Hemoglobin levels, explained
Hemoglobin is the protein in red blood cells that carries oxygen — low hemoglobin defines anemia.
What’s a normal Hgb level?
Typical adult reference range, shown for orientation. Your report’s range may differ by lab, age, and sex — the analyzer uses your report’s own ranges when available.
What high and low Hgb mean
A value outside the reference range is a flag, not a diagnosis. Here’s what each direction usually points to — and the most common causes.
High hemoglobin most often reflects dehydration (concentrated blood) but can indicate the body making extra red cells in response to low oxygen or a bone-marrow condition.
- Dehydration (relative concentration)
- Smoking or chronic low blood oxygen (lung/heart disease)
- Living at high altitude
- Polycythemia vera (a bone-marrow disorder)
Low hemoglobin means anemia — not enough oxygen-carrying capacity — and the underlying cause guides treatment.
- Iron, B12, or folate deficiency
- Blood loss (heavy periods, gastrointestinal bleeding)
- Chronic disease or kidney disease
- Bone-marrow or red-cell disorders
When a Hgb result needs attention
Hemoglobin well below the reference range with breathlessness, chest pain, dizziness, or rapid heartbeat needs prompt evaluation; very high hemoglobin with headaches or clotting symptoms also warrants review.
Have your Hgb number? Get the full picture.
Upload or paste your whole lab report and the free AI analyzer interprets every value at once — in context, not in isolation. No signup, no email, nothing stored.
Hemoglobin — frequently asked questions
- What does low hemoglobin mean?
- Low hemoglobin means anemia — your blood carries less oxygen than it should, causing fatigue, paleness, breathlessness, and sometimes a fast heartbeat. The most common cause is iron deficiency, but B12 or folate deficiency, blood loss, and chronic disease are also frequent. Ferritin and other tests help find the cause.
- What causes high hemoglobin?
- The most common cause is dehydration, which concentrates the blood. Persistent elevation can come from smoking, chronic low oxygen (lung or heart disease), living at altitude, or, less commonly, a bone-marrow condition called polycythemia vera. The pattern over time and other counts guide the workup.
- What is a normal hemoglobin level?
- Typical adult ranges are roughly 13.5–17.5 g/dL for men and 12.0–15.5 g/dL for women. Pregnancy, altitude, and age shift the expected range, so compare against the reference values on your own report.
Related lab markers
- Ferritin →Ferritin is the protein that stores iron in your body — it is the single best blood marker of how much iron you have in reserve.
- Vitamin B12 →Vitamin B12 is essential for nerve function and red-blood-cell formation — a deficiency can cause anemia and neurological symptoms.
- Creatinine →Creatinine is a muscle waste product cleared by the kidneys — the standard blood marker used to estimate kidney function.
- All lab markers →Browse every biomarker guide in one place.
This page provides educational health information and does not replace professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Interpret any lab value with your clinician, who has your full medical context. For emergencies, contact emergency services.