Iron-Rich First Foods

Iron-Rich First Foods

iBuddies Baby Portion Collection
Baby Feeding 101 · Hong Kong

The #1 First-Food Nutrient Iron-Rich First Foods

👶 Around 6 months+ Evidence-based · references the HK Dept of Health (FHS)

If you have seen a "baby iron deficiency" warning scrolling through your feed and felt a flicker of panic, take a breath. Here is the reassuring truth: a healthy, full-term baby is born with a store of iron built up in the womb, and that store naturally starts to run low at around 6 months. That is not a sign anything has gone wrong, it is simply nature's cue that it is time for solids, and that iron is the single most important nutrient to aim for with your baby's first foods.

This guide breaks down why iron matters, how your baby actually absorbs it, the simple vitamin C trick that doubles down on every meal, and the best iron-rich first foods you can offer here in Hong Kong, in line with the Department of Health's Family Health Service (FHS).

An iBuddies Australia Grass-Fed Beef Tenderloin Slice pack beside soft-cooked, finely minced beef on a baby plate
Red meat is one of the richest, most absorbable iron sources for babies. Soft-cooked and finely minced, iBuddies Australia Grass-Fed Beef Tenderloin Slice is an easy way to offer iron from around 6 months.

Why Iron Becomes the Priority at 6 Months

Iron does some of the most important work in your baby's first years. It carries oxygen around the body in the blood, and it directly supports brain development and immune function, which is why the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) tells parents that when babies start solids at around 6 months, those first foods should contain iron.

Around the 6-month mark, the iron a baby stored up before birth has naturally decreased, so iron-rich foods begin to do the heavy lifting (Solid Starts). If you are partially or fully breastfeeding, the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) notes that some babies benefit from an iron supplement of 1 mg per kg per day from 4 months until iron-rich solids are well established, so it is worth raising iron with your paediatrician.

It is common, not a failure

Globally, the World Health Organization estimates that 39.8% of children aged 6 to 59 months were affected by anaemia in 2019, with iron deficiency a leading cause. So if iron is on your mind, you are doing exactly the right thing, not falling behind.

Heme vs Non-Heme Iron: Why the Source Matters

Not all iron is absorbed equally. There are two kinds, and knowing the difference is the key to building iron-rich meals that actually count.

Heme iron

Found in animal foods, meat, poultry, liver, fish and seafood. The body absorbs it far more easily (CDC, FHS).

Easily absorbed
Non-heme iron

Found in plant foods, dark leafy greens, beans, tofu and iron-fortified cereals. Absorbed less readily, but a vitamin C pairing helps a lot.

Less readily absorbed

Bars illustrate relative absorbability, not exact percentages.

The Vitamin C Trick That Boosts Absorption

Here is the one move you can action at the very next meal: pair non-heme (plant) iron with a food that is rich in vitamin C, and your baby absorbs more of the iron on the plate. The FHS advises serving iron-rich foods alongside vitamin-C-rich fruit and vegetables to promote absorption, and the CDC agrees.

In practice that looks like soft-cooked spinach or tofu served with mashed kiwi, or a fish meal finished with soft strips of bell pepper. Easy pairings, real difference.

Flaked salmon beside soft kiwi and bell pepper strips, showing an iron and vitamin C pairing
A simple vitamin C pairing: flaked iBuddies Norway Wild Caught Salmon beside soft kiwi and steamed bell-pepper strips. The vitamin C helps your baby absorb more of the iron in the meal.

The Best Iron-Rich First Foods (HK-Practical)

The FHS infant weaning leaflet names liver, fish, meat, egg, dark leafy greens and tofu among the iron-rich foods to let your baby try early. Red meat and liver are the heme-iron heavyweights. Here is how some common foods compare, using the FHS's own figures (cooked weight, sourced to the Centre for Food Safety nutrient database).

Iron content (per serving — unit shown)
Animal (heme) sources, compared on the same per-100g basis (FHS / CFS):
Pork liver18.0 mg / 100g
Lean beef1.7–3.7 mg / 100g
Salmon0.3–1.3 mg / 100g
Plant & other sources — per serving (not per 100g)
  • Spinach (non-heme): 3.2–5.8 mg per 160g serving — high, but plant iron absorbs less readily than the heme iron in meat and liver.
  • Egg: 0.7–1.0 mg per egg.

Bars compare animal (heme) sources on the same per-100g basis. The spinach and egg figures above are per serving (per 160g and per egg), not per 100g, so they are listed separately rather than as comparable bars. Liver is in a league of its own for iron, but it comes with an important caveat, see the note below.

A thick soft-cooked beef strip about the width of an adult finger on a wooden board
For baby-led weaning from around 6 months, offer beef as a thick, soft-cooked strip about the width of an adult finger, big enough to grip and gnaw. You can also serve it finely minced or puréed.
⚠️ Important: liver is an occasional food

Liver, including duck liver such as foie gras, is the densest iron source there is, but it is also very high in vitamin A, so the FHS advises eating liver only occasionally and in small amounts, not every day. Offer it as a small, occasional treat in the rotation, not a daily staple.

When & How to Offer Iron-Rich Foods

Meat, fish and liver can all be introduced from around 6 months. Keep it simple and safe:

1

Offer iron-rich foods early and often, aim to include an iron source at most meals once solids are established.

2

Serve it in an age-safe form: a smooth purée, finely minced meat, or a soft-cooked strip about the width of an adult finger for baby-led weaning.

3

Pair plant (non-heme) iron with a vitamin-C-rich fruit or vegetable to boost absorption.

4

Do not expect a clean plate, even licking and mouthing a soft meatball counts as exposure at this stage (Solid Starts). Cook all meat, fish and liver thoroughly and remove any bones.

5

Ask your paediatrician about iron, the AAP recommends routine anaemia screening at around 12 months, so the 12-month check-up is a good time to bring it up.

Iron-Rich First Foods from iBuddies

Every iBuddies Baby Portion Collection protein is pre-portioned and vacuum-sealed, baby-size and freezer-ready. These three are all safe to introduce from around 6 months and land squarely on the iron message:

🥩
Australia Grass-Fed Beef Tenderloin Slice
35g · Heme-iron powerhouse · grass-fed · ~6m+ finely minced
Shop →
🐟
Norway Wild Caught Salmon
50g · Heme iron + omega-3 for the brain · ~6m+ deboned, soft-cooked, flaked
Shop →
🦆
France Duck Foie Gras Cube
10g · Foie gras is duck liver — the densest iron source · ~6m+ but occasional / small amounts only (high in vitamin A, per FHS)
Shop →
An iBuddies France Duck Foie Gras Cube pack beside a small portion of cooked liver
Liver is iron-rich gold, but treat the iBuddies France Duck Foie Gras Cube (duck liver) as an occasional, small-amount food rather than a daily one, because it is high in vitamin A (FHS).

References & Resources

Last reviewed 22 June 2026. This article is general information, not medical advice. Always raise concerns about your baby's iron with your paediatrician or maternal & child health centre.

  • Hong Kong Department of Health, Family Health Service (FHS) — Preventing Iron Deficiency (iron function, heme vs non-heme, mg figures, vitamin C pairing). Revised 05/2024. fhs.gov.hk
  • Hong Kong Department of Health, Family Health Service (FHS) — Starting Solids leaflet (names liver, fish, meat, egg as early iron-rich foods). fhs.gov.hk (PDF)
  • US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) — Infant & Toddler Nutrition: Iron. Last reviewed 14 April 2026. cdc.gov
  • American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) / HealthyChildren.org — Vitamin D & Iron Supplements for Babies. healthychildren.org
  • World Health Organization (WHO) — Global Anaemia estimates, 2025 edition. who.int
  • Solid Starts — Iron-Rich Foods for Babies & Toddlers (Venus Kalami, RD; medically reviewed). Updated 22 May 2026. solidstarts.com

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