The peptide hormone hepcidin plays a central role in iron homeostasis. It is predominantly expressed in the liver and regulated by iron, hypoxia, and inflammation. Although it has been shown that iron plays a key pathophysiological role in cardiac diseases, including iron-overload cardiomyopathy, myocardial ischemia-reperfusion injury, and atherosclerosis, very little is known about the putative expression and the role of hepcidin in the heart. In the present study, expression and regulation of hepcidin in rat heart were analyzed. Basal cardiac expression of hepcidin was demonstrated on mRNA and protein level in vivo in a rat model and compared with its regulation in the liver. The cellular localization was analyzed by immunofluorescence microscopy. Sixteen hours after a single injection of turpentine, a more than 2-fold increase of cardiac hepcidin mRNA and a more than 3-fold increase of hepatic hepcidin mRNA was observed. In response to hypoxia, expression of hepcidin in the liver decreased. In contrast, hypoxia resulted in a strong up-regulation of hepcidin expression on mRNA and protein level in the heart, accompanied by an increased immunoreactivity of hepcidin pronounced at the myocardial intercalated disc area. The finding of a regulated expression of the iron-regulatory peptide hormone hepcidin in the heart suggests that hepcidin may have an important role in cardiac diseases.