Iron during pregnancy is one of the more important — and most often inadequately handled — pieces of prenatal nutrition. Up to 84% of women in the third trimester are iron deficient in high-income country data,1 and the consequences extend from maternal fatigue to infant outcomes. Yet many women enter pregnancy already depleted from years of menstrual loss, and standard prenatal vitamins often don’t deliver enough iron to fix established deficiency.

This guide covers what’s actually needed, when, in what form, and how to handle the common situations (oral iron intolerance, severe deficiency, postpartum recovery).
Quick answer
- Iron RDA in pregnancy: 27 mg/day (up from 18 mg/day non-pregnant)
- Prevalence of iron deficiency in pregnancy: Up to 50% by mid-pregnancy; 84% in late pregnancy in high-income countries
- Why it matters: Maternal anemia, low birthweight, possibly impaired infant cognition
- Standard recommendation: Daily iron via prenatal vitamin (27 mg) starting preconception, often higher dose if deficient
- Cochrane evidence: Daily iron in pregnancy reduces maternal anemia and iron deficiency, modestly reduces low birthweight2
- IV iron: Indicated in second and third trimesters for established deficiency or oral intolerance
Why pregnancy iron needs are so high
Pregnancy increases iron demands through three mechanisms:
- Maternal blood volume expansion — ~45% increase, requiring more iron for hemoglobin
- Placental and fetal iron transfer — the fetus actively pulls iron from maternal stores, particularly in the third trimester
- Postpartum blood loss — even normal deliveries lose 300–500 mL of blood; cesareans more
The total iron cost of a full pregnancy is approximately 1,000 mg — well above what women can absorb from typical diets, even with good iron sources. This is why supplementation isn’t optional for most pregnancies; the math doesn’t work without it.
Cochrane evidence on iron in pregnancy
A 2024 Cochrane systematic review of 57 trials and 48,971 women evaluated daily oral iron supplementation in pregnancy.2 Key findings:
Maternal outcomes (iron alone vs. placebo):
- Maternal anemia: 4.0% vs 7.4% (RR 0.30, large reduction)
- Iron deficiency at term: 44.0% vs 66.0% (RR 0.51)
- Iron-deficiency anemia at term: 5.0% vs 18.4% (RR 0.41)
- No clear effect on maternal death (rare)
Infant outcomes (iron alone vs. placebo):
- Low birthweight: 5.2% vs 6.1% (RR 0.84, modest reduction)
- No clear difference in birthweight, preterm birth, neonatal death, or congenital anomalies
Iron + folic acid vs. placebo:
- Reduced maternal anemia at term (12.1% vs 25.5%)
- Modest increase in infant birthweight (+57.7 g)
The evidence supports standard daily iron supplementation through pregnancy. Effects on maternal hematologic outcomes are clear; effects on infant outcomes are modest but real.

Pre-pregnancy iron status matters
The reality most women aren’t told: starting pregnancy iron-deficient sets you up for severe deficiency in the third trimester. Many women enter pregnancy with low ferritin from years of menstrual losses that were never adequately replaced.
The ideal sequence:
- Months before trying: Check ferritin (target >70 ng/mL pre-pregnancy)
- If deficient: Replenish before conceiving — see iron deficiency in women, ferritin levels, iron supplements for women
- From conception: Continue iron via prenatal vitamin (27 mg/day)
- Each trimester: Recheck ferritin alongside hemoglobin
- If deficient mid-pregnancy: Higher dose or IV iron as appropriate
- Postpartum: Continue iron, especially with heavy delivery blood loss or breastfeeding
This is the realistic ideal. Many women won’t have done preconception ferritin testing — that’s fine, just start now.
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Standard prenatal protocol
For women without known iron deficiency entering pregnancy:
Foundation:
- Prenatal vitamin with 27 mg elemental iron daily
- Started 3 months before trying if possible, definitely as soon as pregnant
- Continued throughout pregnancy and breastfeeding
For the broader prenatal vitamin picture: prenatal vitamins covers what to look for. For the pregnancy nutrition framework: postpartum nutrition (for the postpartum side).
When deficient: higher-dose protocol
If ferritin is already low at the start of pregnancy or develops during it, additional supplementation is needed.
Modified protocol for confirmed pregnancy iron deficiency:
- 65–120 mg elemental iron daily (above what’s in standard prenatal)
- Some practitioners recommend alternate-day dosing as in non-pregnant women3, though daily protocols are still standard in pregnancy
- With vitamin C for absorption
- Away from coffee, tea, dairy, calcium (most prenatal calcium and iron are intentionally low because they compete)
- Continue throughout pregnancy and at least 3 months postpartum
Forms:
- Ferrous sulfate — standard, cheap
- Ferrous bisglycinate — gentler if GI side effects are an issue
- Iron protein succinylate — better tolerated for some
- Polysaccharide iron complex — well-tolerated alternative
See iron supplements for women for the broader supplement picture.
When oral iron isn’t enough: IV iron in pregnancy
The 2025 JAMA review specifies that IV iron is indicated in the second and third trimesters of pregnancy for women with iron deficiency that isn’t responding to oral iron or for women who can’t tolerate oral.1
This isn’t exotic. Modern IV iron formulations (ferric carboxymaltose, ferric derisomaltose, iron sucrose) are safe in pregnancy, deliver iron rapidly, and bypass GI absorption issues entirely. A single IV iron infusion can deliver as much iron as months of oral supplementation.
When IV iron is appropriate in pregnancy:
- Established iron deficiency (low ferritin) not responding to oral
- Severe oral intolerance (GI side effects too severe to maintain)
- Severe anemia requiring rapid correction
- Late pregnancy with significant deficiency (oral iron is too slow to correct in time)
- Inflammatory bowel disease or other malabsorption
- Post-bariatric surgery
- History of postpartum hemorrhage with persistent anemia
Not typically first-line: mild deficiency in early pregnancy, asymptomatic mild anemia.
The decision to use IV iron is medical — discuss with your obstetrician or maternal-fetal medicine specialist. The shift over the last decade has been toward broader use of IV iron in pregnancy because the safety profile is excellent and the speed advantage is real.
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Symptoms that warrant testing in pregnancy
Some pregnancy symptoms are easy to attribute to “just being pregnant” but can indicate iron deficiency:
- Fatigue beyond what’s expected for the trimester
- Shortness of breath beyond mild
- Pica — strong, persistent cravings for ice, dirt, paper, or non-food substances
- Restless legs syndrome — extremely common in iron-deficient pregnancy
- Hair shedding (early signal)
- Lightheadedness or fainting episodes
- Pale skin or pale conjunctiva
- Reduced exercise tolerance more than expected
The pica symptom is particularly telling. If you’re constantly chewing ice, mention it to your OB — that’s a classic iron deficiency sign that often gets brushed off as “just a weird pregnancy craving.”
Per-trimester considerations
First trimester
- Iron demands are slightly increased but not dramatically
- Standard prenatal (27 mg/day) is adequate for most women
- Get baseline ferritin if you haven’t yet
- Address any pre-existing deficiency now
- Nausea may make iron harder to tolerate — switch to evening dosing or different form
Second trimester
- Iron demands rising significantly as blood volume expands
- Check ferritin around 16–20 weeks
- If deficient, escalate (higher dose oral or IV)
- This is the window where IV iron becomes a real option if oral isn’t enough
- Aim for ferritin >30 ng/mL minimum; ideally higher
Third trimester
- Peak iron demand
- 84% of women in high-income countries are iron deficient at this point
- Hemoglobin checked at standard intervals
- If anemic (Hb <11 g/dL in third trimester), additional iron is indicated
- IV iron is commonly used to rapidly correct deficiency before delivery
- Severe anemia approaching delivery increases hemorrhage risk
Postpartum iron
The first 6 months postpartum often involve continued iron drain:
- Delivery blood loss (300–500 mL normally; more with cesarean or hemorrhage)
- Continued elevated demands during early breastfeeding (though breast milk iron content is relatively low)
- Possible delayed return of periods → eventually heavier than usual periods if breastfeeding is winding down
- Pre-existing depleted stores from pregnancy
Recheck ferritin and hemoglobin at:
- 6 weeks postpartum (with the standard postpartum visit)
- 3 months postpartum if symptomatic
- 6 months postpartum for women with heavy delivery losses or persistent symptoms
Persistent fatigue 3+ months postpartum is frequently iron deficiency — see postpartum recovery, postpartum nutrition, and postpartum hair loss (which is often iron-related as well).
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Food sources alongside supplementation
Diet provides foundation but rarely replaces supplementation in pregnancy. Maximize:
- Heme iron (best absorbed): beef, lamb, dark poultry, sardines, shellfish (cooked thoroughly)
- Non-heme iron: lentils, chickpeas, beans, tofu, spinach, pumpkin seeds, fortified cereals
- Vitamin C pairing: peppers, citrus, strawberries, tomatoes, kiwi
- Avoid blockers at iron-rich meals: limit coffee/tea, separate calcium-rich foods
Pregnancy-specific food considerations: foods to eat during pregnancy, foods to avoid during pregnancy. For broader iron food sources: high iron foods, iron-rich plant foods, and ways to increase iron absorption.
When to be cautious about iron in pregnancy
Iron isn’t universally helpful, even in pregnancy:
- Hemochromatosis — genetic iron overload condition. If you have this, pregnancy iron protocols change significantly.
- Thalassemia — pre-existing condition affecting iron handling
- Pre-existing high ferritin — investigate before supplementing further
- Severe constipation — manage with gentler form, magnesium, fiber, hydration; don’t simply stop iron
For the broader caution piece: why too much iron is harmful.
What about iron between pregnancies?
The interval between pregnancies is when many women rebuild iron stores depleted by the previous pregnancy. This is particularly important if:
- Pregnancies are close together (<24 months apart)
- You experienced postpartum hemorrhage
- You have heavy menstrual bleeding between pregnancies
- You’re breastfeeding while planning another pregnancy
A ferritin check 12+ months before planning another conception is reasonable for women in any of these categories.

Bottom line
Iron during pregnancy is one of the highest-leverage prenatal nutritional interventions, with Cochrane-grade evidence supporting daily supplementation through pregnancy to reduce maternal anemia, iron deficiency at term, and low birthweight. Start with a prenatal vitamin (27 mg elemental iron daily) before conception if possible; check ferritin at baseline and each trimester; escalate to higher-dose oral or IV iron when deficiency is confirmed; continue iron support postpartum. Up to 84% of women in late pregnancy are iron deficient — assume you may be one of them and verify with bloodwork. For the broader iron picture in women: iron deficiency in women. For ferritin interpretation: ferritin levels. For the heavy bleeding piece: iron for heavy periods. For postpartum recovery: postpartum recovery.
Auerbach M, DeLoughery TG, Tirnauer JS. Iron Deficiency in Adults: A Review. JAMA. 2025;333(20):1813-1823. PubMed | DOI ↩︎ ↩︎
Finkelstein JL, Cuthbert A, Weeks J, et al. Daily oral iron supplementation during pregnancy. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. 2024;8(8):CD004736. PubMed | DOI ↩︎ ↩︎
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 ↩︎





