The VerdictMODERATE CONVICTIONWorth-It: Situational ROI (60/100)

Iodine supplements are essential if you genuinely don't get it from food — and potentially harmful if you already do.

Ask yourself: Do I eat dairy, eggs, or seafood at least a few times a week, AND use iodized table salt at home? If yes, you're covered — skip the supplement. If you're vegan, dairy-free, or use non-iodized or sea salt only: add a 150 mcg potassium iodide tablet each day. It costs around £2/month and eliminates the only genuine risk in your diet.

Think of your thyroid as a hormone factory that runs on one specific raw material: iodine. Without enough, the factory shuts down and your metabolism slows. But here's the twist — if you flood the factory with too much iodine all at once, it has a built-in fuse that triggers a complete shutdown. That fuse is designed to protect you, but if your thyroid is already inflamed (Hashimoto's disease affects around 5% of people), the fuse doesn't reset — the shutdown becomes permanent. More iodine is not better. The right amount is a specific, narrow window.

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Dr. Seth Holbrook, DPT — Doctor of Physical Therapy • Coach to 300+ clients
I built The Verdict to cut through recycled health advice and show what the evidence actually supports.
Vitamins & Minerals

Iodine

Thyroid, deficiency, and the supplement that's riskier than it looks

Conditional

Ask yourself: do you eat dairy, eggs, or seafood a few times a week and use iodized table salt at home? If yes — you're covered. If you're vegan, dairy-free, or use sea salt or non-iodized salt only: add one 150 mcg potassium iodide tablet per day.

Most people either don't need iodine supplements (and risk harm from taking them) or genuinely do need them and have no idea. This is the question that tells you which camp you're in.

Takes 30 seconds to figure out. Eliminates the only real iodine risk in your diet.

The Protocol

Who needs it, what to take, and what to avoid. Iodine is not a "one-size" supplement.

Iodine protocol

Dosing by Population

Who Daily Dose Form Loading Phase Source
General adults (iodized salt + dairy/seafood users) Food only — no supplement needed Dietary No EFSA; NIH ODS
Pregnant women (restricted diet) 220–250 mcg/day Potassium iodide (KI) No WHO; EFSA
Lactating women (restricted diet) 250–290 mcg/day Potassium iodide (KI) No WHO; EFSA
Older adults (restricted diet) 150 mcg/day Potassium iodide (KI) No DACH guideline
Autoimmune thyroid disease Dietary only — do not supplement without confirmed deficiency and medical clearance Absolutely not EFSA; ATA

Forms Comparison

Potassium Iodide (KI)
~88–91% absorbed
Standard daily supplementation. Precise, stable, lowest cost.
~£1–3/month at 150 mcg/day
Recommended
Potassium Iodate (KIO₃)
>90% (reduced to iodide in gut)
Used in iodized salt programs in developing nations. Not typically sold as standalone supplement.
Negligible — in iodized salt
Kelp / Seaweed
Wildly variable — near zero to 1,000× RDA per serving
Popular but unreliable. Frequently triggers autoimmune thyroid disease from accidental megadosing.
£5–15/month
Avoid
Nascent Iodine
No human clinical data
Marketed as superior absorption. Reduced to standard iodide in the gut — zero evidence for unique benefit.
Very expensive
Not recommended

Absorption Tips

Safety & Interactions

Iodine has some of the most clinically significant drug interactions of any mineral supplement — particularly with thyroid and cardiac medications.

Iodine safety
Upper Limit: 600 mcg/day (EFSA 2023) — the EFSA ceiling is more protective than the US NIH limit of 1,100 mcg/day. Chronic intake above 600 mcg/day increases autoimmune thyroid disease risk in susceptible individuals.
Severe Interaction

Amiodarone (heart medication)

This common cardiac drug is 37% iodine by weight and delivers up to 75 times the daily recommended amount with each dose. Adding iodine supplements on top creates a massive overload — causing either explosive thyroid activity (Jod-Basedow hyperthyroidism) or a prolonged shutdown (hypothyroidism). Never co-supplement.

Severe Interaction

Lithium (mood stabilizer)

Lithium directly blocks thyroid hormone release. Combined with high iodine (which also shuts down thyroid production via Wolff-Chaikoff), up to 20% of patients develop clinical hypothyroidism. Avoid supplementation; thyroid monitoring required.

Severe — Before Radioactive Iodine Therapy

Radioactive Iodine (I-131) Therapy

Stable iodine competes directly with the radioactive form for absorption into the thyroid. Taking iodine supplements before a diagnostic scan or thyroid ablation blocks the therapy from working. Stop all supplemental iodine 1–2 weeks before any radioactive iodine procedure.

High Severity

Levothyroxine (thyroid hormone replacement)

High-dose iodine can suppress any remaining thyroid function via the Wolff-Chaikoff mechanism, destabilizing TSH control in people on thyroid hormone replacement. Separately: calcium, iron, and fiber physically bind levothyroxine in the gut — separate interacting minerals by at least 4 hours from levothyroxine, regardless of iodine supplementation.

Moderate — Protective Cofactor

Selenium — Essential Partner

Selenium is not an interaction to avoid — it's a required cofactor. Selenium deficiency combined with iodine supplementation leads to unchecked oxidative damage inside the thyroid gland. Ensure adequate selenium (found in Brazil nuts, seafood, eggs) before supplementing iodine.

Who Should Not Supplement Without Medical Clearance

Conviction Level

MODERATE

The evidence for iodine's essentiality is unimpeachable — without it, the thyroid stops working. But the supplementation question is highly population-specific: genuine benefit exists only for people eliminating dietary sources, while supplementation in already-sufficient individuals offers nothing and risks thyroid disruption. The mild-deficiency pregnancy question remains genuinely unsettled.

▸ What would change this rating?
A 5-year, double-blind RCT (N>2,000) in mildly deficient pregnant women, stratified by intrathyroidal thyroglobulin stores rather than single spot-urine tests, tracking standardized cognitive testing (WISC) in the children at age 5. If the supplemented group showed a sustained IQ advantage of more than 3 points, the MODERATE would upgrade to HIGH and routine maternal supplementation in mildly deficient regions would be recommended.

Worth Your Money?

Weekly costUnder £1/week — one small potassium iodide tablet per day costs approximately £1–3/month at 150 mcg/day
Worth it ifYou're vegan, dairy-free, or avoid iodized salt and seafood. At this price point and with this level of evidence for at-risk groups, it's one of the most cost-effective nutritional interventions available.
Lower priority ifYou eat dairy, eggs, or seafood regularly and use iodized salt. Your dietary intake almost certainly meets the 150 mcg/day target without any supplement — your next £3/month would do more good elsewhere.
Conditional Value

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Claims vs Evidence — See What the Research Found

What People Claim

What people claim about iodine

"Iodine is essential for thyroid health and energy. Most people are secretly deficient due to reduced salt intake and modern diets. High-dose iodine — from Lugol's or nascent iodine — detoxifies the body of fluoride, chlorine, and bromine while supercharging your metabolism. Even pregnant women need therapeutic doses to protect their baby's brain."

Functional medicine practitioners and alternative health communities frequently use single spot-urine tests to diagnose widespread deficiency, then prescribe 12.5–50 mg/day (that's 83–330 times the recommended daily amount). Kelp tablets are widely promoted as the "natural" alternative to pharmaceutical-grade supplements.

What the Evidence Actually Shows

Iodine evidence
Claimed Benefit Evidence Effect Size Key Study Verdict
Deficiency correction (confirmed moderate-severe) STRONG Eliminates goiter, prevents cretinism, restores T3/T4 WHO/EFSA global data; Zimmermann 2009 Works — unequivocal
Cognitive improvement in deficient children MODERATE 0.19 SD improvement in perceptual reasoning Gordon et al. 2009 (N=184 RCT) Works in confirmed deficiency
Restoring status in vegans MODERATE Significant UIC improvement, status restored to adequacy Menzel et al. 2021 RCT Works
Maternal supplementation → infant brain development (mild deficiency) LOW MD: -0.18 (95% CI: -1.22, 0.87) — non-significant Dineva 2020 meta-analysis (10 RCTs); Nazeri 2021 No benefit demonstrated
Energy / metabolism boost in sufficient adults DEBUNKED No clinical evidence; paradoxical shutdown risk Endocrinology consensus (ATA, EFSA) No effect; risks harm
Halogen detoxification (fluoride/chlorine) DEBUNKED No human clinical evidence whatsoever Marketing fiction
The Full Picture — Mechanism, Debate & Nuance

How It Works

How iodine works

Iodine has one job in the human body: it's the raw material for thyroid hormone production. After you eat or supplement it, iodine is absorbed into the bloodstream and actively pumped into thyroid follicular cells — against the concentration gradient — by a protein called the Sodium-Iodide Symporter (NIS). Inside the cell, an enzyme called thyroid peroxidase (TPO) oxidizes the iodine and attaches it to tyrosine building blocks on a large protein called thyroglobulin, creating the hormone precursors that eventually couple into T3 (3 iodine atoms) and T4 (4 iodine atoms).

T4 is released into the bloodstream as a prohormone. In peripheral tissues — liver, brain, muscle — selenium-dependent enzymes convert it into the biologically active T3. This is why selenium deficiency makes iodine supplementation potentially harmful: without those selenium-powered enzymes to handle the conversion, hydrogen peroxide accumulates inside the thyroid and damages the tissue.

The built-in shutdown valve: when intracellular iodide reaches a critical threshold, TPO halts completely — this is the Wolff-Chaikoff effect. Healthy thyroids escape this blockade within days by reducing NIS expression (letting less iodine in). In people with autoimmune thyroid disease, the escape mechanism fails and the shutdown becomes permanent. This is why high-dose iodine supplementation is not a dose-response curve you can climb freely.

The Debate

Does mild deficiency in pregnancy actually harm the baby?

WHO guidelines (2004/2007)

Recommends routine supplementation (250 mcg/day) for all pregnant women to prevent neurodevelopmental problems from mild iodine deficiency.

VS

Dineva 2020 + Nazeri 2021 meta-analyses (10+ RCTs)

No measurable cognitive or developmental benefit from supplementation in mildly deficient pregnant women (urinary iodine concentration 50–149 mcg/L).

Why they disagree: Early WHO guidelines built on observational data from moderately and severely deficient populations. Later placebo-controlled RCTs specifically designed for mild deficiency consistently failed to replicate the effect. The evidence standard has moved — the guidelines haven't yet caught up.

Is deficiency re-emerging in developed countries?

Hynes et al. 2022; multiple observational studies

Iodine deficiency is re-emerging due to reduced salt intake, veganism growth, and processed food using non-iodized salt.

VS

Ghassabian et al. 2021 (63 studies)

Subclinical deficiency in iodine-replete regions rarely causes outright thyroid pathology — compensatory intrathyroidal stores are larger than spot-urine tests suggest.

Why they disagree: A single spot-urine test measures what you ate this week, not the iodine reserves stored in your thyroid gland (which can sustain function for 2–3 months). Population-level trends are real but individual risk is harder to assess than a simple urine test implies.

Honest Limitations

The Single Urine Test Fallacy

In research: Median urinary iodine concentration (UIC) across hundreds of people provides valid population-level data.
In real life: A single spot-urine test varies massively based on hydration and what you ate that day — not a reliable individual diagnostic. Clinicians frequently use it to prescribe supplementation that isn't needed.
More conservative

The Processed Food Iodine Blindspot

Historical assumption: People using salt consume iodized salt and are adequately supplemented through diet.
Modern reality: Restaurant food and processed products overwhelmingly use non-iodized salt. High-sodium dieters can be iodine-deficient. The link between "salt intake" and "iodine intake" is breaking down.
More conservative

Kelp Iodine Roulette

In research: Standardized iodine doses are used in all clinical trials.
In real life: Kelp supplements contain anywhere from near-zero to 10,000+ mcg per serving depending on species and harvest conditions. Autoimmune thyroiditis triggered by kelp is a well-documented clinical phenomenon.
More conservative

The Nuance

Iodine nuance

Who benefits most (ranked by evidence):

  1. Confirmed moderate-to-severe deficiency — Correction is neurologically and metabolically critical; effect size is large and unequivocal. STRONG
  2. Vegans and strict vegetarians — Eliminated dairy and seafood removes primary dietary sources; 150 mcg/day KI reliably restores adequacy. MODERATE
  3. Dairy-free / non-iodized salt consumers — Growing population risk in developed nations as food systems shift. MODERATE

What Doesn't Work

  • High-dose iodine as an energy or metabolism booster — In sufficient adults, flooding the thyroid with iodine triggers a protective shutdown. Energy decreases or thyroid disease develops, not a boost.
  • Kelp/seaweed as a reliable iodine source — 1,000-fold variation in iodine content between products; multiple case reports of Hashimoto's triggered by kelp supplementation.
  • Nascent iodine's claimed superiority — Reduced to standard iodide in the stomach; zero human pharmacokinetic evidence for unique absorption properties.
  • Spot urine tests as individual deficiency diagnostics — A population metric misapplied as an individual diagnostic tool. Not clinically reliable for personal supplementation decisions.

Sources

Action ROI

Is this worth your time, money, effort, risk, and trust for this goal? Different from Verdict Score (evidence strength) and Leverage Map (relative importance) — Action ROI is the worth-it call once friction is priced in.

Action ROI score
60/100 Situational ROI Trust grade B
Conditional. Essential and cheap if you genuinely avoid dairy, seafood, and iodized salt; pointless and risky for everyone already getting it.
Time
Low
Money
Low
Effort
Low
Risk
Medium
Why this score
Why it didn’t score higher
Best for
Lower ROI if
Minimum effective dose
For at-risk diets: 150mcg/day of potassium iodide (KI), one tablet, any time of day. Pregnant 220 to 250mcg/day, lactating 250 to 290mcg/day. Do not use kelp or nascent iodine (unpredictable dose). Iodine-sufficient adults need none.
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