Women's Hormone Check

Female hormonal health, top to bottom — the cycle hormones, fertility signals, and the markers behind energy and mood.

One-time payment of $169. GST included. No subscription.

What this panel measures

  • Oestradiol — Primary oestrogen; varies across the cycle.
  • Progesterone — Second-half-of-cycle hormone; involved in mood and ovulation.
  • LH — Luteinising hormone; triggers ovulation.
  • FSH — Follicle stimulating hormone; drives egg development.
  • Prolactin — Pituitary hormone; high levels can disrupt cycles.
  • Total Testosterone — Relevant to women too — particularly libido and energy.
  • Free Testosterone — The biologically active fraction.
  • SHBG — Affects how much testosterone is bioavailable.
  • Cortisol (AM) — Primary stress hormone; reflects sleep, recovery and stress load.

Who this panel is for

Have you noticed any of these:

  • irregular, painful or missing periods
  • PMS, mood swings or cycle-related fatigue
  • low libido or energy
  • thinking about fertility, pregnancy or contraception
  • perimenopause or menopause symptoms
  • wanting a baseline before lifestyle, contraceptive or HRT changes

How it works

  1. Order online — no GP referral needed.
  2. Visit any of 2,000+ accredited collection centres across Australia.
  3. Results delivered same day to your personal dashboard with clear explanations.

Sample and turnaround

Single blood draw. Best done on day 2–3 of your cycle for baseline hormones, or day 21 if you're checking progesterone and ovulation. Talk to your doctor about timing if you're using hormonal contraception.

Frequently asked questions

When in my cycle should I test?

Day 2–3 for baseline hormones (FSH, LH, oestradiol). Day 21 for progesterone if you're checking ovulation.

Will the pill or IUD affect results?

Yes — hormonal contraception suppresses some of these markers. Your doctor can interpret results in that context.

I'm postmenopausal — does this still help?

Yes. Many of these markers are useful for tracking the menopausal transition and HRT response.