Mitral annular calcification (MAC) may be a potential marker of biological aging. However, the association of MAC with non-cardiovascular measures, including bone mineral density (BMD), incident renal failure, dementia, and non-cardiovascular mortality, is not well studied in a multiracial cohort. We used data from 6,814 participants (mean age:62.2±10.2 years; 52.9%-females) without cardiovascular disease at baseline in the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis. MAC was assessed with non-contrast cardiac computed tomography at study baseline. Using multivariable-adjusted linear and logistic regression, we assessed cross-sectional association of MAC with BMD and walking pace. Also, using Cox proportional hazards, we evaluated the association of MAC with incident renal failure, dementia, and all-cause mortality. Additionally, we assessed the association of MAC with cardiovascular and non-cardiovascular mortality using competing risks regression. The prevalence of MAC was 9.5% and was higher in women (10.7%) than in men (8.0%). MAC was associated with low BMD (coefficient: -0.04; 95%CI: -0.06 - -0.02) with significant interaction by sex (p-interaction:0.035). MAC was, however, not associated with impaired walking pace (odds ratio:1.09; 95%CI:0.89–1.33). Compared to individuals without MAC, those with MAC had an increased risk of incident renal failure albeit nonsignificant (hazard ratio [HR]:1.18; 95%CI:0.95–1.45) but a significantly higher hazards of dementia (HR:1.36; 95%CI:1.10–1.70). Additionally, persons with MAC had a substantially higher risk of all-cause (HR:1.47; 95%CI:1.29–1.69), cardiovascular (sub-distribution HR:1.39; 95%CI:1.04–1.87), and non-cardiovascular mortality (sub-distribution HR:1.35; 95%CI:1.14–1.60), compared to those without MAC. MAC≥100 vs <100 was significantly associated with reduced BMD, incident renal failure, dementia, all-cause, cardiovascular, and non-cardiovascular mortality. In conclusion, MAC was associated with reduced BMD and dementia, as well as all-cause, cardiovascular, and non-cardiovascular mortality in this multiracial cohort. Thus, MAC may be a marker not only for atherosclerotic burden but also for other metabolic and inflammatory factors that increase the risk of non-cardiovascular outcomes and death from other causes.