Find out how this blood-clotting condition that's passed through families can cause life-threatening bleeding and what to do about it.
Update Date: 12.05.2026
Hemophilia is a rare condition in which the blood doesn't clot well. That's because it doesn't have enough blood-clotting proteins, called clotting factors. People with hemophilia might bleed longer after an injury than they would if the blood clotted as it should.
Small cuts aren't often much of a problem. For people with a serious form of hemophilia, the main concern is bleeding inside the body. Internal bleeding can damage organs and tissues and be life-threatening.
Gene changes that are passed through families, called inherited changes, are almost always the cause of hemophilia. Treatment includes regular replacement of the specific clotting factor that is low. There are newer therapies that don't have clotting factors, as well.
Symptoms of hemophilia vary, depending on the level of clotting factors. People with a slightly low clotting-factor level might bleed only after surgery or injury. People with a low amount of clotting factor may bleed easily for what seems like no reason, called spontaneous bleeding.
People with serious hemophilia often have symptoms in the first two years of life. For instance, an infant with severe hemophilia may first bleed too much during a heel stick to draw blood for newborn screening tests. People with milder hemophilia might not know they have the condition until later in life, maybe after injury or surgery.
Symptoms of hemophilia include:
A simple bump on the head can cause bleeding into the brain for some people who have serious hemophilia. This is rare, but it's one of the most serious complications of the condition. Symptoms include:
Seek emergency care if you or your child has:
The cause of hemophilia is a missing or low level of a clotting factor. Clotting factors are proteins in the blood that work with cells called platelets to form clots. Most often, when people bleed, blood cells pool together to form a clot to stop the bleeding. A missing or low clotting factor keeps blood from clotting well in people with hemophilia.
Hemophilia is most often inherited, meaning a person is born with the condition. This is called congenital. Congenital hemophilia is classified by the type of clotting factor that's low.
The most common type of congenital hemophilia is hemophilia A, linked with a low level of factor 8. The next most common type is hemophilia B, linked with a low level of factor 9.
Some people get hemophilia with no family history of the condition. This is called acquired hemophilia.
Acquired hemophilia happens when a person's immune system attacks clotting factor 8 or 9 in the blood. It can be linked with:
In the most common types of hemophilia, the changed gene is on the X chromosome. Everyone has two sex chromosomes, one from each parent. People assigned female at birth get an X chromosome from the mother and an X chromosome from the father. People assigned male at birth get an X chromosome from the mother and a Y chromosome from the father.
This means that most people who get hemophilia are people assigned male at birth. The condition passes from mother to son through one of the mother's genes.
Most people assigned female at birth who have the changed gene are carriers. They tend to have no hemophilia symptoms. But some carriers can have bleeding symptoms if their clotting factors are lowered slightly.
The biggest risk factor for hemophilia is to have family members who also have the condition. People assigned male at birth are much more likely to have hemophilia than are people assigned female at birth.
Complications of hemophilia can include:
Most people with serious hemophilia get a diagnosis within the first year of life. People with mild forms may not know they have the condition until they're adults. Some people learn they have hemophilia after bleeding more than expected during a surgical procedure.
Tests can help diagnose hemophilia. They may include:
The main treatment for severe hemophilia involves replacing the missing or low clotting factor through a tube in a vein.
This therapy can treat a bleeding episode as it's happening. Some people get the treatment on a regular schedule at home to help prevent bleeding episodes. Some people get ongoing replacement therapy.
Replacement clotting factor can come from donated blood. Other products, called recombinant clotting factors, come from a laboratory, not from human blood.
Other therapies include:
To manage bleeding and to protect your joints:
To help you and your child cope with hemophilia:
If you or your child has symptoms of hemophilia, your main healthcare professional may send you to a doctor who specializes in blood disorders, called a hematologist.
Make a list of:
Be sure to ask all the questions you have.
Questions your healthcare professional may ask include:
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