Blood markers
Ferritin and hair loss: what your result can and can’t tell you
One lab value for stored iron — helpful in context, not a full diagnosis of why hair is shedding.
Ferritin measures how much iron your body has in reserve — think “storage,” not a perfect read of today’s iron status in every situation. It comes up often when hair sheds, because low stores can matter for some people. One result is never the whole story: your symptoms, exam, and often other blood tests still decide what it means.
What is ferritin?
Ferritin is an acute-phase reactant as well as a marker of iron stores. Infection, inflammation, liver disease, and other conditions can shift it independently of iron status. That is why clinicians interpret it alongside history, examination, and often other blood indices.
Ferritin and shedding
In telogen effluvium-type shedding, doctors may check whether low iron stores could be playing a part — when your symptoms and exam fit. That is not the same as saying ferritin alone caused the shed, and many people with shedding have normal iron studies.
“Normal” vs online targets
Laboratory reference intervals vary by laboratory and population. Public discussions sometimes cite narrow “optimal” ferritin targets for hair; robust trial evidence tying a single ferritin cut-off to hair outcomes is limited, so decisions still depend on symptoms, haemoglobin, iron studies, menstrual losses, diet, and tolerance of treatment. Avoid self-treating based on a label alone.
Iron and thyroid tests together
Ferritin is one part of a selective work-up. When appropriate, clinicians may also consider thyroid function and other markers described in what blood tests matter for hair loss.
Iron supplements and follow-up
Iron therapy carries risks if iron overload is present or if the diagnosis is wrong. Dosing, duration, and follow-up belong with a prescriber. Repeat testing is used to confirm response and safety, not as a DIY loop.
In short
Ferritin can be a useful clue when shedding has a reversible piece — but only read with your symptoms, exam, and often other blood work. It does not replace a proper assessment, and it should not be treated as the whole story for every hair concern.
Terms in this article
- Ferritin
A blood protein reflecting iron stores; often discussed alongside hair shedding when stores are low — interpretation is clinical context–dependent.
- Telogen effluvium
A pattern of increased hair shedding often linked to physiological stressors, illness, or nutritional shifts; diagnosis belongs with a clinician.
Related topics
Who wrote this and who checked it
Articles are drafted for patient clarity, then reviewed for medical accuracy under HLI editorial standards. Sources are listed where they help you verify claims; this education still does not replace an exam or plan from your own clinician.
Author
Hair Longevity Institute Editorial
Clinical education
Trichology-led medical writing
Reviewer
HLI Clinical Review
Medical accuracy review
Senior trichology sign-off before publication; same review standard across insight articles.
Frequently asked questions
Does low ferritin always mean I need iron tablets?
Not necessarily. Your clinician considers haemoglobin, symptoms, menstrual losses, diet, and whether another cause explains the result before recommending treatment.
Can ferritin be normal and iron still be an issue?
Interpretation can be nuanced with inflammation or chronic disease. This is why labs are read as a set, not as single numbers in isolation.
Will fixing ferritin restore my hair density immediately?
Hair cycles are slow. Any reversible contributor may take months to show in volume. Pattern thinning may still need separate discussion.
Should I test ferritin repeatedly at home via kits?
It is safer to test through your doctor so results connect to a clear plan. Random home tests often add confusion.
References & further reading
Related articles
- Blood markersBlood tests and hair loss: what may actually helpA plain-language guide to blood tests that often come up for shedding or thinning: iron and ferritin, thyroid, and others. Why your doctor picks certain tests for you — and why a big panel is not always the answer.Read →
- Blood markersVitamin D, B12, and folate: what labs may mean for hairLow vitamin D, B12, or folate can matter for overall health and sometimes for hair when there is a real deficiency. This article explains what the tests measure, why normal results do not prove vitamins caused your thinning, and why high-dose supplements are not automatic.Read →
- ConditionsHair shedding after pregnancy: what’s normal and when to get checkedMany parents lose more hair a few months after birth. This guide explains why that happens, when watchful waiting is reasonable, which symptoms should prompt a doctor visit, and how iron or thyroid sometimes overlap.Read →
- Hair loss causesHair shedding after illness or stress: telogen effluvium explainedTelogen effluvium is a common type of diffuse shedding that can start after you are already feeling better. This article explains typical triggers, timing, how it can overlap with pattern thinning, and when blood tests or a scalp exam matter.Read →
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When to consider blood tests
If shedding is new, severe, or accompanied by systemic symptoms, structured blood review may be appropriate. HLI can help interpret results you already have or suggest what to discuss with your GP.
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