Let's get the headline out of the way: yes, your testosterone does decline as you age. Around 1–2% per year from your mid-thirties, according to the research. By the time you're 50, you could be sitting on levels 15–30% lower than your peak.
That sounds alarming. It isn't — at least, not for most men. The problem is that the framing around testosterone decline has been completely hijacked by two groups with opposing agendas: the "just eat steak and lift heavy" crowd who think this is all gym motivation content, and the TRT clinic marketing machine that wants you to think you're deficient and need a prescription.
Both camps are largely missing the point.
Here's what's actually happening, why the numbers can mislead you, and what you should actually focus on.
The decline is real — but it's not uniform
The landmark Massachusetts Male Aging Study tracked testosterone levels in men over time and found that total testosterone declines by around 1.6% per year. Other studies put it closer to 1–1.2%. The exact figure varies by study design, population, and how testosterone was measured.
What the headline number obscures:
- Free testosterone declines faster — around 2–3% per year — because SHBG (sex hormone binding globulin) increases with age, binding more testosterone and making it unavailable. More on SHBG in a minute.
- Lifestyle factors dominate genetics — men with poor sleep, high body fat, chronic stress, and sedentary lifestyles can have levels 30–40% lower than age-matched men who don't. Age is a factor. It's not the main factor.
- The decline is not linear — it accelerates in your 50s and 60s. In your 40s, the picture is more variable and more controllable than most men realise.
The 'normal range' problem
When you get testosterone tested — either on the NHS or privately — you'll get a result measured in nmol/L (in the UK) alongside a reference range, typically something like 8–30 nmol/L.
That range is enormous. A man sitting at 9 nmol/L and a man at 29 nmol/L are both technically "normal." They do not feel the same. They do not function the same.
The reference range is derived from population-level data, not from what men feel well at. It includes older men, overweight men, and men with poor lifestyle habits — which is to say, it reflects the average state of the population, not an optimal state.
The NHS threshold for TRT consideration is typically around 8–12 nmol/L, depending on the clinical picture. Most private clinics operate with a broader clinical view, treating symptoms as heavily as numbers. Neither approach is wrong — they're answering different questions.
The point is: don't fixate on whether you're "in range." Focus on the full picture: total testosterone, free testosterone, SHBG, LH, FSH, and how you actually feel.
SHBG: the number your GP probably didn't mention
SHBG — sex hormone binding globulin — is a protein that binds to testosterone and makes it biologically inactive. Only "free" testosterone (unbound) and "bioavailable" testosterone (loosely bound to albumin) can actually act on your tissues.
As men age, SHBG tends to rise. The consequence: your total testosterone reading can look stable or even acceptable while your free testosterone — the stuff that actually works — is tanking.
This is why a man can have a total testosterone of 16 nmol/L but feel genuinely symptomatic, while another man at the same level feels fine. SHBG levels are doing different things.
Factors that raise SHBG (reducing free T):
- Ageing itself
- Low BMI / being underweight
- Hyperthyroidism
- Liver disease
- High oestrogen
- Certain medications (including some statins)
Factors that lower SHBG (increasing free T):
- Obesity / higher insulin levels
- Hypothyroidism
- Anabolic steroids and exogenous testosterone
- High protein intake (modest effect)
If you're getting tested, always ask for SHBG alongside total testosterone. Without it, you're only seeing half the picture.
What actually moves testosterone — the evidence
The lifestyle interventions with the best evidence base are less exciting than most content in this space makes them sound. No single supplement or protocol is going to transform your hormones. But several things genuinely compound over time.
Sleep
This is the most underrated lever by a significant margin. A 2011 study in JAMA found that men who slept 5 hours per night for one week had testosterone levels 10–15% lower than their baseline. One week. The effect is acute and dramatic.
The mechanism: most testosterone is produced during sleep — specifically during the first few hours of deep NREM sleep. Disrupted sleep architecture doesn't just leave you tired. It reduces the time your body spends in testosterone-producing states.
Andrew Huberman has covered this extensively: the single highest-ROI thing you can do for your hormones is consistently get 7–9 hours of quality sleep, with a regular schedule. Morning light, dark rooms, cool temperatures — it all compounds.
Body fat
Adipose tissue (body fat) contains aromatase — the enzyme that converts testosterone to oestrogen. More body fat means more aromatisation. It also means more SHBG and lower SHBG sensitivity. The relationship between obesity and low testosterone is bidirectional: low T promotes fat gain, and fat gain suppresses T.
Getting body fat from 25% to 15–18% (a realistic range for most men over 40) will meaningfully shift your hormonal profile. Not overnight — but over 6–12 months of sustained effort, the blood results will reflect it.
Resistance training
The acute testosterone response to heavy compound lifts is real but modest and short-lived. What matters more is the long-term: men who train consistently have better body composition, better insulin sensitivity, and typically higher resting testosterone than sedentary men. It's not the spike from a session — it's the cumulative effect of a body that's being asked to perform.
Focus on compound movements (squat, deadlift, press), meaningful progressive overload, and recovery. Three to four sessions per week is well-supported. More isn't necessarily better, and overtraining can temporarily suppress testosterone.
Stress and cortisol
Cortisol and testosterone are antagonists. Chronic psychological stress elevates cortisol, which directly suppresses gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH), the signalling hormone that tells your testes to produce testosterone. This is a well-established axis.
The implication: if you're running on adrenaline, consistently under-sleeping, over-caffeinating, and never switching off, you're running a cortisol load that directly erodes testosterone. It's not a metaphor — it's a hormonal feedback loop.
HRV (heart rate variability) tracking is a useful proxy for this. Chronically low HRV is a reliable signal that your autonomic nervous system is under load, which correlates with cortisol elevation.
The foundational supplement stack
Three micronutrients are worth taking seriously. Not because they'll "boost" testosterone, but because deficiency is common and deficiency does suppress it.
Zinc — required for testosterone synthesis and LH signalling. Deficiency is more common than most people realise, especially in men with high sweat output or poor diet quality. Dosage: 15–25mg elemental zinc daily with food. Don't go above 40mg long-term without monitoring copper levels.
Magnesium (Glycinate) — involved in hundreds of enzymatic reactions, including those affecting testosterone. Magnesium glycinate is the best-absorbed form and doesn't cause GI issues. Sleep quality typically improves noticeably. Dosage: 200–400mg elemental magnesium 30–60 minutes before bed.
Vitamin D — acts more like a hormone than a vitamin. Receptors exist in testicular Leydig cells, which are the primary sites of testosterone production. UK population data suggests 40–60% of adults are deficient or insufficient. Dosage: 2,000–4,000 IU daily with a fatty meal. Test first if possible (NHS test available on request, or via Medichecks privately).
These are not the whole story. But if your levels of any of these three are depleted, everything else you do is working against a headwind.
What this means for you
The 1% per year figure is real. But it's a population average across men with wildly different lifestyles. Your trajectory is not fixed.
The men at 60 with the hormonal profile of a healthy 40-year-old almost universally share the same characteristics: they sleep well, they're lean, they train consistently, they manage stress, and they've been doing those things for years. That's the unsexy truth.
Once you have the foundations locked in, the picture gets more nuanced — SHBG manipulation, clinical options, peptides, targeted supplementation. But none of that matters if the basics are broken.
Start with bloodwork so you know where you actually stand. The UK Male Optimisation Bloodwork Checklist below covers exactly what to test, what the numbers mean, and where to get it done privately for under £100.
This article is for informational purposes only. It does not constitute medical advice. Consult a qualified healthcare professional before making changes to your health protocol.