Key Benefits
- Gauge your free testosterone availability using total testosterone and SHBG.
- Spot androgen excess driving acne, hirsutism, hair loss, or irregular periods.
- Clarify suspected PCOS by providing objective evidence of biochemical hyperandrogenism.
- Guide ovulation and fertility planning by identifying androgen levels that disrupt cycles.
- Explain atypical results when SHBG is altered by weight, thyroid, liver, or medications.
- Guide treatment choice for PCOS, hirsutism, or acne based on androgen status.
- Track response to lifestyle change, contraception, or antiandrogens by trending FAI over time.
- Best interpreted with total testosterone, SHBG, DHEAS, and your symptoms.
What is a Free Androgen Index (FAI) blood test?
The Free Androgen Index (FAI) is a calculated number derived from a blood test; it is not a hormone itself. It uses two measured players: total testosterone, the main androgen made primarily by the testes or ovaries and also by the adrenal glands, and sex hormone–binding globulin (SHBG), a transport protein produced by the liver. By combining these two, FAI provides a shorthand view of how much testosterone is present relative to the body’s binding capacity (total testosterone and SHBG).
FAI matters because it estimates the share of testosterone that is readily available to tissues—the portion not tightly sequestered by SHBG and thus more able to enter cells and engage androgen receptors (free or bioactive testosterone). In simple terms, it reflects the balance between androgen supply and the proteins that carry and limit it, offering a practical snapshot of androgen bioavailability. This gives context to how strongly androgen signals may be felt across the body—affecting features like hair growth, skin oiliness, muscle and bone support, and aspects of libido and energy—without directly measuring the tiny unbound fraction.
Why is a Free Androgen Index (FAI) blood test important?
The Free Androgen Index (FAI) estimates how much testosterone is available to act on tissues by relating total testosterone to sex hormone–binding globulin (SHBG). Because androgens shape muscle and bone, red blood cell production, skin and hair, mood, metabolism, and reproductive function, FAI gives a systems-level view of androgen signaling rather than just hormone supply.
Reference intervals vary by lab, age, and sex: in adult women typical values are very low; in adult men they are several-fold higher. During pregnancy and with estrogen therapy, SHBG rises and FAI runs lower; in puberty it rises. For most people, results clustered near the middle of the sex- and age-specific range align best with balanced physiology.
When FAI is low, either testosterone is low or SHBG is high (as with estrogen exposure, hyperthyroidism, liver conditions, or undernutrition). Tissue-level androgen tone falls, and people may notice reduced strength, lower libido, low energy, and thinner bones over time. Men can have features of hypogonadism; women may experience low sexual desire and arousal; boys may show delayed pubertal progression.
When FAI is high, testosterone is elevated or SHBG is suppressed (commonly with insulin resistance, obesity, hypothyroidism, or androgen medications). Androgen-sensitive organs are overstimulated: women often develop acne, hirsutism, scalp hair thinning, and irregular or absent ovulation, as seen in polycystic ovary syndrome; men may show acne, oily skin, and hair loss.
Big picture: FAI integrates signals from the gonads, liver, thyroid, and metabolic state. It complements total testosterone to flag androgen excess or deficiency that influences fertility, bone and muscle health, and, especially in women, long-term metabolic and cardiovascular risk.
What insights will I get?
The Free Androgen Index (FAI) is a calculated ratio of total testosterone to sex hormone–binding globulin (SHBG). It estimates how much testosterone is available to tissues (free/bioavailable). This matters because available androgens influence energy and mood, muscle and bone maintenance, glucose–insulin balance, lipid metabolism, red blood cell production, skin/hair, and reproductive function.
Low values usually reflect either too little testosterone production or disproportionately high SHBG, which binds and reduces available hormone. In men this aligns with androgen deficiency physiology (lower libido and vigor, reduced muscle and hematocrit, lower bone turnover). In women it indicates low androgen availability (lower sexual desire, fatigue, reduced lean mass); during pregnancy FAI is typically low due to high SHBG.
Being in range suggests balanced androgen signaling relative to SHBG, supporting stable metabolic, musculoskeletal, cardiovascular, and reproductive function. In practice, values near the middle of the sex- and age-specific reference interval commonly align with eugonadal physiology when symptoms are absent.
High values usually reflect either excess testosterone or disproportionately low SHBG. In women this often signals androgen excess physiology (acne, hirsutism, ovulatory dysfunction) and can track with insulin resistance, commonly seen in polycystic ovary syndrome. In men it may reflect exogenous androgens or low SHBG states and can associate with increased erythropoiesis and oilier skin.
Notes: FAI is a surrogate and depends heavily on SHBG; it is most useful in women. In men, calculated free testosterone or equilibrium dialysis is preferred when available. SHBG shifts with estrogen exposure, thyroid and liver status, insulin resistance/obesity, and pregnancy. Morning sampling and assay method affect interpretation.






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