Abstract Introduction/Objective Neonatal hemochromatosis (NH), an extremely rare congenital phenotype of acute hepatic failure with hepatic and extrahepatic siderosis, is primarily (98%) caused by gestational alloimmune liver disease (GALD) and, rarely (2%), by infection, metabolic disorders, bile acid defects, and mitochondrial hepatopathy. This report presents an extremely rare case of NH caused by an inborn error of metabolism (suspected mitochondrial dysfunction). This low-birth-weight female was born with acute liver failure, metabolic acidosis, multisystem failure, and progressive lactate acidosis, and expired on day 7. On autopsy, liver was less than 50% of normal size and without nodularity. Microscopic architecture was preserved with erythropoiesis, canalicular bile plugs, microvesicular steatosis (oil red O stain) and abundant coarsely granular siderosis (iron stain). GALD was unlikely because of the absence of the typical hepatocytic injury, fibrosis or biliary destruction, and the negative immunohistochemistry for MAC (C5b-C9). Extrahepatic siderosis was demonstrated in thyroid follicles, thymic Hassall corpuscles, myocardium, and adenohypophysis. Sanger sequencing and deletion testing of mitochondrial genome on a maternal buccal biopsy identified a homoplasmic variant (m.15482 T>C p.(S246P) in maternal MT-CYB gene but without molecular diagnosis of a mitochondrial DNA disorder. Infant plasma had increased C6DC, C5, C12-OH acylcarnitine, alanine, and proline. Urine contained elevated organic acids (lactate/pyruvate, 2-ketoacids, 3-methylglutarate, 3-methylglutaconate), concerning acute mitochondrial respiratory chain dysfunction. Methods/Case Report: Case Study Results (if a Case Study enter NA) NA Conclusion Diagnosis of NH warrants exclusion of the most common etiology, GALD. Mitochondrial genetic mutations are the most difficult to diagnosis because of heterogeneity and typically undiagnosed maternal defects. This is the first report of NH with a homoplasmic maternal variant of uncertain significance. Neonatal lactic acidosis is the strongest clinical clue for mitochondrial dysfunction and should trigger phenotyping, maternal mitochondrial genetic variants (mtDNA, nuDNA), functional, biochemical, and genetic studies.