3 simple steps to lose weight as fast as possible. Read now

Iron Deficiency in Women: Why It's So Common and How to Fix It

Iron deficiency affects ~38% of reproductive-age women — and many are undiagnosed because ferritin reference ranges are outdated. Here's the full picture.

Evidence-based
This article is based on scientific evidence, written by experts, and fact-checked by experts.
We look at both sides of the argument and strive to be objective, unbiased, and honest.
Iron Deficiency in Women: Causes, Diagnosis, Treatment
Last updated on May 20, 2026, and last reviewed by an expert on May 20, 2026.

Iron deficiency is one of the most underdiagnosed conditions in women’s health. A 2025 JAMA review estimated that in high-income countries, about 38% of nonpregnant reproductive-age women have iron deficiency without anemia, and 13% have iron-deficiency anemia.1 In the third trimester of pregnancy, that number climbs to 84%. These are staggering numbers — and most affected women don’t know they have it because:

Iron Deficiency in Women: Causes, Diagnosis, Treatment
  1. Symptoms are vague and easily attributed to “just being tired”
  2. Standard ferritin reference ranges are too low and miss functional deficiency
  3. Doctors often check hemoglobin alone, which only catches advanced cases
  4. The condition gets normalized — “all women are tired”

This guide covers what iron deficiency in women actually is, why it’s so common, the symptoms, how to get accurately diagnosed, and what works to treat it.

Quick answer

Why women are uniquely vulnerable

Three biological factors plus several modifiable ones create the perfect storm:

Menstrual blood loss

Each period averages 30–80 mL of blood loss, which translates to about 15–40 mg of iron per cycle. Over a year of normal periods, that’s 180–480 mg of iron — a substantial drain that has to be replaced from diet. For women with heavier-than-normal bleeding, the loss can exceed what diet can replace.

Pregnancy

Pregnancy iron requirements roughly double. Maternal blood volume expands ~45%, and the placenta and fetus actively pull iron from maternal stores. By the third trimester, iron deficiency affects up to 84% of pregnant women in high-income country data.1 Many women enter pregnancy already iron-depleted from years of menstrual loss; pregnancy then tips them into overt deficiency.

Prenatal Vitamins: What to Look For and When to Start
Suggested read: Prenatal Vitamins: What to Look For and When to Start

Dietary patterns

Women, on average, consume less iron than men due to smaller portion sizes and dietary patterns. Heme iron (from animal sources) is also better absorbed than non-heme iron (from plants); women who eat less red meat — or who are vegetarian/vegan — have lower iron intake and absorb less of what they eat.

For dietary sources: high iron foods, iron-rich foods for vegetarians and vegans, and ways to increase iron absorption.

Modifiable contributors

The full symptom picture

Iron deficiency symptoms are broader than most people realize. The 2025 JAMA review lists prevalence rates for some less-recognized symptoms:1

SymptomPrevalence in iron deficiency
FatigueVery common
Restless legs syndrome32–40%
Pica (ice, dirt, paper cravings)40–50%
Difficulty concentratingCommon
Hair lossCommon (especially with low ferritin)
Shortness of breathCommon, especially with exertion
LightheadednessCommon
Exercise intoleranceCommon
Depression and irritabilityCommon
Brittle nailsCommon
Pale skinCommon, especially with anemia
Cold hands and feetCommon
Worsening heart failureIn affected patients

The pica symptom is particularly telling — strong, persistent cravings for ice (pagophagia), or non-food substances like dirt, clay, or paper. This is highly specific for iron deficiency. If you find yourself chewing ice constantly, get ferritin tested.

For the broader symptom list: iron deficiency symptoms.

Suggested read: Menstrual Phase: Hormones, Symptoms, and How to Support It

Why ferritin “normal” often isn’t

This is the most important section of this article. The standard ferritin reference range used by most labs is too low and misses functional iron deficiency in many women.

A 2023 paper published in the American Society of Hematology Education Program — titled “Sex, lies, and iron deficiency: a call to change ferritin reference ranges” — argued:

“Studies have shown that 30%-50% of healthy women will have no marrow iron stores, so basing ferritin cutoffs on the lowest 2.5% of sampled ferritins is not appropriate. In addition, several lines of evidence suggest the body physiologic ferritin ‘cutoff’ is 50 ng/mL.”2

Practical implications:

Ferritin levelInterpretation
< 15 ng/mLAbsolute iron deficiency, no debate
15–30 ng/mLIron deficiency in most clinical contexts
30–50 ng/mLLikely functional iron deficiency in symptomatic women — though many labs call this “normal”
50–100 ng/mLGenerally adequate; some experts target above 50–70 ng/mL for women
> 100 ng/mLAdequate; assess for inflammation or iron overload if much higher

The 2025 JAMA review used <30 ng/mL as the diagnostic cutoff in patients without inflammation.1 Even at this cutoff, many women fall through the cracks because their ferritin is in the 30–50 range with significant symptoms.

If your ferritin came back “normal” but you have iron-deficiency symptoms — ask what the actual number was. A ferritin of 32 is not “fine” if you’re exhausted, losing hair, and have restless legs.

How to get accurately diagnosed

The right workup:

Bloodwork to request

How to interpret as a woman

What to do if your doctor dismisses you

If you’re symptomatic, female, and your doctor only checked hemoglobin or used very low ferritin cutoffs to dismiss your concerns:

  1. Ask for the actual numbers — not just “normal”
  2. Bring up the 2023 ASH paper on ferritin reference ranges
  3. Push for a full iron panel if not already done
  4. Consider a second opinion from a hematologist if symptomatic with ferritin below 50

This isn’t paranoia — it’s a documented blind spot in routine care.

Suggested read: Endometriosis Symptoms: What to Know and When to Push

Treatment: what actually works

Address the cause

Treatment isn’t just about replacing iron. The cause matters:

Oral iron — modern dosing

The standard “150–200 mg elemental iron per day in divided doses” recommendation is outdated based on newer research. A 2020 review in Molecular Aspects of Medicine showed that:3

Modern protocol:

This regimen often delivers equal or better hemoglobin response than daily dosing, with fewer GI side effects.

For specific supplement types: iron supplements for women covers the different formulations.

When IV iron is appropriate

The JAMA review specifically lists IV iron indications:1

IV iron is fast and effective but more expensive and requires medical supervision. Modern preparations (ferric carboxymaltose, ferric derisomaltose) are much safer than older formulations.

Suggested read: What Is Perimenopause? Plain-English Guide to the Transition

Timeline for response

Once treatment is correct:

Stopping too early — when “labs are normal” but stores aren’t refilled — is the most common reason for recurrence.

What about diet alone?

Diet matters but rarely fixes established iron deficiency alone in women. The reasons:

Use diet as the foundation for prevention and maintenance, not as primary treatment for established deficiency. See high iron foods, iron-rich plant foods, and ways to increase iron absorption.

What gets missed

A few situations where iron deficiency is particularly under-recognized:

Athletes

Endurance athletes (especially women) have higher iron turnover and frequently develop deficiency. Symptoms include unexplained performance drop, prolonged recovery, and persistent fatigue. Target ferritin in athletes is often higher (>40–50 ng/mL minimum).

Vegetarians and vegans

Plant iron is less bioavailable. Vegetarian/vegan women should:

Women in their 40s with worsening periods

Perimenopause often brings heavier, longer periods. Iron deficiency in this window is very common but often missed because attention is on hormonal symptoms.

Post-bariatric surgery

Both gastric bypass and sleeve gastrectomy reduce iron absorption. Lifelong iron monitoring is appropriate.

Postpartum women

Sleep deprivation often masks iron deficiency symptoms in new mothers. Persistent fatigue 3+ months postpartum deserves a ferritin check. See postpartum recovery and postpartum nutrition.

Postpartum Hair Loss: Causes, Timeline, and What Helps
Suggested read: Postpartum Hair Loss: Causes, Timeline, and What Helps

What to track

If you’re treating iron deficiency:

Iron status changes slowly. Don’t expect transformation in 2 weeks; do expect meaningful improvement by 8–12 weeks.

When to be cautious about iron

A reminder that iron isn’t universally helpful: why too much iron is harmful. Don’t take iron supplements long-term without monitoring — both deficiency and overload have consequences. The treatment is targeted replacement, not “more is better.”

For the “should I supplement?” question: should you take iron supplements. For daily intake: how much iron per day.

Bottom line

Iron deficiency affects about 38% of reproductive-age women and 84% of women in late pregnancy — yet most cases are missed because ferritin reference ranges are too lenient and doctors often check only hemoglobin. The functional cutoff is around 50 ng/mL ferritin in symptomatic women, not the lab “normal” of 10–15 ng/mL. Address the cause (often heavy periods or pregnancy demands), treat with alternate-day morning oral iron at 60–120 mg with vitamin C, and continue for at least 3 months after labs and symptoms normalize. IV iron is the right tool for specific situations. Track ferritin over time. For the menstrual side: iron for heavy periods. For pregnancy: iron during pregnancy. For supplement types: iron supplements for women. For the diagnostic marker: ferritin levels.


  1. Auerbach M, DeLoughery TG, Tirnauer JS. Iron Deficiency in Adults: A Review. JAMA. 2025;333(20):1813-1823. PubMed | DOI ↩︎ ↩︎ ↩︎ ↩︎ ↩︎

  2. Martens K, DeLoughery TG. Sex, lies, and iron deficiency: a call to change ferritin reference ranges. Hematology American Society of Hematology Education Program. 2023;2023(1):617-621. PubMed | DOI ↩︎

  3. Stoffel NU, von Siebenthal HK, Moretti D, Zimmermann MB. Oral iron supplementation in iron-deficient women: How much and how often? Molecular Aspects of Medicine. 2020;75:100865. PubMed | DOI ↩︎

Share this article: Facebook Pinterest WhatsApp Twitter / X Email
Share

More articles you might like

People who are reading “Iron Deficiency in Women: Causes, Diagnosis, Treatment” also love these articles:

Topics

Browse all articles