Beta-carotene is a fat-soluble antioxidant commonly found in foods such as fruits, vegetables, and palm oil. Despite various liquid chromatography methods are proposed to detect and measure the sera carotenoid level, a long retention time to elute this marker is needed. This study attempted to develop a rapid reverse phase method in eluding beta-carotene in human sera. The researchers managed to elute the antioxidant in 2.2 minutes by applying a combination of a C8 column, mobile phase comprising of acetonitrile mixed with methanol in 70:30 proportion, and an ultra-high performance liquid chromatography system. The outputs had a good calibration curve (R2=0.959) and low coefficient of variation (0.2%), suggesting this protocol is reliable. A column with a lower carbon chain such as C8 allows the beta-carotene molecule to flow through the column faster. Besides, selecting solvents with high elution strength coupled with an ultra-high performance liquid chromatography system which equipped with high pressure can force the beta-carotene through the column in a shorter duration compared to previous reported methods. Therefore, it is recommended to adopt this protocol in epidemiological studies where beta-carotene is screened as a dietary biomarker associated with disease of interest by using human sera in the population level.