Calculate your daily iron requirement based on age, sex, diet type, and health factors. Includes RDA targets, vegetarian adjustments, and iron-rich food sources.
Iron is a critical mineral that enables red blood cells to carry oxygen throughout the body, supports energy metabolism, and plays a role in immune function and cognitive performance. Iron deficiency is the most common nutritional deficiency worldwide, affecting an estimated 2 billion people — especially women of reproductive age, pregnant women, young children, and vegetarians.
This calculator estimates your Recommended Dietary Allowance (RDA) for iron based on the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and IOM guidelines. It accounts for age, sex, menstrual status, diet type (omnivore vs. vegetarian/vegan), pregnancy, and other factors that affect iron needs or absorption.
Vegetarians and vegans have 1.8× higher iron requirements because plant-based (non-heme) iron is absorbed less efficiently than animal-based (heme) iron. Understanding your specific needs helps you determine whether dietary sources are sufficient or supplementation is warranted. Whether you are a beginner or experienced professional, this free online tool provides instant, reliable results without manual computation.
Iron needs range from 7 mg to 27+ mg per day depending on your demographic profile. A post-menopausal woman on an omnivore diet has very different needs than a pre-menopausal vegan. This calculator gives you a personalized target rather than a generic number, plus practical guidance on food sources and absorption enhancers.
NIH Recommended Dietary Allowances (RDA): • Infants 7–12 mo: 11 mg • Children 1–3: 7 mg | 4–8: 10 mg | 9–13: 8 mg • Males 14–18: 11 mg | 19+: 8 mg • Females 14–18: 15 mg | 19–50: 18 mg | 51+: 8 mg • Pregnant: 27 mg | Lactating: 9–10 mg Vegetarian/Vegan Multiplier: × 1.8 Absorption Rates: • Heme iron (animal): 15–35% absorbed • Non-heme iron (plant): 2–20% absorbed • Vitamin C increases non-heme absorption by 2–6×
Result: 32.4 mg / day
A pre-menopausal woman has a base RDA of 18 mg/day. The vegetarian multiplier of 1.8× increases this to 32.4 mg/day because plant-based (non-heme) iron has lower bioavailability (2–20% vs. 15–35% for heme iron). Meeting this through diet alone requires strategic food pairing — pairing iron-rich foods with vitamin C to enhance absorption and avoiding calcium, tea, and coffee with iron-rich meals.
Iron in food exists in two forms. Heme iron, found only in animal tissue (meat, poultry, fish), is efficiently absorbed (15–35%) and is less affected by other dietary factors. Non-heme iron, found in both plant and animal foods (grains, legumes, vegetables, eggs, dairy), is poorly absorbed (2–20%) and highly affected by enhancers and inhibitors in the meal. About 60% of iron in meat is non-heme; the rest is heme.
Iron deficiency is the most common nutritional deficiency worldwide, affecting about 2 billion people. In the US, approximately 10% of women of childbearing age are iron deficient, and about 5% have iron-deficiency anemia. Groups at highest risk include: pre-menopausal women (especially with heavy periods), pregnant women, infants and toddlers, adolescents (growth spurts), frequent blood donors, and people with GI conditions that impair absorption (celiac disease, IBD).
Common supplement forms include ferrous sulfate (most affordable, 20% elemental iron), ferrous gluconate (gentler on stomach, 12% iron), and ferrous bisglycinate (best absorbed, fewest side effects, but more expensive). For best absorption: take on an empty stomach with vitamin C, at least 2 hours apart from calcium, coffee, or tea. Side effects include constipation, nausea, and dark stools. If you experience GI issues, try every-other-day dosing — research shows it may actually improve total absorption.
The most useful blood tests are: serum ferritin (reflects iron stores; low < 30 ng/mL), hemoglobin (anemia if low), transferrin saturation (percentage of iron-carrying capacity used), and total iron-binding capacity (TIBC). Ferritin is the most sensitive early marker — it can be low even when hemoglobin is still normal, indicating depleted stores before anemia develops. Ask your doctor for a complete iron panel if you have symptoms or risk factors.
Early symptoms include fatigue, weakness, pale skin, shortness of breath, dizziness, cold hands and feet, brittle nails, and frequent infections. As deficiency progresses, symptoms may include pica (cravings for non-food items like ice or dirt), restless legs, headaches, and tongue soreness. Iron deficiency is the leading cause of anemia worldwide. A blood test (serum ferritin, hemoglobin) is the definitive way to diagnose it.
Iron exists in two forms: heme (from animal tissue, 15–35% absorbed) and non-heme (from plants, 2–20% absorbed). Vegetarians and vegans consume only non-heme iron, which is less bioavailable. The IOM recommends 1.8× the standard RDA for vegetarians to compensate. However, strategic food pairing (vitamin C with iron-rich foods, avoiding inhibitors) can significantly improve absorption.
Yes. Iron overload (hemochromatosis) can damage the liver, heart, and pancreas. The tolerable upper intake for adults is 45 mg/day from food and supplements combined. Iron supplements should only be taken when there is a confirmed need (blood test). People with hereditary hemochromatosis are especially vulnerable to excess iron. Never take iron supplements without medical guidance.
Heme (animal) sources: beef liver (5.3 mg/3 oz), beef (2.2 mg/3 oz), oysters (8 mg/3 oz), chicken liver (11 mg/3 oz), sardines (2.5 mg/3 oz). Non-heme (plant) sources: fortified cereals (18 mg/serving), white beans (8 mg/cup), lentils (6.6 mg/cup), spinach (6.4 mg/cup cooked), tofu (3.4 mg/half cup). Absorption varies widely — a cup of spinach may provide only 0.3–1.3 mg of usable iron.
Yes, moderately. Acidic foods with high moisture content cooked for longer periods absorb the most iron from cast iron cookware. A study found that spaghetti sauce cooked in cast iron contained 5.7 mg of iron per 100g compared to 0.6 mg when cooked in a glass pot. The effect is most pronounced with new (unseasoned) pans and diminishes as the pan becomes well-seasoned.
Iron needs nearly double during pregnancy (from 18 to 27 mg/day) due to increased blood volume, placental development, and fetal growth. The total additional iron cost of pregnancy is about 1,000 mg. Most pregnant women cannot meet this through diet alone and require supplementation. Iron deficiency during pregnancy increases the risk of preterm birth, low birth weight, and postpartum depression.
Yes. Menstrual blood loss averages 30–40 mL per cycle (about 15–20 mg of iron lost). Women with heavy periods (menorrhagia) may lose 80+ mL, depleting iron stores much faster. This is the primary reason why pre-menopausal women's RDA (18 mg) is more than double the post-menopausal RDA (8 mg). Women with heavy periods should have their ferritin levels checked regularly.
Enhancers: Vitamin C (most powerful — can increase absorption 2–6×), meat/fish/poultry (the "meat factor"), citric acid, and fermented foods. Inhibitors: Phytates (in grains, legumes, nuts), polyphenols/tannins (in tea, coffee, wine), calcium (in dairy), and oxalates (in spinach, rhubarb). Timing matters — consume enhancers and avoid inhibitors at iron-rich meals for maximum absorption.