Excellent 4.6 out of 5
Nutrients

Blood Testing for Hemoglobin

Hemoglobin blood testing measures the amount of hemoglobin, the red, oxygen‑carrying protein inside your red blood cells (erythrocytes). Hemoglobin is made in the bone marrow as new red blood cells are formed (hematopoiesis). Each hemoglobin molecule holds iron within heme groups and sits packed inside circulating red blood cells, which is why the test is done on blood. At home blood testing is available in select states. See FAQs below

Book A Hemoglobin Blood Test
Cancel anytime
HSA/FSA eligible
Results in a week
Physician reviewed

Every result is checked

·
CLIA-certified labs

Federal standard for testing

·
HIPAA compliant

Your data is 100% secure

Key Benefits

  • Check how well your blood carries oxygen—screen for anemia or too many red cells.
  • Spot iron deficiency early to prevent fatigue, brain fog, and decreased exercise tolerance.
  • Clarify symptoms like shortness of breath, dizziness, pale skin, or rapid heartbeat.
  • Guide treatment choices for anemia causes, including iron, vitamin B12, folate, or transfusions.
  • Protect fertility and pregnancy by ensuring adequate oxygen delivery and maternal iron status.
  • Flag hidden blood loss from heavy periods or gastrointestinal sources for timely workup.
  • Track recovery after iron therapy, surgery, bleeding events, or chemotherapy.
  • Best interpreted with hematocrit, red blood cell indices, ferritin, and your symptoms.

What is a Hemoglobin blood test?

Hemoglobin blood testing measures the amount of hemoglobin, the red, oxygen‑carrying protein inside your red blood cells (erythrocytes). Hemoglobin is made in the bone marrow as new red blood cells are formed (hematopoiesis). Each hemoglobin molecule holds iron within heme groups and sits packed inside circulating red blood cells, which is why the test is done on blood. In plain terms, this test quantifies how much of the body’s oxygen‑shuttling protein you have available in your bloodstream (hemoglobin, Hb).

Hemoglobin’s main job is to pick up oxygen in the lungs and release it to tissues so cells can make energy (aerobic metabolism). It also helps carry some carbon dioxide away from tissues and buffers acids, supporting stable blood pH. Because hemoglobin is the vehicle for oxygen delivery, its measured level reflects your blood’s capacity to deliver oxygen and, indirectly, the overall mass of red blood cells (oxygen‑carrying capacity, erythrocyte mass). It is the core indicator of the body’s oxygen transport system and the protein that gives blood its red color (heme‑iron).

Why is a Hemoglobin blood test important?

Hemoglobin is the oxygen‑carrying protein in red blood cells. This test gauges the blood’s oxygen‑delivery capacity, a core determinant of energy, brain clarity, muscle endurance, and how hard the heart must work during daily activity, exercise, illness, and pregnancy.

Typical values are higher in adult men than women; children vary by age. Pregnancy lowers values via plasma dilution. For most, the healthy spot is mid‑range—adequate oxygen delivery without the viscosity and clotting risks seen near the top.

When values fall, oxygen transport drops (anemia). The heart speeds up to compensate and tissues shift to less efficient metabolism. Tiredness, exertional breathlessness, dizziness, palpitations, pallor, and brain fog are common; chest pain can surface in coronary disease. Menstruation and pregnancy increase vulnerability; low levels in pregnancy strain mother and raise preterm risk. In children, growth and learning can lag.

When values rise, blood thickens, flows more slowly, and strains the heart while raising clot risk. Headache, dizziness, blurred vision, facial redness, and warm‑shower itch can occur. Elevations may reflect altitude adaptation, dehydration, chronic lung disease or sleep apnea, smoking exposure, or bone‑marrow disorders.

Big picture: hemoglobin sits at the crossroads of bone marrow, iron and vitamins, kidney erythropoietin, lungs, and the heart. Persistently low levels limit performance and pregnancy outcomes; persistently high levels raise thrombosis and cardiopulmonary strain. That’s why this simple test anchors whole‑body health assessment.

What insights will I get?

Hemoglobin measures the concentration of the oxygen-carrying protein inside red blood cells. It is a direct readout of your blood’s oxygen delivery capacity, which underpins cellular energy production, brain performance, exercise tolerance, temperature regulation, and the workload placed on the heart and lungs.

Low values usually reflect reduced oxygen-carrying capacity due to too few red cells or too little hemoglobin per cell—anemia—or dilution from expanded plasma volume. This lowers tissue oxygenation, prompting faster heart and breathing rates and causing fatigue, shortness of breath, headaches, and paleness. Common mechanisms include iron lack, low B12/folate, chronic inflammation or kidney disease (low erythropoietin), blood loss, hemolysis, or bone marrow disorders. Pregnancy lowers values via hemodilution; menstruating people often run lower; pediatric and older adult ranges differ.

Being in range suggests adequate oxygen delivery with balanced red cell production, iron availability, erythropoietin signaling, and plasma volume. It reflects stable cardiovascular load and supports steady energy and cognition. In adults, optimal typically sits near the midrange; average values are higher in men than in women, and lower in pregnancy.

High values usually reflect increased red cell concentration (erythrocytosis/polycythemia) or decreased plasma from dehydration. This thickens blood, raising clot risk and causing headaches, dizziness, facial redness, and higher blood pressure. Drivers include chronic low oxygen (lung or heart disease, sleep apnea, high altitude), smoking/carbon monoxide exposure, androgen use, excess erythropoietin, or rare high-affinity hemoglobins. Newborns have higher normal values.

Notes: Interpretation varies with altitude, smoking status, hydration, recent bleeding or IV fluids, pregnancy trimester, and lab method. After acute blood loss, hemoglobin can lag behind clinical reality. Indices like MCV and the reticulocyte count add useful context.

Superpower also tests for

See more blood diseases

Frequently Asked Questions About

What is hemoglobin testing?

It measures the concentration of hemoglobin in blood, reflecting oxygen-carrying capacity and identifying anemia or erythrocytosis.

Why should I test hemoglobin levels?

It helps detect anemia or high viscosity states early, track responses to training, altitude, travel, hydration, or therapy, and clarify symptoms like fatigue or breathlessness.

How often should I test hemoglobin?

Establish a baseline, then retest during therapy, altitude exposure, training cycles, or when symptoms change.

What can affect hemoglobin levels?

Iron, B12, folate, hydration, altitude, smoking, lung or kidney health, hormones (androgens), EPO, blood loss, and training load.

Are there preparations needed before testing?

No fasting is required. Hydration improves accuracy and sample quality.

What states are Superpower’s at-home blood testing available in?

Superpower currently offers at-home blood testing in the following states: Alabama, Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, and Wisconsin.

We’re actively expanding nationwide, with new states being added regularly. If your state isn’t listed yet, stay tuned.

What if hemoglobin is outside the optimal range?

Interpret results with related markers (hematocrit, ferritin, B12/folate, reticulocytes) and context (altitude, hydration, training, symptoms).

Can lifestyle changes affect hemoglobin?

Yes—nutrition, hydration, altitude exposure, smoking cessation, sleep, and balanced training can all influence hemoglobin.

How do I interpret hemoglobin with other markers?

Pair with hematocrit, MCV/MCHC, ferritin, iron studies, and reticulocytes to separate iron, B12/folate, kidney, or marrow drivers.

Is hemoglobin testing right for me?

Yes—for anyone monitoring energy, endurance, anemia risk, or effects of training, altitude, or therapies that shift red cell mass.

How it works

1

Test your whole body

Get a comprehensive blood draw at one of our 3,000+ partner labs or from the comfort of your own home.

2

An Actionable Plan

Easy to understand results & a clear action plan with tailored recommendations on diet, lifestyle changes, supplements and pharmaceuticals.

3

A Connected Ecosystem

You can book additional diagnostics, buy curated supplements for 20% off & pharmaceuticals within your Superpower dashboard.

Superpower tests more than 
100+ biomarkers & common symptoms

Developed by world-class medical professionals

Supported by the world’s top longevity clinicians and MDs.

Dr Anant Vinjamoori

Superpower Chief Longevity Officer, Harvard MD & MBA

A smiling woman wearing a white coat and stethoscope poses for a portrait.

Dr Leigh Erin Connealy

Clinician & Founder of The Centre for New Medicine

Man in a black medical scrub top smiling at the camera.

Dr Abe Malkin

Founder & Medical Director of Concierge MD

Dr Robert Lufkin

UCLA Medical Professor, NYT Bestselling Author

membership

$17

/month
Billed annually at $199
A smartphone displays health app results, showing biomarker summary, superpower score, and biological age details.
A smartphone displays health app results, showing biomarker summary, superpower score, and biological age details.
What could cost you $15,000 is $199

Superpower
Membership

Your membership includes one comprehensive blood draw each year, covering 100+ biomarkers in a single collection
One appointment, one draw for your annual panel.
100+ labs tested per year
A personalized plan that evolves with you
Get your biological age and track your health over a lifetime
$
17
/month
billed annually
Pricing for members in NY & NJ is $499
Flexible payment options
Four credit card logos: HSA/FSA Eligible, American Express, Visa, and Mastercard.
Start testing
Cancel anytime
HSA/FSA eligible
Results in a week

Finally, healthcare that looks at the whole you