High-phosphorus oolitic hematite is recognized as one of the most refractory iron ores due to the intergrowth of phosphorus and iron, making traditional separation techniques ineffective. Gas-based direct reduction followed by magnetic separation is of significance to realize the efficient recovery of iron from low-grade iron ore, accompanying the reduction of phosphorus. However, the transformation and migration behavior of phosphorus during the reduction process remains unclear. To simulate the direct reduction of this ore, the initial heating followed by the reduction experiments were performed. Using confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM), this study first investigated the phosphorus transformation under a high-purity Ar atmosphere heating from 25 degrees C to 1500 degrees C. The results indicate that fluorapatite (Ca-5(PO4)(3)F) underwent a sequence of defluorination, partial dissolution, and complete dissolution, corresponding to solid (Ca-3(PO4)(2)), solid-liquid coexistence, and liquid phases (P2O5), respectively. Subsequently, the migration behavior of three kinds of phosphorus in different states during CO reduction was clarified through a quantitative mass balance analysis. At 1200 degrees C, solid Ca-3(PO4)(2) was not reduced by CO. By 1300 degrees C, (P2O5) in the melt was reduced, and more than half of phosphorus escaped to the gas phase. The increase in dissolved (P2O5) in the melt accelerated the reduction of phosphorus at 1400 degrees C, resulting in an increase of phosphorus in the iron phase. Finally, inhibiting (P2O5) dissolution in the melt via Al2O3 addition could decrease phosphorus content in the iron phase, providing a visible strategy to promote the utilization of high-phosphorus iron ores.