The State of TRT in the UK
Testosterone replacement therapy has been available on the NHS for decades, but historically prescribed narrowly — for men with documented primary hypogonadism (usually due to testicular damage, certain genetic conditions, or chemotherapy). Men with the far more common age-related testosterone decline fell into a grey zone where NHS GPs were reluctant to prescribe.
That's changed significantly in the last five years. A market of credible private TRT clinics has emerged — Optimale, Balance My Hormones, Leger Clinic, Harley Street specialists — staffed by doctors who understand and treat testosterone deficiency in the full clinical context that NHS GPs often lack the time or training to assess.
This isn't fringe medicine. The British Society for Sexual Medicine (BSSM) guidelines support testosterone therapy for men with documented hypogonadism and symptoms. The evidence base is substantial. The shift has been in clinical access, not in the evidence.
The NHS Route
What the NHS Will Treat
The NHS will prescribe testosterone therapy for men with primary or secondary hypogonadism where:
- Total testosterone is consistently below 12 nmol/L on two separate tests
- Symptoms are present (fatigue, low libido, erectile dysfunction, mood changes, loss of muscle)
- Secondary causes have been excluded (thyroid dysfunction, hyperprolactinaemia, sleep apnoea)
If your testosterone is 12–16 nmol/L with symptoms, you are in a clinical grey area where NHS prescribing is inconsistent. Some GPs and NHS endocrinologists will treat; many won't. The "in range" interpretation dominates NHS practice.
The NHS Process
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GP appointment — Present your symptoms. Ask for a testosterone blood test (total testosterone, LH, FSH at minimum). Ideally ask for SHBG and free testosterone, though many GPs won't include these.
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If total testosterone below 12 nmol/L — GP may refer to endocrinology or urology. Some GPs will initiate TRT directly; most prefer specialist confirmation.
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Repeat testing — NICE guidelines require two low readings 4–6 weeks apart before diagnosis. This is because testosterone fluctuates and a single reading can be misleading.
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Specialist referral — NHS endocrinologists have significant waiting lists (6–18 months is common in most areas). This is the primary bottleneck.
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Prescription — If approved, the NHS will typically prescribe testogel (topical testosterone gel) or Sustanon 250 injections. You administer at home or receive injections at a clinic.
NHS Prescribing Formats
Testogel (1% testosterone gel) — Applied to shoulders/arms daily. Steady absorption, no injection needed. Risk of transference to female partners or children (skin contact). Around £30/month on NHS prescription with standard prescription charge (£9.90 per item in England as of 2026, or free if on prepayment certificate).
Nebido (testosterone undecanoate) — A long-acting injection administered every 10–14 weeks. Very convenient — 4–5 injections per year. The extended release can make dose optimisation more difficult. Standard NHS injection protocol.
Sustanon 250 (mixed testosterone esters) — Typically every 2–3 weeks via self-injection or clinic visit. The frequency allows more consistent blood levels than Nebido but less than weekly injection protocols.
NHS Limitations
The NHS TRT experience is functional but often not optimal:
- Limited monitoring (infrequent blood tests to check free testosterone, haematocrit, oestradiol)
- Inflexible dosing (protocols designed for average response, not individual optimisation)
- Minimal guidance on managing side effects (oestradiol management, haematocrit monitoring)
- The secondary issue of free testosterone vs total testosterone often not addressed
If your NHS testosterone prescription keeps your total testosterone in range but doesn't address your SHBG or free testosterone status, you may still feel suboptimal despite being "on TRT."
The Private Route
Why Private Makes Sense for Many Men
Private TRT clinics assess the full picture — total testosterone, SHBG, free testosterone, oestradiol, haematocrit, PSA, LH, FSH, prolactin — and optimise protocols based on how you feel, not just where a number falls on a reference range. They also prescribe injectable testosterone cypionate or enanthate, which produce more stable blood levels than the NHS default protocols.
The cost is real but reasonable in context. Monthly private TRT including medication runs approximately £100–200/month depending on the clinic and protocol. For the men this is relevant to, this is a meaningful quality-of-life expenditure with legitimate health evidence behind it.
UK Private TRT Clinics
Optimale
One of the most established and well-regarded UK TRT clinics. Founded by a team with specific expertise in male hormone health. Strong clinical protocols, comprehensive initial assessment, regular monitoring.
Process: Online consultation → comprehensive blood panel → doctor review → protocol prescription → ongoing monitoring.
Cost: Initial consultation and blood panel around £200–250. Ongoing monthly costs approximately £120–180 depending on protocol. Injectable testosterone cypionate is the standard prescription (most clinics have moved away from gel as primary option due to inconsistent absorption).
What they assess: Full male hormone panel including SHBG, free testosterone, oestradiol, prolactin, haematocrit, PSA, thyroid.
Referral commission: Optimale runs an affiliate/referral programme — referral fee approximately £30–50 per new patient. Relevant for those referring through the site.
Balance My Hormones
Another well-established private TRT clinic with strong online presence. Comprehensive initial assessment, ongoing monitoring, and access to a broader range of prescriptions including HCG (human chorionic gonadotropin) to maintain testicular function alongside TRT.
HCG note: HCG maintains endogenous testosterone production to some degree and preserves fertility on TRT. Not all private clinics prescribe it; Balance My Hormones does.
Cost: Broadly comparable to Optimale. Initial assessment and bloods around £200. Monthly ongoing approximately £130–200.
Leger Clinic
Harley Street-based, longer established in the UK testosterone space. More traditional clinic model with in-person appointments available. Slightly higher price point than online-only clinics but some men prefer the face-to-face consultation model.
Cost: Initial appointment and panel £250–350. Ongoing costs comparable.
What to Expect at a Private Clinic — The Process
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Initial consultation — Either online (video) or in-person depending on the clinic. You'll cover symptoms, history, current medications, goals. Takes 45–60 minutes.
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Blood panel — The clinic sends you a home test kit (finger-prick or venous), or you visit a partner phlebotomy service. Results typically in 48–72 hours.
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Doctor review — A doctor reviews your results and consultation notes. If TRT is indicated, they'll discuss protocol options.
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Prescription — Injectable testosterone cypionate or enanthate at a starting dose (typically 100–150mg per week). Clinic provides self-injection training.
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Follow-up testing — 6–8 weeks after starting, repeat bloods to check testosterone levels (trough and sometimes peak), oestradiol, haematocrit. Dose adjusted if needed.
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Ongoing monitoring — Every 3–6 months bloods. Ongoing prescription via the clinic.
TRT Protocols: What Private Clinics Actually Prescribe
Testosterone Cypionate or Enanthate (Weekly Injection)
The gold standard in current UK private TRT practice. Injected subcutaneously (belly fat) or intramuscularly (glute or thigh) using small insulin-type needles. Starting dose typically 100–150mg per week.
The weekly injection frequency produces far more stable blood levels than the NHS fortnightly or quarterly injection protocols. Stable blood levels = more consistent symptoms, easier oestradiol management.
Many experienced TRT patients move to 2× weekly injections (same total dose split) for even more stable levels — particularly useful for managing oestradiol spikes that can occur with once-weekly peaks.
What you feel: Most men notice improvement in energy, libido, and mood within 4–6 weeks. Body composition changes (muscle preservation, fat loss) develop over 3–6 months. Stabilisation of the protocol takes 3–4 months of consistent dosing and monitoring.
Testosterone Gel (Private Prescription)
More consistent than NHS gel in terms of quality and dosing guidance, but the same absorption variability issues apply. Some men genuinely prefer gel — no injections, daily application habit that's easy to maintain. Others find the transference concern with children or partners anxiety-inducing. Private clinics can prescribe higher-concentration gels than NHS defaults.
HCG (Human Chorionic Gonadotropin)
When you start TRT, your body stops producing its own testosterone (LH and FSH are suppressed by the feedback loop). The testes atrophy over time without a stimulus. HCG mimics LH, maintains testicular function and fertility potential on TRT.
Not essential for every TRT patient — men who are not concerned about fertility and don't mind the cosmetic effect of testicular atrophy can skip it. But for men who want to preserve the option of fertility or simply want comprehensive protocol management, it's a meaningful addition.
TRT Side Effects: What's Real and How to Manage Them
Haematocrit elevation — Testosterone stimulates red blood cell production. Haematocrit (the percentage of blood volume that is red blood cells) rises on TRT. Values above 52–54% increase blood viscosity and cardiovascular risk. Managed through regular monitoring and blood donation if haematocrit rises. The most important monitoring parameter on TRT.
Oestradiol elevation — Exogenous testosterone aromatises to oestradiol. High oestradiol causes: gynecomastia (breast tissue), water retention, mood instability, reduced libido. Managed by keeping the testosterone dose appropriate (not excessive) and, in some cases, using an aromatase inhibitor (AI). Most good private clinics prefer to optimise dose rather than reflexively add AIs, as low oestradiol causes its own problems.
Testicular atrophy — As above, managed with HCG if desired.
Acne — Common in the first months, usually settles. Topical treatments effective for most.
Fertility — TRT suppresses sperm production by suppressing FSH. Men who want biological children should either delay TRT or use HCG + FSH support simultaneously. HCG alone partially maintains fertility but is not fully reliable.
Prostate — TRT does not cause prostate cancer. This is the most persistent myth in the field. PSA should be checked before and during TRT; existing prostate cancer is a contraindication.
Should You Get TRT? An Honest Assessment
TRT is not a lifestyle optimisation tool. It's a medical intervention for hypogonadism. Before considering it:
Have you addressed the lifestyle fundamentals? Body fat below 20%, sleep 7–9 hours, training 4x per week, adequate zinc and Vitamin D, stress management. These can move testosterone by 20–30% in men who are deficient in these areas. Many men who pursue TRT haven't done the baseline work.
Have you had a proper full panel? Not just total testosterone — full panel including SHBG, free testosterone, LH, FSH, thyroid. Many men who feel they need TRT have a different root cause (thyroid, high SHBG, Vitamin D deficiency, sleep disorder) that addresses their symptoms without lifelong medication.
Do you understand the commitment? Once you start TRT, your own testosterone production shuts down. Coming off TRT requires a managed protocol (clomiphene, HCG) to restart production. It's not necessarily permanent but it's a meaningful commitment.
If you've done the above and your free testosterone is genuinely low with persistent symptoms that affect quality of life — TRT is a clinically sound, evidence-backed intervention with good long-term safety data. The UK private clinic market gives you access to expert management that wasn't available 10 years ago.
The Short Version
NHS TRT: long waiting list, conservative prescribing, limited monitoring, functional but not optimal. Accessible if total testosterone is below 12 nmol/L.
Private TRT: quicker, comprehensive, optimised protocols, proper monitoring. Costs £100–200/month but managed well. Optimale, Balance My Hormones, and Leger are the established UK options.
Before either route: get a full panel, address lifestyle fundamentals, understand SHBG and free testosterone. Know your numbers first.