Vitamin B12 is naturally present in foods of animal origin, including fish, meat, poultry, eggs and dairy products (milk, eggs, cheese), yeast extracts and fortified breakfast cereals.
A variety of foods and their vitamin B12 levels per serving are detailed in the table below:
  | Micrograms  | Percent  | 
Beef liver, cooked, pan-fried, 3 ounces  | 70.7  | 2,944  | 
Clams (without shells), cooked, 3 ounces  | 17  | 708  | 
Tuna, bluefin, cooked, dry heat, 3 ounces  | 9.3  | 385  | 
Nutritional yeast, fortified, from several brands (check label), about ¼ cup  | 8.3 to 24  | 346 to 1,000  | 
Salmon, Atlantic, cooked, 3 ounces  | 2.6  | 108  | 
Beef, ground, 85% lean meat/15% fat, pan-browned, 3 ounces  | 2.4  | 100  | 
Milk, 2% milkfat, 1 cup  | 1.3  | 54  | 
Yogurt, plain, fat free, 6-ounce container  | 1.0  | 43  | 
Breakfast cereals, fortified with 25% of the DV for vitamin B12, 1 serving  | 0.6  | 25  | 
Cheese, cheddar, 1½ ounces  | 0.5  | 19  | 
Egg, whole, cooked, 1 large  | 0.5  | 19  | 
Turkey, breast meat, roasted, 3 ounces  | 0.3  | 14  | 
Tempeh, 1/2 cup  | 0.1  | 3  | 
Banana, 1 medium  | 0.0  | 0  | 
Bread, whole-wheat, 1 slice  | 0.0  | 0  | 
Strawberries, raw, halved, 1/2 cup  | 0.0  | 0  | 
Beans, kidney, boiled, 1/2 cup  | 0.0  | 0  | 
Spinach, boiled, drained, 1/2 cup  | 0.0  | 0  | 
Notes:
Stores of vitamin B12 in the liver remain in the body for years, so vitamin B12 deficiency depends on chronic, long-term deficiency.
Reference:
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