Mean Corpuscular Hemoglobin (MCH)

MCH shows how much hemoglobin is in the average red blood cell to help assess anemia.

Last reviewedJune 16, 2026
Whole blood
sample type
~3 mL
blood needed
~7 days
results in app
Any time of day
best timing
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In short

Mean corpuscular haemoglobin, or MCH, is the average amount of haemoglobin in a single red blood cell. Haemoglobin is the protein that carries oxygen, so MCH reflects how much oxygen-carrying pigment each cell holds.

It is a calculated index from the complete blood count and moves closely with MCV.

Blood Health (CBC & Iron)
Reviewed against DGKL reference practice.
Why it matters

Why test this?

MCH helps classify anaemia. A low MCH (cells with less haemoglobin) often goes with iron deficiency or a thalassaemia trait. A high MCH usually goes with larger cells, as in vitamin B12 or folate deficiency. Read with MCV, it helps point to the likely cause and the right follow-up.

Reference ranges

What is a normal result?

Aniva reads your result against research-backed ranges, not just the lab's wide normal. The reference shown below is specific to this biomarker.

Typical adult range, automated count:

MeasureTypical range
MCH27 to 33 pg

Ranges are guidance only and vary by laboratory and analyser. Read against your lab's own reference range, aligned to German practice (DGKL).

Ranges are guidance and vary by lab and assay, aligned with DGKL practice. Always read your result against your own lab's reference interval.
What you'll learn

What insights will this test give you?

Your result shows how much haemoglobin your average red cell carries. With haemoglobin, MCV, and the other indices, it helps identify the type of anaemia and what to check next.

What affects your level

What can affect this result?

What can skew the result

MCH tracks cell size, so causes that change MCV also change MCH. Very high white cell counts, lipaemia, or cold agglutinins can interfere with the calculation. Delays before analysis can affect the result.

Best interpreted with

Best read with haemoglobin, MCV, MCHC, and RDW, and with iron studies, vitamin B12, and folate when anaemia is found.

How testing works

How is this tested?

Sample
Whole blood
Blood needed
~3 mL
Method
Photometry
Best timing
Any time of day
FAQ

Common questions

What does an MCH result mean in plain terms? It shows how much hemoglobin, the oxygen-carrying protein, is in the average red blood cell. Higher or lower values help sort possible anemia patterns.

What can affect my MCH level? Iron, B12, or folate changes, alcohol, certain medicines, recent transfusion or blood donation, illness, pregnancy, and sample handling can influence results.

Do I need to fast for MCH? No. Fasting does not affect this measurement, but staying hydrated helps a smooth blood draw.

How often should I test it? Many people check it during routine CBCs or when symptoms arise. Your clinician may repeat it to track changes or after treatment adjustments.

How quickly will I get results? Results are usually ready in about 7 days.

What should I discuss with my clinician? Review MCH alongside MCV, MCHC, RDW, ferritin, and vitamins. Ask what the pattern suggests and whether more tests or follow-up are needed.

Related biomarkers

Markers usually read alongside this one

On this page
Why testReference rangesWhat you'll learnWhat affects itHow testing worksSourcesFAQ
✦ Privately insured? German PKV usually reimburses.

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