A complete blood count tells you whether you have anemia. It does not tell you whether your iron stores are depleted. Ferritin is the storage protein that reveals your body’s iron reserves, and it is the marker most doctors never order. Low ferritin with normal CBC is one of the most common and most consistently missed causes of fatigue, hair loss, brain fog, and shortness of breath in women.
Normal hemoglobin and hematocrit mean you do not have anemia. They do not mean your iron stores are adequate. Ferritin is the protein that stores iron in your body’s tissues, and it can be critically low for months or years before anemia develops. During that entire time, your cells are starved of the iron they need to produce energy, support thyroid function, grow healthy hair, and regulate neurotransmitters.
Iron deficiency without anemia is an established clinical diagnosis. It has a defined set of symptoms, a specific treatment protocol, and a single test that identifies it. That test is ferritin. I order it every time I run an iron assessment, because leaving it out is leaving out the only marker that tells you whether your iron stores are actually sufficient.
Understanding the Test
Ferritin is a protein that stores iron in cells and tissues throughout the body. Serum ferritin is the blood measure of this iron reserve. When iron intake or absorption is insufficient, the body draws on ferritin stores first, before serum iron levels drop and long before hemoglobin falls. This means ferritin is the earliest and most sensitive indicator of iron depletion, and the only marker that reflects whether your iron stores are adequate rather than simply whether you are anemic right now.
The clinical consequence of this biology is that a person can have completely normal hemoglobin, hematocrit, and serum iron while their ferritin is critically low. Every other iron marker on the CBC looks fine. Only ferritin reveals the problem. This is why iron deficiency without anemia is so consistently missed in conventional medicine: the standard CBC does not include ferritin, and the test that would explain years of fatigue, hair loss, and brain fog is simply never ordered.
I run ferritin as a standard component of every iron assessment and interpret it using a functional optimal range rather than the standard lab floor of 12 ng/mL. In clinical practice, most women do not feel well until ferritin is above 50 ng/mL, and optimal for hair and energy is generally considered to be between 70 and 90 ng/mL. A ferritin of 14 ng/mL is technically “not flagged” by standard labs. Clinically, it explains everything.
Ferritin is also an acute phase reactant, meaning it rises with inflammation even when iron stores are low. This is an important nuance in interpretation: a ferritin in the normal range in someone with chronic inflammation may be masking genuine iron depletion. Context matters, which is why I always assess ferritin alongside the full panel and in the clinical context of each client’s history.
The Clinical Diagnosis Most Doctors Miss
Iron deficiency without anemia (IDWA) is a recognized clinical entity in the medical literature. It describes the state of depleted iron stores with preserved hemoglobin and normal CBC. It is extremely common, particularly in women of reproductive age, and it is almost universally missed because the test that identifies it — ferritin — is not included in a standard CBC or basic iron panel.
The body prioritizes hemoglobin production above all other iron-dependent functions. It will sacrifice iron stores, thyroid conversion, hair growth, neurotransmitter synthesis, and mitochondrial energy production long before hemoglobin falls below the standard cutoff. By the time a CBC shows anemia, iron stores have been depleted for a considerable period. Ferritin catches the problem at stage one, not stage three.
This is the most important clinical point on this page. A complete blood count measures hemoglobin, hematocrit, red blood cell count, MCV, and related indices. None of these directly measure iron stores. A person can have a perfect CBC and a ferritin of 9 ng/mL simultaneously. The CBC simply does not contain the information needed to assess whether iron stores are adequate. Only ferritin does that.
Many labs set the lower limit of normal ferritin at 12 ng/mL. Research on symptom resolution consistently shows that women do not experience meaningful symptom improvement until ferritin is above 50 ng/mL, and most feel their best above 70 ng/mL. A ferritin of 18 ng/mL will not be flagged. It will also not support normal hair growth, adequate energy production, or optimal thyroid conversion.
If you have been told your iron is fine because your CBC is normal, ferritin has likely not been tested. Or it was tested and read at 18 ng/mL, which is technically not flagged but is clinically insufficient. Running the full panel and interpreting ferritin against a functional reference range rather than a standard lab floor is the difference between finding the diagnosis and missing it entirely.
What Low Ferritin Looks Like Clinically
The symptoms of low ferritin are wide-ranging because iron is required for so many fundamental biological processes. Energy production, hair follicle maintenance, neurotransmitter synthesis, thyroid hormone conversion, and immune function all depend on adequate iron stores. When ferritin is depleted, all of them are impaired simultaneously.
The most common presentation I see is a woman in her thirties or forties with significant fatigue, hair shedding, brain fog, and sometimes shortness of breath on exertion who has had multiple normal CBC results and never had her ferritin tested. When ferritin comes back at 14 ng/mL it immediately explains everything. Restoring ferritin to optimal is one of the most consistently transformative interventions in functional nutrition.
It is also worth noting that these symptoms can coexist with normal thyroid labs, normal B12, and normal complete metabolic panels. The standard workup misses low ferritin because ferritin is not in the standard workup. It has to be specifically ordered, and it has to be interpreted against a functional range rather than the 12 ng/mL floor most labs use.
The Four Markers in This Panel
Each of the four markers in this panel reveals a different aspect of iron status. Taken together they give a complete picture that no single marker can provide.
Serum iron measures the amount of iron currently circulating in the blood. It fluctuates significantly throughout the day and with recent dietary intake, making it an unreliable standalone marker. Most useful when interpreted alongside TIBC and transferrin saturation.
Fluctuates dailyTIBC measures the blood's total capacity to bind and transport iron. It rises when iron stores are low — the body upregulates its transport capacity in response to depletion. A high TIBC alongside low or normal serum iron is a classic indicator of iron deficiency even when ferritin is not yet critically low.
Rises with depletionTransferrin saturation is calculated from serum iron and TIBC and represents the percentage of iron-binding sites that are actually occupied. Below 20% suggests functional iron deficiency. Above 45% may indicate iron overload. It is the key ratio marker that puts serum iron in clinical context.
Calculated ratioFerritin is the iron storage protein and the only marker that directly reflects iron reserves in tissues. It depletes before serum iron falls and long before hemoglobin drops. A normal CBC with low ferritin confirms iron deficiency without anemia. This is the marker that changes the clinical picture — and the one most consistently omitted from standard testing.
The marker that changes everythingStandard vs Functional Reference Ranges
The standard lower limit for ferritin is typically 12 ng/mL for women and 12 ng/mL for men. A result of 14 ng/mL will not be flagged. A result of 14 ng/mL is also not sufficient to support normal hair growth, adequate energy production, optimal thyroid hormone conversion, or healthy neurotransmitter synthesis.
Research on symptom resolution in women with iron deficiency without anemia consistently shows that meaningful improvement occurs when ferritin reaches 50 ng/mL or above. For hair regrowth specifically, levels above 70 ng/mL are typically required. I target a functional optimal of 70 to 90 ng/mL as the range where my clients actually feel and function well.
Ferritin above 150 ng/mL also warrants investigation because elevated ferritin can indicate inflammation, liver disease, hemochromatosis, or other conditions where high ferritin is a sign of a problem rather than a sign of adequate iron stores. High ferritin is not simply “extra good” — the context matters.
| Marker | Standard Range | Functional Optimal |
|---|---|---|
| Ferritin (Women)ng/mL | 12 to 150 | 70 to 90 |
| Ferritin (Men)ng/mL | 12 to 300 | 100 to 140 |
| Serum Ironµg/dL | 60 to 170 | 80 to 140 |
| TIBCµg/dL | 250 to 370 | 250 to 320 |
| Transferrin Sat.% | 15 to 50 | 25 to 40 |
Who Should Consider This Test
Iron deficiency without anemia is disproportionately common in certain populations. If you fall into any of these groups and have unexplained fatigue, hair loss, or brain fog, ferritin should be the first test you request.
Menstrual blood loss is the most common cause of iron depletion in women of reproductive age. Heavy periods from fibroids, endometriosis, or hormonal imbalance can deplete ferritin faster than diet can restore it. Many women with heavy periods have never had their ferritin tested despite years of fatigue and hair loss.
Iron demand increases significantly during pregnancy and blood loss at delivery depletes iron stores rapidly. Postpartum ferritin depletion is extremely common and is one of the leading contributors to postpartum fatigue, postpartum hair loss, and postpartum mood disorders that are frequently attributed to other causes.
Non-heme iron from plant sources is significantly less bioavailable than heme iron from animal products. Plant-based diets also contain phytates and other compounds that inhibit iron absorption. Vegetarians and vegans are at consistently higher risk of iron depletion even when their serum iron levels appear adequate.
Iron absorption requires stomach acid and a healthy intestinal lining. H. pylori infection depletes iron by competing for it and damaging the gastric mucosa. Celiac disease, Crohn's disease, and SIBO all impair iron absorption significantly. Clients with gut issues frequently have low ferritin even with adequate dietary intake.
Thyroid hormones regulate iron absorption in the gut and iron metabolism in cells. Hypothyroidism and Hashimoto's thyroiditis are associated with impaired iron absorption and utilization. Low ferritin is also a primary driver of elevated reverse T3 and impaired T4-to-T3 conversion, creating a bidirectional relationship between iron and thyroid status.
Distance running causes foot-strike hemolysis, the physical destruction of red blood cells with each footfall. Athletes also have higher iron demands from increased red blood cell production. Athletic women are among the highest-risk groups for iron depletion without anemia because their increased turnover depletes stores faster than they are replenished.
How Iron and Ferritin Connect to Other Testing
Low ferritin almost never exists in complete isolation. These are the conditions and tests most commonly connected to iron and ferritin findings in clinical practice.
Iron is required for thyroid peroxidase, the enzyme that produces thyroid hormones. Iron deficiency impairs T4-to-T3 conversion and is one of the leading drivers of elevated reverse T3. A person with optimal TSH and free T4 but low ferritin can still have significant functional hypothyroidism at the cellular level.
Thyroid panel pageH. pylori infection, small intestinal bacterial overgrowth, celiac disease, and intestinal permeability all impair iron absorption. Clients whose ferritin does not improve with supplementation often have an underlying gut issue that is preventing adequate absorption. The GI Map frequently reveals the reason supplementation is not working.
GI Map pageLow ferritin and low B12 produce an overlapping symptom picture and frequently coexist, particularly in vegetarians, vegans, and those with gut malabsorption. Testing both together ensures that fatigue and brain fog are attributed to the correct deficiency — or to both simultaneously — rather than treating one while missing the other.
B12 and MMA pageVitamin D deficiency and low ferritin share overlapping risk groups and overlapping symptoms. Both are common in women with autoimmune thyroid disease, gut malabsorption, and heavy menstrual losses. Testing both together avoids the common error of correcting one while missing the other as a contributing cause.
Vitamin D test pagePyrrole disorder depletes zinc, and zinc is required for iron absorption and utilization. In pyroluric individuals, zinc depletion can compound iron depletion and make iron repletion difficult. Additionally, elevated reverse T3 — which low ferritin drives — is a documented consequence of pyrrole disorder's impact on the thyroid conversion pathway.
Kryptopyrrole test pageCopper is required for ferroxidase activity, the process that loads iron onto transferrin for transport. Copper deficiency impairs iron utilization and can cause anemia that does not respond to iron supplementation. When iron supplementation fails to improve ferritin, copper status is one of the first things to investigate.
Copper/Zinc panel pageHow It Works
The full iron panel including ferritin is a standard blood draw at LabCorp. Here is what the process looks like from your first call to your personalized protocol.
We spend 20 minutes talking through your symptoms, history, and prior testing. I will advise on which markers to include alongside iron and ferritin based on your specific situation, and whether connected testing such as thyroid or gut markers should be ordered at the same time.
After sign-up, we complete a full intake session. I order the full iron panel including ferritin, serum iron, TIBC, and transferrin saturation. I provide your LabCorp requisition form and advise on fasting requirements for the draw.
You visit your nearest LabCorp in the morning before eating for the most accurate serum iron reading. The draw takes just a few minutes. Results are typically returned within 1 to 2 weeks.
I review all four markers together and build your personalized protocol, including the correct form and dose of iron, timing recommendations, cofactor support, and any gut or absorption issues that need to be addressed alongside supplementation. We meet monthly with updates.
years in practice
Why Work With Samantha
The pattern is almost always the same. A woman has years of fatigue and hair loss, multiple normal CBC results, and has been told her iron is fine. Ferritin has never been tested, or was tested once and read at 16 ng/mL and not flagged. When I test it and interpret it against a functional range, the explanation for everything she has been experiencing for years is immediately visible.
Restoring ferritin is also not always straightforward. The form of iron matters. The dose needs to be titrated carefully. Many clients have gut absorption issues that prevent oral supplementation from working. And low ferritin frequently connects to thyroid conversion failure, gut dysbiosis, or pyrrole disorder that also needs to be addressed for ferritin to recover and hold. I treat the full picture, not just the number.
Common Questions
Ferritin is the protein that stores iron in cells and tissues throughout the body. It is the body’s iron reserve, and it is the first marker to deplete when iron intake or absorption is insufficient. Unlike serum iron, which fluctuates daily and reflects what is currently circulating, or hemoglobin, which only falls once depletion is advanced, ferritin reflects the actual state of your iron stores. A normal hemoglobin with low ferritin means your body has depleted its reserves but has not yet reached the point of anemia. That gap is where most iron deficiency symptoms occur and where most iron deficiency goes undiagnosed.
Research on hair loss and ferritin consistently shows that meaningful regrowth does not occur until ferritin reaches at least 50 ng/mL, and most practitioners who specialize in hair loss target 70 to 100 ng/mL for optimal results. Many women with ferritin in the 12 to 30 ng/mL range have been told their iron is normal and have never been told that restoring their ferritin to the functional optimal range is the single most impactful thing they can do for their hair. The standard reference range of 12 ng/mL is simply not the threshold for healthy hair growth.
Several factors can prevent oral iron supplementation from raising ferritin effectively. Gut absorption issues are the most common: H. pylori, celiac disease, SIBO, or low stomach acid all reduce iron absorption significantly. Taking iron with calcium, coffee, or tea inhibits absorption. Some iron forms are poorly absorbed. Inflammation can raise ferritin independently while masking ongoing depletion. And copper deficiency impairs the ferroxidase enzyme required to load iron onto transferrin for transport. If ferritin is not responding to supplementation, investigating gut health through the GI Map is almost always the right next step.
Ferritin testing is frequently covered by insurance with a documented clinical indication such as fatigue, hair loss, or suspected iron deficiency. Serum iron and TIBC are also commonly covered. Transferrin saturation is typically covered as part of a comprehensive iron panel. I do not take insurance or provide superbills. You may be able to submit your service receipt to your insurance company for partial reimbursement. During your discovery call I can walk you through current pricing and which elements are most likely to be covered. I will always advise on the most cost-effective approach to getting you the information we need.
A complete blood count measures hemoglobin, hematocrit, and red blood cell indices. None of these directly measure iron stores. The body prioritizes hemoglobin production above almost all other iron-dependent functions, which means it will deplete ferritin stores, sacrifice thyroid conversion efficiency, impair hair growth, and reduce energy production capacity long before hemoglobin drops below the normal range. By the time your CBC shows anemia, iron deficiency has often been present and causing significant symptoms for months or years. Ferritin is the marker that catches it at the beginning of that process, not the end.
Iron is a required cofactor for thyroid peroxidase, the enzyme that produces thyroid hormones. Iron deficiency impairs thyroid hormone synthesis and, critically, impairs T4-to-T3 conversion in peripheral tissues. Low ferritin is one of the leading non-thyroid causes of elevated reverse T3 and functional hypothyroidism at the cellular level despite normal TSH and T4 results. A person can have perfect thyroid bloodwork and still have significant thyroid-related symptoms if their ferritin is low, because the conversion of stored T4 to active T3 depends on adequate iron. This is one of the reasons I routinely test the full thyroid panel alongside ferritin.
Not necessarily, and this is an important clinical point. Ferritin is an acute phase reactant, meaning it rises in response to inflammation, liver disease, metabolic syndrome, and hemochromatosis independently of iron stores. High ferritin can coexist with functional iron deficiency when inflammation is driving it up. A ferritin of 180 in someone with significant chronic inflammation may reflect inflammatory activity rather than healthy iron stores, and the inflammatory cause warrants investigation. Elevated ferritin above 150 in women or 300 in men should always be interpreted in context rather than assumed to indicate good iron status.
Yes. I work with international clients regularly. The blood draw needs to happen at a LabCorp location in the United States. Canadian clients and those near the US border can typically arrange to cross for the draw. Reach out during your discovery call and we will find the right solution for your location.
Schedule your free 20-minute discovery call with Samantha. We will talk through your symptoms, your prior testing history, and whether a full iron panel with ferritin is the right next step for you.