Hormones & Metabolism

Testosterone Therapy for Women in Menopause: Evidence, Risks, Results

By Dr. Jossy Onwude, MD

Reviewed by Kenya Bass, PA-C

Published Feb 18, 2026

5 min read

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Testosterone is often thought of as a “male hormone,” but women produce it too—and it plays an important role in sexual desire, energy, mood, muscle strength, and overall wellbeing. During perimenopause and menopause, testosterone levels can decline alongside estrogen, which may contribute to symptoms such as low libido, fatigue, and reduced vitality.

In carefully selected women, testosterone therapy can meaningfully improve sexual desire and satisfaction, though its effects on energy, mood, or body composition are less certain. Understanding who benefits, what’s safe, and what the science actually shows is essential before considering treatment.

Quick Facts About Testosterone in Menopause

  • Women naturally produce testosterone in the ovaries and adrenal glands. (Med Clin North Am. 2021)
  • Levels gradually decline with age and ovarian aging, and may drop suddenly after surgical menopause.
  • The only well-supported medical indication for testosterone therapy in women is hypoactive sexual desire disorder (HSDD).
  • Treatment should aim for physiologic female ranges, not male levels.
  • Therapy requires medical supervision and monitoring for safety.

Understanding Testosterone in Women

Do Women Really Have Testosterone?

Yes. Although women produce far less testosterone than men, the hormone is still biologically important. It contributes to:

  • Sexual desire and arousal
  • Bone maintenance
  • Muscle mass and strength
  • Mood and motivation

Circulating testosterone declines gradually from the mid-reproductive years onward, independent of menopause itself.

What Happens During Perimenopause and Menopause?

Unlike estrogen—which drops sharply—testosterone typically declines more slowly. However, symptoms may still emerge due to:

  • Overall hormonal shifts
  • Reduced ovarian function
  • Changes in sex hormone–binding globulin (SHBG)
  • Surgical removal of ovaries (sudden drop)

Symptoms of Low Testosterone in Midlife Women

Symptoms are nonspecific, which is why diagnosis depends on clinical evaluation, not blood tests alone.

Woman experiencing low libido due to low testosterone

Sexual Health

  • Reduced libido
  • Fewer sexual thoughts or fantasies
  • Decreased arousal or orgasm intensity

Energy, Mood, and Cognition

  • Persistent fatigue
  • Low motivation
  • Brain fog
  • Flattened mood (distinct from major depression)

Body Composition and Strength

  • Loss of lean muscle
  • Increased fat mass
  • Reduced exercise recovery

Bone and Vitality

  • Possible contribution to bone loss
  • Reduced sense of wellbeing

Related Read: How to Treat High Testosterone in Women: Signs, Causes & Safe Options

Evidence-Based Benefits of Testosterone Therapy

1. Sexual Desire and Function (Strongest Evidence)

Multiple randomized controlled trials show transdermal testosterone improves sexual desire, arousal, orgasm frequency, and sexual satisfaction in postmenopausal women diagnosed with HSDD.

Major medical societies—including the International Society for the Study of Women’s Sexual Health (ISSWSH) and the Endocrine Society—recognize testosterone therapy as an evidence-based option for this condition.

Expected timeline:

  • Improvement often appears within 4–12 weeks.

2. Energy, Mood, and Cognitive Effects (Mixed Evidence)

Some women report:

  • Better mood
  • Increased motivation
  • Improved wellbeing

However, clinical trials show inconsistent results, so testosterone is not recommended solely for mood or fatigue.

3. Muscle Mass, Strength, and Metabolism

Small studies suggest modest improvements in lean body mass, especially when combined with resistance training, but evidence remains limited.

Testosterone is not an approved weight-loss treatment for women.

4. Bone Health and Aging

Androgens may help maintain bone density, yet estrogen remains the primary hormone for bone protection. Long-term fracture-prevention data for testosterone are insufficient.

Who Is a Good Candidate?

Women With Hypoactive Sexual Desire Disorder (HSDD)

This is the main evidence-based indication, defined by:

  • Persistent low sexual desire
  • Personal distress
  • No better medical or psychological explanation

Women Still Symptomatic on Estrogen Therapy

Some women using menopausal hormone therapy (MHT) continue to experience low libido, and may benefit from carefully dosed testosterone.

Who Should Avoid Testosterone?

  • Pregnancy or breastfeeding
  • Active hormone-sensitive cancers (individualized decision required)
  • Severe acne or androgen excess disorders
  • Uncontrolled cardiovascular or liver disease

Types of Testosterone Therapy for Women

Transdermal Gels or Creams

Most commonly recommended due to:

  • Stable absorption
  • Easier dose adjustment
  • Best safety evidence

Patches

Less widely available but supported by clinical trials.

Pellets

Provide long-acting dosing but carry risk of excessive levels and limited reversibility.

Oral Testosterone

Generally not recommended due to unfavorable lipid effects and liver metabolism.

Dosing, Monitoring, and Safety

Female Dosing Principles

  • About one-tenth of male doses
  • Goal: maintain normal premenopausal female range

Laboratory Monitoring

Before and during therapy:

  • Total testosterone
  • SHBG
  • Lipid profile
  • Liver function

When Results Appear

  • Libido: 1–3 months
  • Mood/energy: variable
  • Body composition: months with exercise

Signs of Excess Dose

  • Acne or oily skin
  • Facial hair growth
  • Scalp hair thinning
  • Voice deepening (rare but potentially irreversible)

Risks, Side Effects, and Controversies

Common Mild Effects

  • Acne
  • Hair changes
  • Skin irritation (topicals)

Serious Concerns

When kept within physiologic female levels, studies show no clear increase in breast cancer or cardiovascular events over short-to-medium follow-up, but long-term safety data remain limited.

Compounded Hormone Concerns

Non-regulated compounded testosterone may have:

  • Inconsistent dosing
  • Limited safety data

Medical societies generally prefer approved or standardized formulations when available.

Testosterone vs Estrogen vs Progesterone

Similar Read: Estrogen Patch Benefits for Menopause: Uses, Safety, and What to Know

Natural Ways to Support Healthy Testosterone

Menopausal woman resting to improve testosterone supply

Lifestyle strategies can support hormonal balance:

  • Resistance training to preserve muscle
  • Adequate sleep (7–9 hours)
  • Protein, zinc, vitamin D, healthy fats
  • Stress reduction to limit cortisol effects
  • Healthy weight and insulin sensitivity

These approaches cannot replace medical therapy for diagnosed HSDD but improve overall wellbeing.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is testosterone therapy safe for menopausal women?

When prescribed appropriately and monitored, evidence suggests short-term safety within female physiologic ranges, though long-term data are still developing.

Does testosterone cause weight loss?

No. It is not a weight-loss medication.

Will it improve mood or brain fog?

Possibly, but evidence is inconsistent, so it’s not a primary treatment.

Can it cause facial hair or voice changes?

Yes—especially if levels become too high.

Can women take testosterone without estrogen?

Sometimes, but many experts evaluate overall hormone balance first.

How long can therapy continue?

As long as benefits outweigh risks and monitoring remains normal.

When to Talk to a Menopause Specialist

Consider evaluation if you experience:

  • Persistent low libido with distress
  • Ongoing symptoms despite estrogen therapy
  • Uncertainty about hormone options

Individualized care is essential—hormone therapy is never one-size-fits-all.

Key Takeaways

  • Women naturally produce testosterone, and levels decline with age.
  • The strongest evidence supports treatment for low sexual desire (HSDD).
  • Benefits for mood, energy, or weight are uncertain.
  • Therapy must use low physiologic doses with monitoring.
  • Decisions should be made with a qualified menopause clinician.
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