Iodine Deficiency in Australia — Symptoms, Foods & Budget Sources
Iodine deficiency was considered eliminated in Australia decades ago. It's back. Over 50% of pregnant Australian women are now iodine deficient — and mild deficiency is widespread in the general population. Most people don't know they're low.
Why Is Iodine Deficiency Re-Emerging?
Australia's soils are naturally low in iodine — unlike coastal regions of Europe and Asia where seafood and seaweed are dietary staples. Several shifts have made the situation worse:
- Dairy processing changes — iodine-based sanitisers in the dairy industry used to be a major unintentional iodine source in milk. Modern food-grade sanitisers don't contain iodine, so milk's iodine content has dropped significantly.
- Less seafood consumption — many Australians eat very little fish or shellfish, which are the richest natural iodine sources.
- Specialty salts don't help — Himalayan pink salt, sea salt, and rock salt contain negligible iodine. Only iodised table salt (clearly labelled) contains added iodine, and most Australians use non-iodised salt.
- Bread mandates help but aren't enough — since 2009, commercial bakers in Australia are required to use iodised salt. This helps, but home-baked bread and artisan bread are exempt.
🚨 Why iodine matters so much in pregnancy
Iodine is essential for thyroid hormone production, and thyroid hormones are critical for foetal brain development — particularly in the first trimester. Iodine deficiency in pregnancy is the world's leading preventable cause of intellectual disability. Even mild deficiency during pregnancy is linked to lower IQ scores in children. The Australian National Health and Medical Research Council recommends iodine supplements for all pregnant and breastfeeding women.
Cheapest Iodine-Rich Foods in Australia
Prices based on Coles & Woolworths homebrand, May 2026. RDA reference: adult 150µg/day.
| Food | Iodine per serve | Cost/serve | % Daily Target |
|---|---|---|---|
| 🐟 Sardines, canned (100g) | 35–65 µg | $1.50 | 23–43% |
| 🥛 Milk, full-cream (250mL) | 35–60 µg | $0.45 | 23–40% |
| 🫙 Greek yoghurt (200g) | 35–50 µg | $0.90 | 23–33% |
| 🍳 Eggs (2 large) | 30–50 µg | $0.80 | 20–33% |
| 🧀 Cheddar cheese (30g) | 15–25 µg | $0.50 | 10–17% |
| 🐟 Tuna, canned (100g) | 20–40 µg | $1.20 | 13–27% |
| 🍞 Commercial bread (2 slices, iodised salt) | 25–35 µg | $0.30 | 17–23% |
| 🦐 Prawns (100g) | 30–50 µg | $3.00 | 20–33% |
Iodine content varies considerably depending on farming region, season, and processing methods. Values are indicative ranges from NUTTAB and FSANZ data.
💡 The simplest daily iodine strategy
Two serves of dairy (milk at breakfast, yoghurt at lunch) + 2 eggs at any meal = approximately 100–160µg of iodine — close to or at the daily target for non-pregnant adults. Add a tin of sardines twice a week and you're consistently hitting the target across the week.
What About Seaweed and Kelp?
Seaweed and kelp are extraordinarily high in iodine — but this cuts both ways:
- Nori (sushi seaweed sheets): 30–60µg per sheet — a moderate, safe amount
- Wakame: 100–500µg per small serve — high but within safe range occasionally
- Kelp and kombu: can contain 1,000–2,000µg+ per small serve — this is above the safe upper limit of 1,100µg/day
Nori is the safest seaweed for regular consumption. Avoid kelp supplements and kombu broth as a daily habit — excess iodine can disrupt thyroid function just as deficiency can.
Symptoms of Iodine Deficiency
- Fatigue and sluggishness disproportionate to sleep
- Weight gain and difficulty losing weight (thyroid slowing metabolism)
- Feeling cold — especially in hands and feet
- Brain fog, difficulty concentrating, poor memory
- Dry skin and hair, brittle nails
- Swollen neck / goitre (enlarged thyroid gland) — in severe deficiency
- In pregnancy: risk of miscarriage, preterm birth, and developmental issues in the child
Many of these symptoms overlap with other conditions. A GP can test thyroid function and, if indicated, urinary iodine levels.
Should You Take Iodine Supplements?
For most healthy adults eating dairy and eggs regularly, food sources are sufficient. However, supplements are recommended for:
- Pregnant women — 150µg iodine supplement daily (in addition to diet), as recommended by NHMRC
- Breastfeeding women — same recommendation
- Vegans and those avoiding dairy, eggs, and seafood — should consider a supplement
- People using non-iodised salt only and eating little dairy or fish
⚠️ Don't over-supplement
The safe upper limit for iodine is 1,100µg/day for adults. High-dose iodine supplements or kelp products can cause thyroid problems — both hypothyroidism and hyperthyroidism. Standard pregnancy supplements contain 150µg, which is appropriate. Avoid "high-dose iodine" products without medical supervision.
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