# Remnant Cholesterol Calculator

> Free remnant cholesterol calculator. Compute remnant cholesterol as total cholesterol minus HDL minus LDL, with published reference context. mg/dL or mmol/L.

*Source: [https://www.health3.app/tools/remnant-cholesterol-calculator](https://www.health3.app/tools/remnant-cholesterol-calculator)*

Calculate your remnant cholesterol, the cholesterol carried in triglyceride-rich remnant lipoproteins, as total cholesterol minus HDL minus LDL. Remnant cholesterol has drawn research attention as a cardiovascular risk marker independent of LDL. Supports mg/dL and mmol/L. Informational reference, not a diagnostic test.

 Tracking your lipids? **See your remnant cholesterol and full lipid trends over time** in the Health3 app.

## What Remnant Cholesterol Is

Remnant cholesterol is the cholesterol carried inside triglyceride-rich "remnant" lipoproteins: mainly VLDL and IDL particles and the partially digested remnants of chylomicrons. On a standard panel you do not measure it directly; you back it out by subtracting the two cholesterol fractions you do have (HDL and LDL) from total cholesterol. Whatever is left over is the remnant fraction.

A large body of cohort and genetic research, much of it from the Copenhagen population studies, has reported that elevated remnant cholesterol is associated with cardiovascular disease risk even when LDL is controlled. It is an area of active study rather than a settled clinical target, which is why this tool presents it as a reference number with cited context, not an interpretation.

 **Formula:** `Remnant cholesterol = Total cholesterol − HDL − LDL`
 Equivalently, `Non-HDL-C − LDL`. Works in mg/dL or mmol/L. If your LDL is a calculated value, the remnant value depends on that estimate.

### Published Research Context

There are **no formal clinical guideline cutoffs** for remnant cholesterol. The orientation below reflects values discussed in published cohort research (for example, remnant cholesterol above roughly 24 mg/dL has been associated with elevated long-term cardiovascular risk). Treat these as **research reference points**, not diagnostic thresholds.

| Remnant cholesterol (mg/dL) | (mmol/L) | Published research orientation |
| --- | --- | --- |
| Below 24 | Below 0.6 | Within the range commonly reported in lower-risk groups |
| 24 – 30 | 0.6 – 0.8 | Around levels linked with elevated risk in some cohorts |
| Above 30 | Above 0.8 | Above the levels commonly cited as a comparison point |

### Explore Related Tools and Topics

 [Non-HDL Cholesterol Calculator](https://www.health3.app/tools/non-hdl-cholesterol-calculator) [LDL Cholesterol Calculator](https://www.health3.app/tools/ldl-cholesterol-calculator) [Cholesterol Ratio Calculator](https://www.health3.app/tools/cholesterol-ratio-calculator) [TyG Index Calculator](https://www.health3.app/tools/tyg-index-calculator) [Cardiovascular Health](https://www.health3.app/topics/cardiovascular-health)

## Frequently Asked Questions

 What is remnant cholesterol? Remnant cholesterol is the cholesterol carried in triglyceride-rich remnant lipoproteins (mainly VLDL and IDL). It is calculated as total cholesterol minus HDL minus LDL. Research, particularly from the Copenhagen population studies, has linked elevated remnant cholesterol with cardiovascular risk independent of LDL, though it is an area of ongoing study rather than a fixed clinical target. What is a normal remnant cholesterol level? There is no formal guideline cutoff. Published cohort research has associated remnant cholesterol above roughly 24 mg/dL (about 0.6 mmol/L) with elevated long-term cardiovascular risk, but this is a research reference point, not a diagnostic threshold. The right interpretation depends on your overall risk and should come from your clinician. How is remnant cholesterol different from triglycerides? Triglycerides measure the fat content of lipoproteins, while remnant cholesterol measures the cholesterol carried inside the triglyceride-rich remnant particles. They are related but not the same. Remnant cholesterol is calculated from the cholesterol fractions on your panel, not from triglycerides directly. Why does my remnant value depend on my LDL? Because remnant cholesterol is total cholesterol minus HDL minus LDL. On most panels LDL is itself a calculated value, so any error in the LDL estimate (for example from high triglycerides) carries into the remnant number. A directly measured LDL gives a more reliable remnant value. Can I enter mmol/L values? Yes. Switch the unit toggle to mmol/L. Remnant cholesterol is a subtraction, so it works directly in your chosen unit and the result is shown in the same unit with the matching research reference band. **Medical Disclaimer:** Remnant cholesterol is calculated as total cholesterol minus HDL minus LDL. There are no formal clinical guideline cutoffs; the context shown reflects published cohort research (for example, Nordestgaard and colleagues, Copenhagen studies) and is provided as a reference, not a diagnosis. If your LDL is a calculated value, the remnant figure inherits its limitations. This tool is for informational and educational use only. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider to interpret your lipid results.
