Testosterone Therapy

What Is Testosterone Therapy for Women?

Testosterone is typically framed as a male hormone — but women produce it throughout their lives, and it plays a meaningful role in sexual function, energy, mood, and physical vitality. Testosterone peaks in a woman’s mid-20s and steadily declines, dropping sharply around menopause.

Testosterone therapy for women uses low, physiologic doses — typically 5 to 10% of a male dose — to restore levels to a normal female range. Because no FDA-approved female testosterone product currently exists in the U.S., our providers prescribe off-label male formulations at female-appropriate doses, or compounded products.

What the evidence shows

  • The Global Consensus Position Statement (2019), endorsed by major menopause and endocrine societies, supports testosterone for postmenopausal women with low sexual desire causing distress.
  • Randomized trials consistently show improvement in sexual desire, arousal, and satisfaction in postmenopausal women.
  • Current evidence does not support increased breast cancer or cardiovascular risk at physiologic female doses.

What Symptoms Does Testosterone Therapy Address?

Testosterone deficiency in women contributes to a wide range of symptoms beyond low libido. Here’s what optimizing it can help with.

Sexual Desire & Arousal

Testosterone is the primary hormonal driver of libido in women. Low levels are the most common cause of hypoactive sexual desire disorder (HSDD) at menopause.

Energy & Motivation

Persistent, unexplained fatigue that estrogen doesn’t fully resolve is often related to low testosterone. Many women describe a marked return of drive and vitality.

Muscle Mass & Strength

Testosterone supports protein synthesis, lean muscle maintenance, and metabolic health — important for physical function and weight management after menopause.

Cognitive Sharpness

Emerging research links testosterone to attention, working memory, and verbal fluency. Some women notice significant improvement in mental clarity.

Bone Density

Testosterone contributes independently to bone mineral density, complementing estrogen’s protective role — particularly relevant for higher osteoporosis risk.

Mood & Wellbeing

Beyond libido, testosterone influences confidence, emotional resilience, and overall sense of wellbeing — qualities that can diminish subtly but significantly at menopause.

Common Myths — and What’s Actually True

Testosterone therapy for women is surrounded by misconceptions. Here’s what the evidence actually shows.

Common Myth

“Testosterone will make me look or sound like a man.”

What’s True

Female-dose testosterone is 5–10% of male doses — far below masculinizing thresholds. When dosed appropriately and monitored, virilizing side effects (acne, voice changes, excess hair) are rare and reversible if they occur.

Common Myth

“Testosterone causes heart disease or breast cancer.”

What’s True

Current evidence does not support increased cardiovascular or breast cancer risk with physiologic female doses of testosterone. Long-term data continue to accumulate. Our providers discuss current evidence openly at every visit.

Common Myth

“Testosterone is only for libido — I don’t need it for other symptoms.”

What’s True

Testosterone impacts energy, mood, cognitive function, muscle mass, and bone health. Women with low testosterone can experience a wide range of symptoms beyond sexual function — and can benefit meaningfully from therapy targeting them.



Page Content

What Is Testosterone Therapy for Women?

What the evidence shows

What Symptoms Does Testosterone Therapy Address?

Common Myths — and What’s Actually True

The Benefits We Provide

Appointment

Same day appointments.

Availibility

7 days a week.

Physicians

Licensed & certified Physicians.

Quality Care

Affordable, compassionate care.

Change Your Life Today!

Get Started

You don’t have to live with uncomfortable symptoms. Schedule a virtual visit to discuss whether estrogen therapy is right for you.