Thorne Advanced Iron Complex
Iron deficiency is the most common nutritional deficiency in endurance athletes — and it's not just about low iron. Building and maintaining healthy red blood cells requires a coordinated team of nutrients working together: iron to form hemoglobin, vitamin C to enhance iron absorption, and the B vitamins (B6, B12, and folate) that are essential for the DNA synthesis and cell division involved in actually creating new red blood cells. Supplementing with iron alone addresses only part of the equation.
Thorne Advanced Iron Complex delivers the full picture in a single capsule.
Gentle, High-Absorption Iron – Most iron supplements use ferrous sulfate, a form notorious for causing nausea, constipation, and GI distress. Thorne uses Ferrochel® ferrous bisglycinate chelate — iron bonded to the amino acid glycine — which is absorbed significantly more efficiently through the gut wall and produces substantially fewer GI side effects. Chelated iron is the endurance athlete's choice for long-term iron repletion without the gut compromise.
The Absorption and Production Stack – Iron doesn't absorb well in isolation. Vitamin C directly enhances non-heme iron absorption by keeping iron in its more bioavailable ferrous state. The active forms of B6 (pyridoxal 5'-phosphate), B12 (methylcobalamin), and folate (5-MTHF) then supply the essential cofactors for hemoglobin synthesis and new red blood cell production — ensuring iron goes to work building oxygen-carrying capacity rather than simply accumulating in the bloodstream.
A Meaningful Therapeutic Dose – At 36mg of elemental iron per capsule, this formula delivers a clinically relevant dose for athletes actively repleating iron stores — twice the 18mg daily value and higher than Thorne's standalone Iron Bisglycinate (25mg). The flexible 1–3 capsule daily dosing allows practitioners to tailor the protocol to individual ferritin levels and repletion targets.
Iron deficiency is particularly prevalent in female endurance athletes, high-volume runners (due to foot-strike hemolysis), plant-based athletes, and those training at altitude. Signs include unexplained fatigue, shortness of breath during efforts that should feel easy, decreased performance, cold extremities, and poor recovery. If you're experiencing these symptoms and your nutrition is otherwise dialed in, iron status is the first place to look.
How to Use Thorne Advanced Iron Complex
Standard Dose: Take 1 capsule one to three times daily with food, or as recommended by your healthcare practitioner. Taking with food reduces the chance of any GI sensitivity.
Timing: Avoid taking iron supplements within two hours of coffee, tea, calcium supplements, or antacids — all of which can reduce iron absorption. Spacing iron away from these significantly improves uptake.
Pro Tip: Get your ferritin tested before and after supplementing. Athletes need ferritin above 35–50 ng/mL for optimal oxygen transport — not just hemoglobin within the normal range. Track your levels every 8–12 weeks during active repletion.
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Thorne Advanced Iron Complex
Thorne Advanced Iron Complex
Iron deficiency is the most common nutritional deficiency in endurance athletes — and it's not just about low iron. Building and maintaining healthy red blood cells requires a coordinated team of nutrients working together: iron to form hemoglobin, vitamin C to enhance iron absorption, and the B vitamins (B6, B12, and folate) that are essential for the DNA synthesis and cell division involved in actually creating new red blood cells. Supplementing with iron alone addresses only part of the equation.
Thorne Advanced Iron Complex delivers the full picture in a single capsule.
Gentle, High-Absorption Iron – Most iron supplements use ferrous sulfate, a form notorious for causing nausea, constipation, and GI distress. Thorne uses Ferrochel® ferrous bisglycinate chelate — iron bonded to the amino acid glycine — which is absorbed significantly more efficiently through the gut wall and produces substantially fewer GI side effects. Chelated iron is the endurance athlete's choice for long-term iron repletion without the gut compromise.
The Absorption and Production Stack – Iron doesn't absorb well in isolation. Vitamin C directly enhances non-heme iron absorption by keeping iron in its more bioavailable ferrous state. The active forms of B6 (pyridoxal 5'-phosphate), B12 (methylcobalamin), and folate (5-MTHF) then supply the essential cofactors for hemoglobin synthesis and new red blood cell production — ensuring iron goes to work building oxygen-carrying capacity rather than simply accumulating in the bloodstream.
A Meaningful Therapeutic Dose – At 36mg of elemental iron per capsule, this formula delivers a clinically relevant dose for athletes actively repleating iron stores — twice the 18mg daily value and higher than Thorne's standalone Iron Bisglycinate (25mg). The flexible 1–3 capsule daily dosing allows practitioners to tailor the protocol to individual ferritin levels and repletion targets.
Iron deficiency is particularly prevalent in female endurance athletes, high-volume runners (due to foot-strike hemolysis), plant-based athletes, and those training at altitude. Signs include unexplained fatigue, shortness of breath during efforts that should feel easy, decreased performance, cold extremities, and poor recovery. If you're experiencing these symptoms and your nutrition is otherwise dialed in, iron status is the first place to look.
How to Use Thorne Advanced Iron Complex
Standard Dose: Take 1 capsule one to three times daily with food, or as recommended by your healthcare practitioner. Taking with food reduces the chance of any GI sensitivity.
Timing: Avoid taking iron supplements within two hours of coffee, tea, calcium supplements, or antacids — all of which can reduce iron absorption. Spacing iron away from these significantly improves uptake.
Pro Tip: Get your ferritin tested before and after supplementing. Athletes need ferritin above 35–50 ng/mL for optimal oxygen transport — not just hemoglobin within the normal range. Track your levels every 8–12 weeks during active repletion.
Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
Iron deficiency is the most common nutritional deficiency in endurance athletes — and it's not just about low iron. Building and maintaining healthy red blood cells requires a coordinated team of nutrients working together: iron to form hemoglobin, vitamin C to enhance iron absorption, and the B vitamins (B6, B12, and folate) that are essential for the DNA synthesis and cell division involved in actually creating new red blood cells. Supplementing with iron alone addresses only part of the equation.
Thorne Advanced Iron Complex delivers the full picture in a single capsule.
Gentle, High-Absorption Iron – Most iron supplements use ferrous sulfate, a form notorious for causing nausea, constipation, and GI distress. Thorne uses Ferrochel® ferrous bisglycinate chelate — iron bonded to the amino acid glycine — which is absorbed significantly more efficiently through the gut wall and produces substantially fewer GI side effects. Chelated iron is the endurance athlete's choice for long-term iron repletion without the gut compromise.
The Absorption and Production Stack – Iron doesn't absorb well in isolation. Vitamin C directly enhances non-heme iron absorption by keeping iron in its more bioavailable ferrous state. The active forms of B6 (pyridoxal 5'-phosphate), B12 (methylcobalamin), and folate (5-MTHF) then supply the essential cofactors for hemoglobin synthesis and new red blood cell production — ensuring iron goes to work building oxygen-carrying capacity rather than simply accumulating in the bloodstream.
A Meaningful Therapeutic Dose – At 36mg of elemental iron per capsule, this formula delivers a clinically relevant dose for athletes actively repleating iron stores — twice the 18mg daily value and higher than Thorne's standalone Iron Bisglycinate (25mg). The flexible 1–3 capsule daily dosing allows practitioners to tailor the protocol to individual ferritin levels and repletion targets.
Iron deficiency is particularly prevalent in female endurance athletes, high-volume runners (due to foot-strike hemolysis), plant-based athletes, and those training at altitude. Signs include unexplained fatigue, shortness of breath during efforts that should feel easy, decreased performance, cold extremities, and poor recovery. If you're experiencing these symptoms and your nutrition is otherwise dialed in, iron status is the first place to look.
How to Use Thorne Advanced Iron Complex
Standard Dose: Take 1 capsule one to three times daily with food, or as recommended by your healthcare practitioner. Taking with food reduces the chance of any GI sensitivity.
Timing: Avoid taking iron supplements within two hours of coffee, tea, calcium supplements, or antacids — all of which can reduce iron absorption. Spacing iron away from these significantly improves uptake.
Pro Tip: Get your ferritin tested before and after supplementing. Athletes need ferritin above 35–50 ng/mL for optimal oxygen transport — not just hemoglobin within the normal range. Track your levels every 8–12 weeks during active repletion.























