Tested, not guessed

Could it be hormonal?

Fatigue. Low mood. Weight that won't shift. Poor sleep. A libido that's disappeared. These are some of the most common things we hear — and some of the most commonly misdiagnosed. The only way to know if it's hormonal, or something else entirely, is to test.

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Why we test rather than guess

The symptoms overlap. The causes don't.

Low testosterone and perimenopause share symptoms with an underactive thyroid, iron deficiency, poor sleep, blood sugar dysregulation, and even common mental health conditions. That overlap is exactly why guessing — or self-diagnosing from a symptom checklist — so often leads people to the wrong fix. A comprehensive blood panel looks at your hormones alongside the other markers that can cause the same symptoms, so you find out what's actually going on before you change anything.

A note on the lists below. These are common, non-specific symptoms — most have several possible causes, and experiencing some of them doesn't necessarily mean your hormones are imbalanced. They're a starting point for a conversation, not a diagnosis. Only a blood test and a proper consultation can tell you what's actually happening in your body.
Common symptoms

What hormonal imbalance can look like

The pattern of symptoms differs by sex, though there's real overlap — fatigue and low mood show up on both lists.

For men

Low testosterone

Sometimes called andropause — often dismissed as normal ageing, or just "getting older."

  • Persistent fatigue or low energy, even with enough sleep
  • Reduced muscle mass or strength despite consistent training
  • Increased body fat, particularly around the abdomen
  • Low libido or difficulty with erections
  • Low mood, irritability, or reduced motivation
  • Poor concentration or "brain fog"
  • Fewer morning erections
  • Disrupted or poor-quality sleep
For women

Perimenopause & hormonal imbalance

Covers the transition into perimenopause as well as broader imbalances such as PCOS.

  • Irregular, heavier, or unpredictable periods
  • Hot flushes or night sweats
  • Mood swings, anxiety, or irritability
  • Disrupted sleep or new-onset insomnia
  • Persistent fatigue
  • Weight gain, particularly around the middle
  • Brain fog or difficulty concentrating
  • Reduced libido
  • Changes in skin or hair, or new acne
What we offer

Find the actual cause, then act on it

Rather than testing hormones in isolation, we look at the full picture — a comprehensive hormone panel, the conditions most often mistaken for one, body composition and lifestyle context, and a plain-English plan you can actually act on.

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Why this is more common now

This isn't just "getting older"

Hormonal symptoms are often written off as an inevitable part of ageing. But the research tells a more specific story — one that's as much about modern life as it is about age.

~1%

Population studies tracking men of the same age across different decades have found average testosterone levels falling by roughly 1% per year since the late 1980s — a generational decline, not just an individual one. Some of the largest studies found this held true even after accounting for rising body weight.

20%

One large US study found roughly 1 in 5 adolescent and young adult men already had testosterone levels in the deficient range — a pattern researchers didn't expect to see at that age.

Conditions like PCOS and insulin resistance are being diagnosed more often in women, and perimenopause is increasingly linked to the same metabolic pressures driving hormonal change in men — rather than being a separate, unrelated process.

Researchers point to a cluster of modern, largely modifiable factors rather than any single cause:

Body composition

Rising body fat

Higher average body fat is linked to lower testosterone and disrupted hormone signalling — and the effect compounds over time.

Movement

Sedentary lifestyles

Far less daily movement than previous generations, with strength training in particular linked to healthier hormone profiles.

Sleep & stress

Poor sleep, high cortisol

Most reproductive hormones are produced overnight, and persistently elevated cortisol suppresses them — modern life pressures both.

Nutrition

Processed, high-sugar diets

Diets driving insulin resistance are increasingly linked to disrupted hormone regulation in both men and women.

This is a simplified summary of an evolving area of research, not a complete clinical picture — individual causes vary, and correlation in population studies doesn't prove a single cause for any one person's symptoms. It's exactly why testing your own numbers matters more than reading a list like this one.

Common questions

Everything you'd want to ask

How do I know if my symptoms are hormonal or something else?

Many symptoms of hormonal imbalance overlap with thyroid conditions, nutrient deficiencies, poor sleep, and mental health. A comprehensive blood panel is the only reliable way to tell the difference, which is why we test broadly rather than assuming.

What does hormone testing involve?

A blood draw covering the relevant hormone markers for your symptoms and sex, alongside related markers like thyroid function, iron, vitamin D and blood sugar, followed by a consultation to interpret the results in plain English.

Can hormonal imbalance be treated?

Many cases improve significantly through training, nutrition, sleep and stress management once the underlying picture is clear. Where clinical treatment such as hormone therapy may be appropriate, this is discussed privately in consultation with a qualified practitioner.

Which package includes hormone testing?

Our Baseline Audit and Performance package both include a hormone panel; the Elite package extends this further. See our full testing and pricing options to compare what's included.

Get started

Stop guessing.
Start with a test.

Whatever's behind your symptoms, the first step is the same: find out what your numbers actually say.

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