Combination check · NIH reference values

Can you take Iron and Vitamin E together?

No known interaction

Yes — there's no established interaction between Iron and Vitamin E; they work through unrelated pathways and are commonly taken in the same stack.

🕑 How to time them

No separation needed. Typical timing: Iron — empty stomach; Vitamin E — with a meal. Vitamin E is fat-soluble — take it with a meal that contains some fat.

Iron is typically taken for oxygen transport, energy, prevents anemia Vitamin E is used for antioxidant, protects cell membranes Different mechanisms, no documented conflict — the practical questions are whether you need each one at all, and whether each dose is sensible on its own.

For context: a typical daily amount of Iron is 8–18 mg, and the upper limit for Iron is 45 mg. A typical daily amount of Vitamin E is 15 mg, and the upper limit for Vitamin E is 1,000 mg.

The two supplements, side by side

Mineral

🩸 Iron

Oxygen transport, energy, prevents anemia.

Typical / RDA8–18 mg
Upper limit45 mg
EvidenceStrong
Full Iron guide →
Vitamin

🥑 Vitamin E

Antioxidant, protects cell membranes.

Typical / RDA15 mg
Upper limit1,000 mg
EvidenceLimited
Full Vitamin E guide →

What each one needs you to watch

  • Iron:Do not supplement without reason — excess accumulates and damages organs.
  • Iron:Coffee, tea, calcium, and zinc reduce absorption — separate them.
  • Iron:Vitamin C boosts uptake of plant (non-heme) iron.
  • Vitamin E:High doses thin the blood — caution with warfarin and before surgery.

Common questions

Can you take Iron and Vitamin E together?

Yes — there's no established interaction between Iron and Vitamin E; they work through unrelated pathways and are commonly taken in the same stack.

How should you time Iron and Vitamin E?

No separation needed. Typical timing: Iron — empty stomach; Vitamin E — with a meal. Vitamin E is fat-soluble — take it with a meal that contains some fat.

Are Iron and Vitamin E already in a multivitamin?

Usually yes — most multivitamins contain both Iron and Vitamin E. If you take a multi on top of standalone pills, add up all three labels; the combined total is what counts against each nutrient's upper limit.

Related guides

Check other combinations

Iron + MagnesiumIron + Vitamin D3Iron + ZincIron + CalciumVitamin E + MagnesiumVitamin E + Vitamin D3Vitamin E + ZincVitamin E + CalciumAll combinations →

Sources

Reference values: NIH Office of Dietary Supplements, adult general population. Educational information only — not medical advice. Medication interactions are individual: confirm your specific situation with a healthcare professional.

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