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Method: FDA-cleared clinical laboratory assay performed in CLIA-certified, CAP-accredited laboratories. Used to aid clinician-directed evaluation and monitoring. Not a stand-alone diagnosis.

T4 and T3 are thyroid hormones that regulate the metabolism of the body.

Similar biomarker tests from Superpower

FAQs about Triiodothyronine (T3) Test

A Free T3 test measures the unbound, biologically active form of triiodothyronine that circulates independently of carrier proteins. Free T3 is the thyroid hormone that can immediately enter cells and drive metabolism, energy production, and temperature regulation. Because much of T3 is made by converting T4 into T3 in tissues, Free T3 helps show how well your body is activating thyroid hormone at the cellular level.

Total T3 includes both protein-bound T3 and unbound (free) T3, while Free T3 measures only the fraction immediately available to tissues. The difference matters because Free T3 better reflects tissue-level thyroid activity and metabolic signaling. If symptoms persist, Free T3 can provide insight into active thyroid hormone availability even when total levels are influenced by carrier proteins or other factors.

Free T3 testing can help explain ongoing symptoms - like fatigue, weight changes, or brain fog - despite a “normal” TSH and Free T4. This happens when T4-to-T3 conversion is impaired, so the body has enough T4 but not enough active T3 reaching cells. Free T3 may also detect thyroid imbalance missed by relying on TSH or T4 testing alone.

Low Free T3 suggests cells aren’t receiving enough active thyroid hormone, often due to reduced conversion of T4 to T3, inadequate thyroid hormone production, or systemic illness suppressing metabolism. Common symptoms include fatigue, cold intolerance, weight gain, brain fog, constipation, dry skin, and slowed digestion. Women may also experience heavier menstrual periods or difficulty conceiving, even when TSH appears normal.

Low Free T3 can occur when the body struggles to convert T4 into T3, which is common during chronic illness, acute illness, severe calorie restriction, chronic stress, or inflammation. This adaptive pattern is sometimes called nonthyroidal illness syndrome (euthyroid sick syndrome), where the body lowers T3 to conserve energy. Conversion efficiency can also naturally decline with age, affecting Free T3 values.

High Free T3 usually indicates thyroid overactivity or too much thyroid medication, and can occur with Graves’ disease, thyroid nodules, or rarely isolated T3 toxicosis. Symptoms often include rapid heartbeat, anxiety, tremor, heat intolerance, sleep disruption, and unintended weight loss despite normal eating. In older adults, elevated T3 can raise the risk of atrial fibrillation and other cardiovascular complications.

Free T3 is often described as your metabolic accelerator because it’s the most potent thyroid hormone driving metabolic rate. It binds to receptors in nearly every cell, switching on genes that control energy burning, heat production, and protein synthesis. Adequate Free T3 supports heart rate, cognitive processing, muscle strength, and digestive speed. Too little slows these systems; too much pushes the body into overdrive.

Free T3 can help guide medication adjustments by showing whether active thyroid hormone is reaching tissues, especially for people taking combination therapy or T3-containing thyroid medication. Tracking Free T3 may help optimize dose and symptom relief when TSH or Free T4 alone doesn’t match how you feel. It’s commonly interpreted alongside TSH and Free T4 to assess the full thyroid picture and treatment response.

An in-range Free T3 generally suggests healthy thyroid hormone activation and metabolic signaling at the cellular level. Many clinicians observe that patients often feel best when Free T3 is in the mid to upper part of the laboratory reference range, though individual variation exists. Trends over time are typically more informative than a single result, especially because reference ranges and assay methods can vary by lab.

Free T3 interpretation depends on context: severe illness, fasting, and certain medications can suppress T4-to-T3 conversion and lower Free T3. During acute or chronic stress, the body may also lower T3 as an energy-conservation strategy. Pregnancy typically doesn’t significantly alter Free T3 in most cases. Because assay methods differ among laboratories, comparing trends and pairing results with TSH and Free T4 is often most useful.