indicates a non-linear relationship between vitamin D status and health, with increased risk concentrated at low 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentrations and limited benefit beyond sufficiency. All-cause mortality shows a modest, threshold-dependent association, with supplementation benefits largely confined to deficient or older populations. Key challenges include assay variability, non-linear dose–response relationships, and RCT designs that frequently enroll vitamin D–replete populations, resulting in substantial methodological heterogeneity and limiting causal inference. Overall, the presented triangulated model may reconcile longstanding inconsistencies by reframing vitamin D as a context-dependent determinant of health. These findings argue against indiscriminate population-wide supplementation and support targeted strategies focused on the identification and correction of deficiency. Vitamin D should be regarded neither as a universal panacea nor as a trivial supplement, but as a context-dependent hormone whose clinical value lies in outcome-specific correction of deficiency. Created in BioRender by Dimitra Petropoulou (January 20, 2026) BioRender.com/rd3udxs.