Iron deficiency Is the world's most common nutritional deficiency, and premenopausal women are the highest-risk group due to menstrual blood loss
Ferritin ≠ haemoglobin Standard blood counts measure circulating haemoglobin: not ferritin stores. Both can be normal on FBC while ferritin is depleted
6–12 months Typical timeframe for hair regrowth to become visible after ferritin levels have been restored to an optimal range

Why ferritin is the number your doctor ignores

Ferritin is how your body stores iron, which means it's the early warning system. When you don't eat enough iron or you're losing blood (heavy periods), your body uses ferritin stores to keep your haemoglobin normal. Here's the catch: your blood test can look totally fine while your iron stores are getting depleted, and that depletion state is exactly when hair shedding happens.

Hair follicles are metabolically demanding: they need lots of iron to sustain the rapid cell division during growth. When iron drops, your body rations it to vital organs first, treating hair as non-essential. Follicles respond by cutting their growth phase short and shedding more, creating the diffuse shedding pattern called telogen effluvium.

Research Note

A 2006 review by Rushton in the Journal of Cosmetic Dermatology found that serum ferritin levels below 40 µg/L were associated with increased hair shedding in women, even when haemoglobin remained normal. Subsequent dermatology literature has discussed threshold levels for hair-related iron sufficiency: the key point being that "normal" on a standard lab reference range may not reflect the level required to sustain optimal hair follicle function. Your doctor can discuss what level is relevant in your specific context.

Who runs the highest ferritin depletion risk

If you have heavy periods, you're losing iron faster than most diets can replace it, which means you're in a constant deficit. Vegetarians and vegans get their iron from plants, which your body absorbs much less efficiently than iron from meat. Plant iron is maybe 2–20% absorbable while meat iron is 15–35% absorbable, so you need to be strategic about sources and absorption timing.

Endurance athletes (especially runners) lose iron through sweat and gut bleeding, so they're vulnerable too. Post-bariatric surgery patients absorb iron poorly and need monitoring. Early pregnancy cranks up your iron needs hard. If any of these apply to you, low ferritin is not just possible: it's likely.

How to Request the Right Test

When asking your doctor about iron and hair loss, specifically request "serum ferritin": a full blood count alone will not measure it. Some doctors may need context about why ferritin specifically is relevant to hair loss, rather than just haemoglobin. A complete picture of iron status includes ferritin, serum iron, transferrin saturation, and haemoglobin together. Though ferritin is the most sensitive early indicator of iron depletion.

But ferritin might not be the real culprit

Hair shedding has multiple causes. Ferritin is just one. A real hair loss workup needs thyroid function, full blood count, vitamin D, zinc, and hormones if you suspect pattern hair loss. Many women misattribute thyroid-driven loss to iron deficiency and waste months on supplements that don't help.

What to ask your doctor

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Don't start supplementing without testing first

Iron supplementation without confirmed deficiency can cause significant side effects. Including gastrointestinal distress, constipation, and in rare cases, iron overload in women with certain genetic conditions (including haemochromatosis). Testing before supplementing is important, and the form, dose, and duration of supplementation should be guided by your actual results and your doctor's advice, not general online recommendations.

Medical Disclaimer: This article is for informational and educational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition.

References

  1. Rushton DH. Nutritional factors and hair loss. Clin Exp Dermatol. 2002;27(5):396-404. PubMed
  2. Trost LB, Bergfeld WF, Calogeras E. The diagnosis and treatment of iron deficiency and its potential relationship to hair loss. J Am Acad Dermatol. 2006;54(5):824-844. PubMed
  3. Almohanna HM, Ahmed AA, Tsatalis JP, Tosti A. The Role of Vitamins and Minerals in Hair Loss: A Review. Dermatol Ther (Heidelb). 2019;9(1):51-70. PMC