Limited time offer! 10% off your first blood test order!
No products in the cart.

take the next step

Schedule an Appointment


Female Fertility

Female Fertility Hormone Panel

Seven-marker fertility panel — AMH, FSH, LH, oestradiol, progesterone, prolactin, and TSH — for comprehensive female reproductive assessment.

7 biomarkers Includes AMH Venous draw, cycle-timed Results in 5 to 7 working days
4.8 (214 reviews)
£129.00

or 4 interest-free payments of £32.25 with Klarna

Collection method Self-collected fingerstick
Quantity 1 kit
1
UKAS accredited ISO 15189 laboratory
UK GDPR secure Barcoded, anonymous sample
GMC-reviewed Physician-signed report
Female Fertility Hormone Panel
UKAS ISO 15189
Accredited
Product description

A seven-marker female fertility panel covering AMH, FSH, LH, oestradiol, progesterone, prolactin, and TSH.

Fertility is influenced by a complex interplay of hormones across the pituitary, ovaries, thyroid, and elsewhere. The Female Fertility Hormone Panel measures seven key markers that together provide a comprehensive overview of female reproductive hormonal health.

AMH (anti-Mullerian hormone) is the most reliable marker of remaining ovarian reserve — the number of eggs left. FSH and LH on day 2 to 5 of the cycle reflect pituitary drive and the quality of the ovarian response. Oestradiol at baseline contextualises the FSH value. Progesterone on day 21 confirms whether ovulation occurred and the quality of the luteal phase. Prolactin screens for hyperprolactinaemia — a frequently missed cause of anovulation and infertility. TSH screens for thyroid dysfunction, which directly affects fertility and pregnancy outcome.

This panel requires careful cycle-day timing. Ideally, FSH, LH, oestradiol, and prolactin are collected on days 2 to 5; progesterone on day 21. If confirming ovulation only, a day 21 progesterone alone is sufficient. Venous draw required. GMC-physician reviewed results within 5 to 7 working days.

Reviewed by the Trupoint medical board · Last updated May 2026
What we measure

Every biomarker, explained

Understand what each marker measures, why it matters, and what the science says — not just a list of numbers.

7
Biomarkers in this panel
4
Physiological systems covered
1
Sample
24 - 48
Hours
2 MARKERS

Ovarian Reserve

Produced by growing follicles; reflects remaining egg pool independent of cycle day — the best single marker of ovarian reserve.

2 MARKERS

Pituitary Hormones

Measured on days 2 to 5; elevated FSH signals declining ovarian reserve or reduced ovarian response.

Measured on days 2 to 5; LH-to-FSH ratio supports or challenges PCOS as a diagnosis.

2 MARKERS

Ovarian Hormones

Baseline oestradiol on days 2 to 5 contextualises FSH; elevated early oestradiol can suppress FSH and give a falsely reassuring reading.

Day 21 measurement confirms ovulation occurred; a level above 30 nmol/L indicates adequate luteal phase quality.

2 MARKERS

Reproductive Co-factors

Pituitary hormone that causes anovulation and irregular cycles when elevated; a common, treatable cause of fertility disruption.

Thyroid dysfunction is a leading cause of anovulation and pregnancy loss; TSH screening is essential in any fertility investigation.

Is this right for me?

Who this test is for

This panel is designed for adults who want a comprehensive, evidence-based picture of their metabolic health — not a GP referral panel.

Have Been Trying To Conceive For

Women who have been trying to conceive for 6 or more months without success

Those With Irregular

Those with irregular or absent periods wanting to investigate ovulation

Women Planning Pregnancy In The Next

Women planning pregnancy in the next 1 to 2 years wanting to understand their fertility window

Have Experienced One

Those who have experienced one or more pregnancy losses

Not appropriate for Post-menopausal women — ovarian reserve assessment is not applicable after menopause. Men — a separate male fertility panel is available
Transparency

Test limitations

AMH reflects ovarian reserve (egg quantity) but cannot predict egg quality, which is the most important determinant of conception success in women over 35. A normal AMH does not guarantee conception; a low AMH does not preclude it. FSH must be collected on days 2 to 5 for clinical relevance; a high FSH on any other cycle day may not be meaningful. Progesterone should be collected approximately 7 days after ovulation (not necessarily day 21 in women with irregular cycles). This panel does not include assessment of the uterus, fallopian tubes, or male partner fertility. Please share results with your GP or fertility specialist rather than adjusting treatment independently based on these findings.

Reviewed annually by our medical advisory board.
The process

How it works

From order to physician-reviewed report in as little as three working days.

Day 0

Order online and book your day 2 to 5 venous draw (for FSH, LH, oestradiol, prolactin, AMH)

Day 1

Book a second draw for approximately day 21 (for progesterone); or request both at one phlebotomist

Day 2

Attend both morning draw appointments as per your cycle

Day 3

Physician-reviewed results on your dashboard within 5 to 7 working days of the last sample

Sample collection

Choose how you collect

Three options designed to fit your schedule, location, and preference — all producing a laboratory-standard sample.

Eligibility

Adults 18+ in mainland UK. Not suitable if you have had a transfusion in the last 3 months.

Availability

Order anytime; kit dispatched within 24 hours Mon–Fri.

Turnaround

Allow 24–48 hours for sample transit on top of lab processing time.

Why Trupoint

Built on rigorous science and UK regulatory standards

Every test is processed in a UKAS ISO 15189-accredited laboratory, overseen by GMC-registered physicians, and governed by UK GDPR. No overseas processing, no offshore data.

ISO 15189 accredited laboratory
CQC-registered collection service
GMC-registered physician review
GDPR-compliant data handling
MHRA-compliant sample processing
2.4M+
tests processed
99.4%
on-time results
11 yrs
average lab tenure
Before your test

Preparation instructions

Follow these guidelines to ensure accurate, reproducible results. Most markers are sensitive to recent food, exercise, and sleep.

Please do

  • Time your day 2 to 5 draw carefully — day 3 is typically optimal
  • For irregular cycles, use ovulation predictor kits to identify ovulation and test 7 days after
  • Fast for 8 hours before each collection

Please avoid

  • Do not take hormonal contraception — results will be suppressed
  • Do not test AMH within 3 months of stopping hormonal contraception for most accurate result
  • Do not collect during an acute illness
Support

Frequently asked questions

Can't find your answer? Our clinical support team is available Monday to Friday, 9am–5pm.

Contact support

Frequently Asked Questions

What is AMH and what does it tell me about my fertility?

AMH (anti-Mullerian hormone) is produced by the granulosa cells of small growing follicles in the ovaries and reflects the size of the remaining follicle pool — the ovarian reserve. A higher AMH indicates more eggs remaining; lower AMH indicates a smaller reserve. AMH is the most reliable single marker of ovarian reserve available from a blood test and can be measured at any point in the cycle without significant day-to-day variation. However, AMH tells you about egg quantity, not quality — which becomes the more critical determinant of natural conception after 35. Low AMH does not mean you cannot conceive naturally; it means time may be more limited.

What AMH level is considered normal?

AMH levels decline naturally with age. Very broadly, AMH above 15 pmol/L in a woman under 35 is considered reassuring. Values between 5 and 15 pmol/L are in a typical working range. Values below 5 pmol/L indicate reduced ovarian reserve, and below 2 pmol/L suggests very low reserve. However, these thresholds vary between laboratories and should be interpreted against age-adjusted reference intervals. Even with very low AMH, natural conception can and does occur — AMH predicts the number of eggs available, not whether one will fertilise and implant successfully. Your physician report will interpret your AMH in the context of your age and clinical picture.

Why does FSH need to be collected on days 2 to 5?

FSH (follicle-stimulating hormone) fluctuates significantly throughout the menstrual cycle. During the early follicular phase (days 2 to 5), FSH is at its ‘baseline’ level — reflecting how hard the pituitary is working to stimulate follicle development. If the ovaries are less responsive (as in declining ovarian reserve or early menopause), the pituitary releases more FSH to compensate. This elevated baseline FSH is the key signal. Measuring FSH later in the cycle — around ovulation or in the luteal phase — gives very different values that are not clinically interpretable as an ovarian reserve indicator.

What does a day 21 progesterone result mean?

In a standard 28-day cycle, ovulation typically occurs around day 14 and progesterone peaks approximately 7 days later — hence ‘day 21 testing’. A progesterone level above 30 nmol/L on day 21 confirms ovulation occurred and indicates an adequate luteal phase. A value below this suggests either anovulation (no ovulation occurred) or inadequate luteal phase support, both of which can impair implantation. In women with irregular cycles, a day 21 test may not capture the progesterone peak — ovulation predictor kits can identify ovulation timing, and testing 7 days after a confirmed ovulation gives a more reliable result.

How does prolactin affect fertility?

Elevated prolactin (hyperprolactinaemia) suppresses gonadotrophin-releasing hormone (GnRH) from the hypothalamus, reducing LH and FSH release from the pituitary. Lower LH and FSH mean reduced or absent ovulation, leading to irregular or absent periods and infertility. Prolactin can be elevated by pituitary adenomas (prolactinomas), certain medications (antipsychotics, antiemetics), hypothyroidism, and physiological stress including the blood draw itself. When a prolactinoma is identified, treatment with cabergoline (a dopamine agonist) normalises prolactin within weeks to months, restoring ovulation and dramatically improving fertility — without surgery in most cases.

Why is thyroid testing included in a fertility panel?

Thyroid dysfunction — both overactive and underactive — directly impairs fertility. Hypothyroidism reduces ovulation frequency and can cause irregular or absent periods. Even subclinical hypothyroidism (mildly elevated TSH with normal FT4) is associated with reduced conception rates and increased miscarriage risk. Untreated hypothyroidism is also associated with impaired fetal neurodevelopment in early pregnancy. TSH screening before or during conception attempts is recommended by NICE and international fertility guidelines; optimal TSH for conception is considered to be below 2.5 mIU/L in most guidelines, though this threshold is debated.

When should I see a fertility specialist?

The NHS recommends a GP referral to a fertility specialist after 12 months of unprotected regular intercourse without conception in women under 35, and after 6 months in women 35 and over. You do not need to wait for these timeframes to obtain private testing — early assessment of hormonal status can identify treatable causes (thyroid dysfunction, elevated prolactin, PCOS, poor ovarian reserve) that, if addressed early, significantly improve the chance of natural conception. If your Trupoint Health results identify concerning findings, the physician report will advise on the appropriate speed and route for specialist referral.