In Northern China, Ca intake and serum vitamin-D level of adolescents are low due to non-dairy-based diets and insufficient sunshine exposure. Maximisation of bone mineral accretion in childhood and adolescence requires adequate dietary calcium (Ca) intake and body vitamin-D status. This study focused on nutritional adaptation in Chinese adolescents under these adversed conditions by determining Ca absorption (CaAbn) and urinary calcium excretion (CaEx). 16 healthy individuals (12 girls, 4 boys) aged 9–17-y were recruited from Beijing during December. CaAbn was determined by a dual stable-isotope technique (44Ca and 42Ca) coupled with a Thermal-Ionization -Mass-Spectrometer. Mean ± The study showed that growing individuals with suboptimal vitamin D status are still capable of enhancing calcium absorption and reducing urinary calcium excretion to allow adequate bone Ca accretion.