A borderline total testosterone can still matter if SHBG is low. Here is how I read that pattern in real lab reports, and when it deserves a proper follow-up.
This guide was written under the leadership of Dr. Thomas Klein, MD in collaboration with the Kantesti AI Medical Advisory Board, including contributions from Prof. Dr. Hans Weber and medical review by Dr. Sarah Mitchell, MD, PhD.
Thomas Klein, MD
Chief Medical Officer, Kantesti AI
Dr. Thomas Klein is a board-certified clinical hematologist and internist with over 15 years of experience in laboratory medicine and AI-assisted clinical analysis. As Chief Medical Officer at Kantesti AI, he leads clinical validation processes and oversees the medical accuracy of our 2.78 trillion parameter neural network. Dr. Klein has published extensively on biomarker interpretation and laboratory diagnostics in peer-reviewed medical journals.
Sarah Mitchell, MD, PhD
Chief Medical Advisor - Clinical Pathology & Internal Medicine
Dr. Sarah Mitchell is a board-certified clinical pathologist with over 18 years of experience in laboratory medicine and diagnostic analysis. She holds specialty certifications in clinical chemistry and has published extensively on biomarker panels and laboratory analysis in clinical practice.
Prof. Dr. Hans Weber, PhD
Professor of Laboratory Medicine & Clinical Biochemistry
Prof. Dr. Hans Weber brings 30+ years of expertise in clinical biochemistry, laboratory medicine, and biomarker research. Former President of the German Society for Clinical Chemistry, he specializes in diagnostic panel analysis, biomarker standardization, and AI-assisted laboratory medicine.
- Free testosterone can be high while total testosterone is borderline when SHBG is low, because less hormone is bound and more is biologically active.
- Total testosterone in adult women is often roughly 15-70 ng/dL by LC-MS/MS, but lab ranges vary by age, cycle phase and assay method.
- SHBG blood test values below about 30 nmol/L commonly raise calculated free testosterone, especially with insulin resistance or higher visceral fat.
- PCOS is the most common clinical pattern behind high free testosterone women, especially with irregular cycles, acne, scalp hair thinning or hirsutism.
- DHEA-S above 700-800 µg/dL is an adrenal clue and usually deserves prompt clinician review, particularly if symptoms are new or fast-moving.
- Total testosterone above 150-200 ng/dL in a woman is not a typical borderline result and should be evaluated for an androgen-secreting source.
- 17-hydroxyprogesterone above 200 ng/dL in a morning follicular sample can trigger follow-up testing for non-classic congenital adrenal hyperplasia.
- Testing timing matters: morning sampling, cycle day 3-5 when feasible, and 8-12 weeks off hormonal contraception can change interpretation.
- Kantesti AI reads free testosterone by checking SHBG, total testosterone, DHEA-S, thyroid, glucose-insulin markers, liver enzymes and medication context together.
Why free testosterone can be high when total testosterone is only borderline
Free testosterone can be high with a borderline total testosterone when SHBG is low, because SHBG is the main binding protein that keeps testosterone inactive in circulation. As of May 15, 2026, the commonest lab pattern I see in women is not a huge testosterone surge; it is total testosterone near the upper range, SHBG below about 30 nmol/L, and symptoms that suddenly make the number clinically relevant.
A total testosterone of 55 ng/dL may be called borderline by one laboratory and high-normal by another, but if SHBG is 18 nmol/L the calculated free testosterone can sit above range. That is the first reason I ask patients not to read testosterone alone; our Kantesti AI blood test analyzer compares total testosterone, SHBG and albumin before assigning meaning.
The practical split is simple. Total testosterone measures bound plus unbound hormone, while free testosterone estimates the tiny unbound fraction that can enter tissues; in most women, free testosterone is commonly less than 2% of total circulating testosterone.
When I review a panel showing acne, irregular periods and total testosterone of 62 ng/dL, I look for SHBG before I look for rare causes. For a deeper explanation of this binding issue, our guide on free versus total testosterone walks through the same calculation logic I use clinically.
The SHBG blood test is often the missing switch
The SHBG blood test tells you how much testosterone is being held in a bound, less active form. A low SHBG result can make free testosterone high even when total testosterone is not dramatically elevated.
SHBG is made mostly in the liver, and adult female reference ranges often run somewhere around 18-144 nmol/L, though I have seen European labs use narrower intervals. In clinic, SHBG below 30 nmol/L is the point where I start asking why free androgen exposure is rising.
Insulin suppresses hepatic SHBG production, so fasting insulin of 15-25 µIU/mL with normal glucose can still push free testosterone upward. That is why a woman with HbA1c of 5.3% may have a high free androgen index despite being told her sugar looks fine.
I am Thomas Klein, MD, and our medical team reviews these patterns with the same caution we use for other endocrine labs; readers can see the clinicians behind our work on the Medical Advisory Board. For a focused SHBG explanation, use our SHBG blood test guide.
PCOS is the common pattern, but the labs need context
PCOS is the most common reason I see high free testosterone women patterns in routine blood testing. The 2023 International PCOS Guideline states that biochemical or clinical hyperandrogenism is one of the key diagnostic features, but PCOS still requires careful exclusion of similar conditions (Teede et al., 2023).
A typical PCOS panel might show free testosterone above range, SHBG 20-35 nmol/L, LH higher than FSH, AMH above age expectation and fasting insulin creeping up. None of those alone diagnoses PCOS; together, they form a recognizable endocrine fingerprint.
One 28-year-old patient I remember had total testosterone of 48 ng/dL, which looked almost boring, but her SHBG was 17 nmol/L and her free androgen index was 9.2. Her main symptom was not severe facial hair; it was a 45-day cycle and cystic jawline acne that started after weight gain during night shifts.
Kantesti AI interprets suspected PCOS patterns by reading androgens beside glucose, insulin, lipids, thyroid and inflammation markers, not as an isolated hormone flag. Our separate PCOS blood test results guide gives the broader checklist.
Borderline total testosterone can be a measurement problem
Total testosterone in women is hard to measure accurately because female concentrations are 10-20 times lower than typical male concentrations. A borderline result from an immunoassay can shift meaning when repeated by LC-MS/MS.
Many routine immunoassays perform less well at female testosterone levels below 70 ng/dL. Rosner and colleagues warned in the Endocrine Society position statement that testosterone assays have real limitations at low concentrations, especially when clinicians over-read small differences (Rosner et al., 2007).
In our analysis of millions of uploaded reports, we often see one lab mark total testosterone of 58 ng/dL as high while another calls 60 ng/dL normal. The number is not the whole story; the assay method, age, menstrual status and SHBG all change the clinical interpretation.
If a result will drive treatment, ask whether the laboratory used LC-MS/MS for total testosterone and either equilibrium dialysis or a validated calculation for free testosterone. The timing advice in our testosterone test preparation article is useful before repeating a borderline result.
Insulin, thyroid and liver signals can lower SHBG
Low SHBG usually reflects a metabolic or hormonal signal acting on the liver. Insulin resistance, hypothyroidism, androgen exposure and some liver patterns can reduce SHBG and raise calculated free testosterone.
Fasting insulin above 10-12 µIU/mL, triglycerides above 150 mg/dL and HDL below 50 mg/dL often travel with low SHBG in women with androgen symptoms. I pay special attention when HbA1c still looks normal, because early insulin resistance may show up in SHBG before diabetes markers turn red.
Thyroid status matters too. Hypothyroidism can lower SHBG, while hyperthyroidism can raise it; a TSH of 6.8 mIU/L with low-normal free T4 may exaggerate free testosterone even if ovarian androgen production has not changed much.
Kantesti’s neural network checks SHBG against fasting glucose, insulin, HbA1c, lipids, TSH, free T4, ALT and AST because those markers explain many false-looking androgen surprises. For metabolic clues, our insulin blood test guide is often the next best read.
Medications and supplements can create a high result
Medication and supplement exposure can raise free testosterone directly or lower SHBG indirectly. I ask about prescribed hormones, DHEA, anabolic agents, valproate, danazol, glucocorticoids and accidental testosterone transfer before ordering scans.
DHEA is a common culprit because doses of 25-50 mg daily can raise downstream androgens in some women. I have seen free testosterone double after a patient added DHEA for fatigue, while total testosterone stayed only mildly above the lab cutoff.
Topical testosterone transfer is under-recognized. A partner’s 1% testosterone gel can contaminate skin, towels or bedding; in one case, a woman’s free testosterone normalized 6 weeks after household gel precautions changed.
Valproate is linked with menstrual irregularity and androgen changes in susceptible women, while oral contraceptives usually raise SHBG and lower free testosterone. Our clinical standards for pattern checking are described in medical validation, and medication timeline issues are covered in our medication monitoring guide.
Adrenal clues: DHEA-S, 17-OHP and cortisol
Adrenal causes become more likely when DHEA-S is high, symptoms progress quickly, or 17-hydroxyprogesterone is abnormal. DHEA-S above about 700-800 µg/dL is a classic threshold that should not be brushed off.
DHEA-S comes mainly from the adrenal glands and has less day-to-day fluctuation than testosterone. A DHEA-S of 320 µg/dL may fit PCOS in a 25-year-old, but 850 µg/dL with rapid new hair growth needs prompt endocrine review.
A morning 17-hydroxyprogesterone above 200 ng/dL in the follicular phase can suggest non-classic congenital adrenal hyperplasia and may lead to ACTH stimulation testing. Values above 1000 ng/dL after stimulation are often used to support that diagnosis, though local endocrine protocols differ.
Cortisol is not ordered for every high free testosterone result, but I add it when there is easy bruising, proximal muscle weakness, purple stretch marks, severe hypertension or glucose rising out of proportion. Our DHEA blood test guide and cortisol pattern guide explain those branches in more detail.
Red flags that need faster follow-up
Fast-onset androgen symptoms deserve quicker follow-up than stable mild acne or long-standing hirsutism. Total testosterone above 150-200 ng/dL, DHEA-S above 700-800 µg/dL, or new virilization should be discussed urgently with a clinician.
The Endocrine Society hirsutism guideline recommends biochemical testing in women with moderate to severe hirsutism, sudden onset, rapid progression or associated menstrual disturbance (Martin et al., 2018). In plain language: the speed of change matters as much as the number.
Virilization means deeper voice, marked muscle increase, male-pattern balding, breast size reduction or clitoral enlargement. I do not wait 6 months to repeat labs when those signs are new; imaging and specialist input may be needed after confirmatory testing.
The softer pattern is different. A woman with 8 years of mild chin hair, regular cycles and total testosterone of 45 ng/dL usually needs careful labs, not panic; our blood test results guide explains how we separate urgent values from watchful follow-up.
When to test: morning, cycle phase and contraception
The best repeat test for free testosterone is usually a morning sample, ideally on cycle day 3-5 if periods are regular. Hormonal contraception can suppress androgens and raise SHBG for weeks, so diagnostic testing may need a washout period.
Testosterone has a mild morning peak, and small female-range values are vulnerable to timing noise. If your first sample was taken at 4 p.m. after poor sleep, I would not make a major diagnosis from one borderline free testosterone result.
Combined oral contraceptives commonly raise SHBG and lower free testosterone; after stopping, SHBG can remain altered for 8-12 weeks. This is one reason PCOS testing immediately after stopping the pill can be misleading in both directions.
Cycle day 3-5 is useful because LH, FSH, estradiol, androgens and 17-OHP are easier to compare against expected early follicular ranges. Our PCOS test timing guide gives a practical calendar approach.
Symptoms that make a high free testosterone more meaningful
A high free testosterone result matters more when it matches androgen-sensitive symptoms. Irregular cycles, acne, hirsutism, scalp hair thinning and ovulation problems raise the probability that the lab result is clinically real.
Hirsutism is usually scored by body areas and hair type, not by one stray chin hair. Clinicians often use a modified Ferriman-Gallwey score, with cutoffs around 4-8 depending on ethnicity, because baseline hair growth differs substantially across populations.
Scalp hair thinning can occur with normal total testosterone when free testosterone is high and genetic follicle sensitivity is present. I have seen women with free testosterone just 20-30% above range lose hair faster than women with higher numbers but lower receptor sensitivity.
Acne along the jawline, oily skin and cycle lengths above 35 days are useful clues, but they are not proof. For hair-specific lab patterns, our hormone and hair loss labs article pairs androgen testing with ferritin, thyroid and vitamin D checks.
Blood tests to check after high free testosterone
The next blood tests should explain whether high free testosterone comes from low SHBG, ovarian-pattern androgen excess, adrenal production, thyroid disease or insulin resistance. A single repeat testosterone is rarely enough.
My usual follow-up panel includes total testosterone by LC-MS/MS, SHBG, albumin, calculated free testosterone or equilibrium dialysis free testosterone, DHEA-S, androstenedione, 17-hydroxyprogesterone, LH, FSH, estradiol, prolactin, TSH and free T4. If cycles are irregular, I also want HbA1c, fasting glucose, fasting insulin and lipids.
Prolactin belongs on the list because high prolactin can disrupt cycles and mimic PCOS symptoms. A prolactin above 25 ng/mL is often repeated fasting and rested, because stress, sex, exercise and some medications can transiently increase it.
Kantesti AI reads more than 15,000 biomarkers and flags when a hormone result lacks the companion markers needed for interpretation. The broader marker library is available in our blood biomarker guide, and prolactin details sit in our prolactin blood test guide.
Ranges, units and the free androgen index
Free testosterone ranges vary so much by method that the lab’s own reference interval matters more than a universal cutoff. Calculated free testosterone, free androgen index and direct free testosterone assays are not interchangeable.
Many adult female free testosterone reference intervals fall around 0.1-6.4 pg/mL, but that range can be wrong for your method. Equilibrium dialysis and validated calculated free testosterone are generally more trustworthy than direct analogue free testosterone immunoassays.
The free androgen index is calculated as total testosterone in nmol/L divided by SHBG in nmol/L, multiplied by 100. A free androgen index above 5 is often considered elevated in PCOS workups, but I treat it as a screening clue rather than a final diagnosis.
Unit conversion causes real confusion. To convert total testosterone from ng/dL to nmol/L, multiply by 0.0347; a total testosterone of 60 ng/dL is about 2.08 nmol/L, and if SHBG is 20 nmol/L the free androgen index is about 10.4. Our lab unit guide helps prevent false alarms when reports use different units.
Age, postpartum changes and perimenopause can shift interpretation
Age and reproductive stage change how I interpret free testosterone. A result that is borderline at 23 can carry different meaning at 47, especially when cycles are changing and SHBG is moving.
After childbirth, sleep loss, weight change, lactation, thyroiditis and cycle disruption can all confuse androgen interpretation. I usually avoid labeling PCOS from a single postpartum androgen panel unless the pattern persists after cycles return.
Perimenopause can bring relatively lower estrogen, more central insulin resistance and lower SHBG, so free testosterone may rise even if androgen production is stable. A 45-year-old with new cycles every 24-60 days needs FSH, estradiol, TSH and prolactin interpreted alongside androgens.
Family context also helps because androgenic hair patterns, insulin resistance and early diabetes can cluster. Our women’s life stage labs and perimenopause blood test guides cover the age-specific side of the decision.
When to follow up and what to bring
Follow up within weeks, not months, if free testosterone is clearly high, symptoms are progressing or total testosterone is above 150 ng/dL. Stable mild elevations can often be repeated in 6-12 weeks with better timing and fuller context.
Bring the original PDF, the lab’s reference range, units, cycle day, contraception status, supplement list and symptom timeline. I cannot tell you how many androgen cases became clear only after someone mentioned DHEA, a partner’s testosterone gel or a pill stopped 5 weeks earlier.
If symptoms are mild and the result is only slightly high, a repeat morning LC-MS/MS total testosterone with SHBG and albumin is often reasonable. If virilization appears, DHEA-S is very high, or total testosterone is above 150-200 ng/dL, do not wait for lifestyle changes to prove a point.
Kantesti stores trends so a result from 2024 can be compared with 2026 rather than judged in isolation. Our blood test history guide shows how trend context changes the next step.
What you can do while waiting for repeat labs
While waiting for repeat labs, avoid starting new hormone supplements and document symptoms carefully. Lifestyle changes may improve SHBG over 8-16 weeks, but they should not delay urgent evaluation when red flags are present.
If insulin resistance is part of the pattern, a modest 5-10% weight reduction can improve cycles and androgen markers in many women with PCOS. The evidence is mixed on the best diet label, but high-fiber meals, resistance training and sleep regularity are boring interventions that often move SHBG in the right direction.
Do not self-start spironolactone, finasteride or anti-androgen supplements if pregnancy is possible. These medicines can be useful, but they require contraception planning, potassium checks in selected patients and a clinician who knows the diagnosis being treated.
You can upload your hormone and metabolic labs to Try Free AI Blood Test Analysis and receive a structured interpretation in about 60 seconds. For broader preparation before a clinician visit, our new doctor lab checklist helps organize what to ask.
How Kantesti AI reads high free testosterone patterns
Kantesti AI interprets high free testosterone by checking whether the result is biologically plausible, methodologically reliable and clinically matched to symptoms. Our platform does not treat a single red flag as a diagnosis.
Our AI blood test platform reads uploaded PDFs or photos and cross-checks total testosterone, SHBG, albumin, DHEA-S, 17-OHP, glucose-insulin markers, thyroid markers and liver enzymes. It also looks for contradictions, such as a direct free testosterone assay that disagrees with a calculated value because SHBG is extreme.
The clinical reasoning is overseen by physicians and benchmarked against specialty workflows, including work described in our AI lab interpretation guide and our validation DOI on multilingual blood test interpretation. Kantesti LTD is described more fully on About Us, including our CE Mark, HIPAA, GDPR and ISO 27001 standards.
Thomas Klein, MD: my bottom line is that high free testosterone is usually solvable if you check SHBG, method, timing, PCOS clues, medications and adrenal markers in the right order. For a fast first read, use Kantesti to organize the pattern before your clinician visit.
Kantesti Research Publication: Kantesti AI. (2026). Multilingual AI Assisted Clinical Decision Support for Early Hantavirus Triage: Design, Engineering Validation, and Real-World Deployment Across 50,000 Interpreted Blood Test Reports. Figshare. https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.32230290. ResearchGate: https://www.researchgate.net/. Academia.edu: https://www.academia.edu/.
Kantesti Research Publication: Kantesti AI. (2026). B Negative Blood Type, LDH Blood Test & Reticulocyte Count Guide. Figshare. https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.31333819. ResearchGate: https://www.researchgate.net/. Academia.edu: https://www.academia.edu/.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why is my free testosterone high but total testosterone normal?
Free testosterone can be high with normal total testosterone when SHBG is low, because less testosterone is bound and more remains biologically active. SHBG below about 30 nmol/L commonly raises calculated free testosterone, especially with insulin resistance, hypothyroidism, higher visceral fat or androgen exposure. A repeat morning total testosterone by LC-MS/MS with SHBG and albumin is usually more useful than repeating free testosterone alone.
What SHBG level causes high free testosterone in women?
There is no single SHBG cutoff that causes high free testosterone, but values below about 30 nmol/L often make free androgen exposure rise if total testosterone is near the upper female range. Many adult female SHBG reference intervals are roughly 18-144 nmol/L, though labs vary. SHBG should be interpreted with total testosterone, albumin, insulin resistance markers, thyroid tests and medication history.
Does high free testosterone always mean PCOS?
High free testosterone does not always mean PCOS, although PCOS is one of the most common causes in women with irregular cycles, acne, hirsutism or scalp hair thinning. Other causes include low SHBG from insulin resistance or hypothyroidism, DHEA supplements, testosterone exposure, valproate, non-classic congenital adrenal hyperplasia and rare androgen-secreting tumors. PCOS diagnosis requires a pattern, not one hormone result.
What testosterone level is concerning in women?
A total testosterone above 150-200 ng/dL in a woman is more concerning than a borderline elevation and usually needs prompt evaluation for an androgen-secreting source. DHEA-S above about 700-800 µg/dL is also a red flag for an adrenal source, especially with rapid symptom onset. New virilization signs such as voice deepening or rapid male-pattern balding should be reviewed urgently.
Can birth control affect free testosterone and SHBG?
Combined oral contraceptives usually raise SHBG and lower free testosterone, which can hide biochemical hyperandrogenism while someone is taking them. After stopping hormonal contraception, SHBG and androgen markers may remain shifted for 8-12 weeks. If testing is being used to diagnose PCOS or another androgen disorder, clinicians often prefer a repeat panel after an appropriate washout when it is safe to do so.
Which blood tests should I ask for after high free testosterone?
After high free testosterone, a practical follow-up panel includes total testosterone by LC-MS/MS, SHBG, albumin, calculated free testosterone or equilibrium dialysis free testosterone, DHEA-S, androstenedione, 17-hydroxyprogesterone, LH, FSH, estradiol, prolactin, TSH and free T4. If PCOS or metabolic SHBG suppression is possible, add fasting glucose, fasting insulin, HbA1c, lipid panel, ALT and AST. The exact panel should match symptoms, cycle status and medication exposure.
Should free testosterone be repeated fasting in the morning?
Free testosterone is best repeated in the morning, and fasting is helpful when insulin, glucose and lipid markers are being checked at the same time. Cycle day 3-5 is often preferred for reproductive hormone interpretation when periods are regular. Poor sleep, recent intense exercise, acute illness and recent hormonal medication changes can make a borderline result harder to interpret.
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📚 Referenced Research Publications
Klein, T., Mitchell, S., & Weber, H. (2026). Multilingual AI Assisted Clinical Decision Support for Early Hantavirus Triage: Design, Engineering Validation, and Real-World Deployment Across 50,000 Interpreted Blood Test Reports. Kantesti AI Medical Research.
Klein, T., Mitchell, S., & Weber, H. (2026). B Negative Blood Type, LDH Blood Test & Reticulocyte Count Guide. Kantesti AI Medical Research.
📖 External Medical References
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⚕️ Medical Disclaimer
This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider for diagnosis and treatment decisions.
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Written by Dr. Thomas Klein with review by Dr. Sarah Mitchell and Prof. Dr. Hans Weber.
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