We talk endlessly about low testosterone in men, and almost never about it in women, even though women need testosterone too and can absolutely run low. The result is that a lot of women spend years feeling flat, tired and uninterested in sex, without anyone connecting it to this one small-but-mighty hormone. Let's give it the attention it deserves.
The symptoms of low testosterone in women
Because testosterone supports libido, energy, mood, muscle and cognition, low levels tend to show up across all of those areas. The most common signs:
Low sex drive is the most recognised symptom, often a noticeable drop in desire or sexual satisfaction. Alongside it, women frequently report persistent fatigue or low energy, low mood or a reduced sense of wellbeing, difficulty concentrating or brain fog, and loss of muscle strength. Over the longer term, low testosterone may also contribute to weaker bones.
Sources: Low Testosterone in Women — Cleveland Clinic; Symptoms of Low Testosterone in Women — Cleveland Clinic. Low testosterone can affect libido, mood, energy and musculoskeletal health.
One honest caveat: every one of these symptoms overlaps with other things — thyroid problems, anaemia, stress, depression, poor sleep. That's exactly why low testosterone can't be self-diagnosed and needs a blood test, which we come to below.
The side effects of low testosterone — on body and mind
When people search "side effects of low testosterone in women," they usually mean: how does it actually affect me? The biggest impacts cluster around sexual health and mental wellbeing. Reduced libido and sexual satisfaction are the most studied. But the emotional toll is just as real: low mood, anxiety, and a dimmed sense of wellbeing are common, and understandably affect quality of life. Over time, lower testosterone can also play a part in reduced muscle mass and bone density, which matters for long-term strength and health.
Source: Low Testosterone in Women: Symptoms, Causes, and Treatment — HealthCentral. Low testosterone in women can cause loss of libido, fatigue and other quality-of-life effects.
What causes low testosterone in women
Several things can lower testosterone. The most universal is simply age — testosterone declines gradually throughout adult life, so midlife levels are naturally lower than in your twenties. Beyond age, common causes include:
Ovaries removed or damaged (since the ovaries are a key production site), for example through surgery or chemotherapy. Adrenal or pituitary gland problems, which interfere with hormone production. And certain medications — notably oral contraceptives and oral estrogen therapy (which raise a protein called SHBG that binds testosterone, lowering the active amount), and corticosteroids. Finally, hypothalamic amenorrhea — the loss of periods from extreme stress, significant weight loss or over-exercising — and eating disorders can suppress testosterone too.
Source: Low Testosterone In Women: Causes, Symptoms & Treatment — Cleveland Clinic. Causes include age, oophorectomy, adrenal/pituitary issues, and medications like contraceptives, oral estrogen and corticosteroids.
How it's diagnosed — and why a number alone isn't enough
Low testosterone is confirmed with a blood test, but the number is only meaningful alongside your symptoms. Levels fluctuate across the day and cycle, and reference ranges vary between laboratories, so a good doctor interprets the result in context rather than treating a single figure as the whole answer. Importantly, testing also helps rule out other causes of the same symptoms — thyroid issues, anaemia, depression — so you get to the real reason you've been feeling low, whatever it turns out to be.
What you can do
If this sounds like you, the most useful step is to see a doctor who takes women's testosterone seriously, and to ask about testing. While you're at it, the foundations that support all your hormones genuinely matter here too: eating enough (under-fuelling suppresses testosterone), strength training (which supports muscle and healthy hormones), good sleep, and managing stress. These won't "cure" a true deficiency, but they create the conditions your body needs to produce hormones well. And if treatment is appropriate, that's a conversation to have with your doctor — we look at the evidence in should women take testosterone.
To understand where testosterone fits among your other hormones, start with do women produce testosterone and estrogen vs progesterone.
Andreea Mighiu is a women's hormonal health educator and the founder of Zōē. She works alongside medical doctors to translate peer-reviewed research into clear, practical cycle education. She is an educator, not a physician — Zōē's content is designed to inform, not to replace personalised medical advice.
References
1. Low Testosterone In Women: Causes, Symptoms & Treatment. Cleveland Clinic. my.clevelandclinic.org
2. Symptoms of Low Testosterone in Women. Cleveland Clinic Health Essentials. health.clevelandclinic.org
3. Low Testosterone in Women: Symptoms, Causes, and Treatment. HealthCentral. healthcentral.com
This article is educational and not a substitute for medical advice. If you have symptoms of low testosterone, please see a doctor for proper testing and assessment.