Iron and Ferritin Blood Test Interpretation: Normal Ranges, Deficiency, and Overload

Evallume·Evallume
May 28, 2026
·
6 min read
Iron and Ferritin Blood Test Interpretation Guide

Iron is one of the most critical minerals in the human body — it carries oxygen in your blood, powers your muscles, and supports immune function. Yet iron deficiency remains the most common nutritional deficiency worldwide, affecting an estimated 2 billion people.

A simple blood test measuring serum iron, ferritin, and related markers can reveal whether you have too little iron, too much, or just the right amount. This guide explains each component of the iron panel, normal ranges, and what abnormal results mean.

Disclaimer: This information is for educational purposes only and does not replace professional medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider for diagnosis and treatment.

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The Iron Panel: What Gets Tested

A complete iron assessment typically includes four key markers:

1. Serum Iron

The amount of iron circulating in your blood, bound to the transport protein transferrin.

  • Normal range: 60–170 mcg/dL (10.7–30.4 µmol/L)
  • Important caveat: Serum iron fluctuates significantly throughout the day and after meals. A single measurement is not reliable on its own.

2. Ferritin

The body's iron storage protein. Each ferritin molecule can hold up to 4,500 iron atoms. Ferritin is the single best indicator of total body iron stores.

  • Women: 12–150 ng/mL (µg/L)
  • Men: 12–300 ng/mL (µg/L)
  • Optimal for symptom resolution: Many experts consider levels below 30 ng/mL as functionally low, even when technically within the reference range

Critical note: Ferritin is also an acute-phase reactant — it rises during inflammation, infection, and liver disease, potentially masking underlying iron deficiency. When CRP is elevated, ferritin must be interpreted with caution.

3. TIBC (Total Iron-Binding Capacity)

Measures the total capacity of transferrin to bind iron. Think of it as the number of "empty seats" on the iron transport bus.

  • Normal range: 250–370 mcg/dL (45–66 µmol/L)
  • High TIBC = body is hungry for iron (iron deficiency)
  • Low TIBC = iron overload or chronic disease

4. Transferrin Saturation (TSAT)

The percentage of transferrin that is actually carrying iron. Calculated as: (serum iron ÷ TIBC) × 100.

  • Normal: 20–50%
  • Below 20%: Suggests iron deficiency
  • Above 50%: Suggests iron overload — screen for hemochromatosis

Iron Deficiency: The World's Most Common Nutritional Problem

Iron deficiency progresses through three stages, each detectable by different lab patterns:

Stage 1: Depleted Stores (Pre-latent)

  • Ferritin drops below 30 ng/mL
  • Serum iron, hemoglobin, and MCV still normal
  • No symptoms yet — but stores are running low

Stage 2: Iron-Deficient Erythropoiesis (Latent)

  • Ferritin continues falling
  • TIBC rises (body tries to capture more iron)
  • Transferrin saturation drops below 20%
  • Hemoglobin may still be normal, but red cell indices (MCV, MCH) begin to decline
  • Symptoms may appear: fatigue, difficulty concentrating, cold intolerance

Stage 3: Iron Deficiency Anemia

  • Hemoglobin drops below normal — see hemoglobin normal ranges
  • MCV < 80 fL (microcytic anemia)
  • MCH and MCHC decreased
  • RDW elevated — red cells become variable in size
  • Clear symptoms: persistent fatigue, pallor, shortness of breath, dizziness, brittle nails, hair loss

Who Is at Risk for Iron Deficiency?

  • Women of reproductive age — menstrual blood loss is the leading cause; heavy periods dramatically accelerate iron depletion
  • Pregnant women — iron requirements increase 2–3× during pregnancy
  • Growing children and adolescents — rapid growth demands more iron
  • Vegetarians and vegans — plant-based (non-heme) iron is absorbed at 2–20% vs. 15–35% for heme iron from meat
  • Endurance athletes — exercise-related iron loss through sweat, GI microbleeding, and foot-strike hemolysis
  • People with GI conditions — celiac disease, inflammatory bowel disease, gastric bypass surgery reduce absorption
  • Frequent blood donors
  • Chronic kidney disease patients

Iron Overload: When Too Much Is Dangerous

While iron deficiency gets more attention, iron overload is equally dangerous — excess iron deposits in organs cause progressive damage.

Hereditary Hemochromatosis

The most common genetic cause of iron overload, affecting approximately 1 in 200–300 people of Northern European descent.

  • Transferrin saturation > 45–50% and ferritin > 300 ng/mL (men) or > 200 ng/mL (women) — screening thresholds
  • Iron accumulates in the liver (cirrhosis), pancreas (diabetes), heart (cardiomyopathy), joints (arthritis), and skin (bronzing)
  • Genetic testing for HFE gene mutations (C282Y, H63D) confirms diagnosis
  • Treatment: regular therapeutic phlebotomy (blood removal)

Secondary Iron Overload

Occurs in patients who receive frequent blood transfusions (thalassemia, sickle cell disease, myelodysplastic syndromes) or excessive iron supplementation.

Iron in the Context of Other Blood Tests

Iron markers gain full meaning when interpreted alongside other tests:

  • Complete blood count (CBC) — hemoglobin, MCV, MCH, MCHC, and RDW reveal the hematological impact of iron status
  • Reticulocyte count — shows whether the bone marrow is responding to iron supplementation
  • CRP — distinguishes true iron deficiency from inflammation-related ferritin elevation
  • Vitamin B12 and folate — other common causes of anemia that may coexist with iron deficiency
  • Blood chemistry panel — liver function tests are important when iron overload is suspected

Anemia of Chronic Disease vs. Iron Deficiency Anemia

These two common conditions look similar but have fundamentally different causes and treatments:

Marker Iron Deficiency Anemia Anemia of Chronic Disease
Ferritin Low (<30 ng/mL) Normal or high (inflammation)
Serum Iron Low Low
TIBC High Low or normal
Transferrin Sat Low (<20%) Low or normal
CRP Normal Elevated

Anemia of chronic disease occurs when the body deliberately restricts iron availability to starve pathogens — an immune defense mechanism. Giving iron supplements in this scenario doesn't help and may be harmful.

How to Prepare for an Iron Blood Test

  1. Fast for 8–12 hours — food intake, especially iron-rich meals, affects serum iron levels
  2. Morning blood draw — serum iron is highest in the morning and drops by up to 30% in the evening
  3. Stop iron supplements 48 hours before testing (unless your doctor advises otherwise)
  4. Avoid vitamin C supplements for 24 hours (they enhance iron absorption and can affect results)
  5. Inform your doctor about medications, supplements, recent illnesses, and menstrual history

Iron-Rich Foods: Dietary Sources

If your doctor recommends increasing dietary iron:

Heme iron (best absorbed — 15–35% absorption rate):

  • Red meat, liver, organ meats
  • Poultry (dark meat)
  • Fish and shellfish (oysters, clams)

Non-heme iron (2–20% absorption rate):

  • Lentils, beans, chickpeas
  • Spinach, kale, Swiss chard
  • Fortified cereals and bread
  • Tofu and tempeh
  • Pumpkin seeds, quinoa

Absorption enhancers: Vitamin C, citric acid, meat protein Absorption inhibitors: Coffee, tea (tannins), dairy (calcium), phytates (whole grains, legumes)

When to See a Doctor

Seek medical evaluation if your iron panel shows:

  • Ferritin below 15 ng/mL — confirmed iron deficiency requiring investigation
  • Transferrin saturation above 50% — screen for hemochromatosis
  • Hemoglobin dropping alongside iron markers — anemia requiring treatment
  • Persistent symptoms (fatigue, shortness of breath, palpitations) despite "normal" ranges
  • Ferritin above 500 ng/mL — urgent evaluation for iron overload or underlying disease

Get Your Results Interpreted

If you have an iron panel, ferritin test, or full blood work and want a clear, personalized explanation of every value, upload your results at Evallume for an instant AI-powered interpretation that accounts for your age, sex, and clinical context.

This article is for informational purposes only. It does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Consult a healthcare professional for any medical concerns.

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