Is TRT worth it?
An honest look at testosterone replacement therapy, what it costs, and what it actually asks of you.
The honest promise
You are here because you are asking a real question. Should you start TRT?
I am not going to talk you into it or out of it. I am going to lay out what I have found in the research as clearly as I can and let you make your own call. This is the pillar page. It walks through the decision at a high level. If you want to go deeper on any one piece, the links throughout will take you there.
This is one nurse sharing the best of what she has been able to pull together. It is not medical advice. Your doctor knows you. I do not. Talk to them.
And listen, I wrote this page for my fellow 3am researchers. The men reading on their phones while their partner sleeps next to them. The ones whose questions pile up faster than their next doctor’s appointment can answer them. I know that landing because I am one of you. The doctor’s office is never open at the hour I actually need them. So this page is what I wish existed for me on those nights. Take what helps. Leave what does not. And know that you are not the only one up.
One small thing if you are late night researching, from a nurse who cannot help herself. Turn on a blue light filter or slap some blue light filtering glasses on. Blue light at this hour suppresses melatonin and wrecks the kind of deep sleep your body needs to do its own work. I will not say more than that here. But sleep matters in this whole conversation more than most men realize. So filter the screen, finish reading, and then please, get some rest.
The short answer
TRT can be worth it for the right man, especially when low testosterone is confirmed, symptoms are persistent, and other causes have been ruled out.
But it is not a casual decision.
TRT can become a long-term medical path with ongoing cost, monitoring, fertility tradeoffs, and a shutdown of your body’s own production.
For some men, yes.
For others, not yet.
What TRT is (the short version)
TRT stands for testosterone replacement therapy. It is a prescription medication that puts testosterone into your body from the outside. It comes in several forms: weekly injections (the most common), daily gels, patches, slow-release pellets implanted under the skin, and oral capsules.
The forms differ in how they are delivered, how often you take them, what they cost, and what they ask of you. The underlying mechanism is the same. You are adding testosterone to your body from an outside source.
Can you stop once you start?
The short answer is that for most men, TRT becomes a long-term commitment.
When you add testosterone from outside the body, your body stops making its own. The brain stops signaling the testicles. Natural production winds down. If you stop TRT, your body has to restart that process, and the restart is not guaranteed to be fast or complete. Some men recover natural production over months. Some take a year or more. Some never fully return to their pre-TRT baseline.
This is the part that most clinics do not emphasize at the first appointment. It is also the single most important thing to understand before you start.
What it costs
TRT is not one number. It is a recurring monthly cost for the rest of your life on it.
The medication itself ranges from roughly $30 to over $500 per month depending on the formulation. On top of that, there is bloodwork twice a year, provider visits, and sometimes additional medications like hCG or anastrozole to manage side effects. Insurance coverage varies widely. Some men pay almost nothing out of pocket. Others pay $200 or more every month for decades.
Over 30 years, the total can range from around $15,000 to over $240,000 depending on the path you take.
Read the full cost breakdown, every line item, year one through year thirty. Just know that pricing shifts constantly. Insurance varies. Where you live changes the numbers. This is the best breakdown I could put together based on current market research, not a fixed quote.
Side effects and safety
TRT has real side effects. Some are minor and manageable. Some are not.
The ones that come up most often in the research I have reviewed: acne, fluid retention, changes in mood, increased red blood cell count (which can require regular blood draws to manage), hair loss in men predisposed to it, and breast tissue changes. The cardiovascular risk picture has shifted in recent years and is still being studied.
Fertility is a separate conversation. TRT typically suppresses sperm production while you are on it, and recovery after stopping is not guaranteed. If having biological children is something you might want, even years from now, that one factor changes the whole decision. Read the full guide: TRT and Fertility.
Ongoing monitoring is part of the commitment. Bloodwork twice a year minimum, sometimes more often. This is not a take-it-and-forget-it medication.
Read the full side effect breakdown. The research on this changes. New studies come out, guidelines update, and no single page can hold every nuance. This is the best of what I could find, pulled into one place. Use it as a starting point, not the final word.
The honest pros and cons
This is the part of the conversation that most clinics do not give you. Both sides, laid out fair.
What TRT can do for you
For men with genuinely low testosterone, the medication can produce real improvements. Higher energy. Better mood. Stronger libido. Increased muscle mass. Sharper focus. Many men describe feeling “like themselves again” after years of feeling flat. When TRT works, it works fast. Most men notice changes within weeks. That speed is one of the biggest reasons it is so popular. You feel different almost immediately.
For the right candidate (the man whose low testosterone is genuine, persistent, and not caused by something treatable), TRT can be a genuine quality-of-life upgrade.
What TRT asks of you in return
- It is a long-term commitment. Most men who start do not stop. Your body’s own production winds down, and restarting it is not guaranteed.
- It is a recurring cost for as long as you are on it. Medication, bloodwork, provider visits, and sometimes ancillary medications. Over decades, the total can be significant.
- It requires ongoing monitoring. Bloodwork at least twice a year. Some side effects (like elevated red blood cell count) need active management.
- It suppresses fertility. If you might want biological children at any point in the future, this is a major decision-point on its own.
- It has real side effects. Most are manageable. Some are not. And research on long-term cardiovascular and prostate effects is still evolving.
The asymmetry worth thinking about
TRT is fast but functionally permanent. Once you start, the path back is uncertain. Lifestyle changes (sleep, training, body composition, alcohol, treating underlying conditions like sleep apnea) are slow but fully reversible. They take a season to show up. TRT takes weeks. The tradeoff between those two paths is not just about speed. It is about what you are willing to commit to before you have tested whether you actually need it.
A man who tries lifestyle changes for three to six months and does not see improvement has lost a season and gained certainty about what he needs. A man who starts TRT without testing lifestyle and underlying causes first may never know whether his body had another path available.
That is the calculation worth sitting with.
So, is it worth it?
I cannot answer that for you. Nobody can except you and your doctor, who knows your specific situation in ways I do not.
What I can tell you is what the question actually is, underneath the surface.
The question is not just “does TRT work?” It works for most men who meet the criteria. The question is whether the version of feeling better that TRT offers is worth what it asks of you. The lifetime commitment. The monthly cost. The monitoring. The shutdown of your body’s own production. The fertility tradeoff. The fact that the path back is uncertain.
For some men, the answer is yes. They have tried the other paths, the symptoms are real, the quality-of-life cost of doing nothing is too high, and they go in with eyes open. That is a legitimate choice, and I respect men who make it after thinking it through.
For other men, the answer is “not yet.” They have not tested whether their body can produce normal levels on its own. They have not addressed sleep, weight, alcohol, training, stress, or underlying medical conditions for at least three months. They have not banked sperm if they might want children. They have not asked the questions their clinic did not raise. For those men, slowing down is not refusing TRT. It is making sure that when they decide, they are deciding from information, not from a 15-minute appointment with someone who gets paid when they say yes.
The men who regret starting TRT, from what I have read in patient forums and the research, almost always say the same thing. They wish they had known what they were signing up for. They wish someone had walked them through it. They wish they had tried the other path first.
The men who are glad they started usually say the opposite. They tried everything else, they understood what they were committing to, and they made the call with full information.
The difference between those two outcomes is not the medication. It is the decision-making process.
So before you start, ask yourself: have I actually tested the other paths? Do I know what this medication shuts down? Do I know what it costs over 30 years? Do I know the fertility implications? Have I had this conversation with a doctor who is not financially incentivized to say yes?
If you can answer yes to all of those, you are ready to make the decision either way. If you cannot, slow down. Not because TRT is wrong. Because a decision this big deserves to be made from a position of information, not urgency.
Before you start TRT, ask yourself
Something to bring to your appointment. If you can answer these, you are deciding from information, not urgency.
- Have I had more than one morning testosterone lab?
- Have I checked sleep, stress, alcohol, weight, training, and medications?
- Have I ruled out sleep apnea or other medical causes that can affect energy and testosterone?
- Do I understand what TRT can shut down?
- Do I understand the fertility implications?
- Do I know what this could cost over 10, 20, or 30 years?
- Have I talked to a doctor who is not financially rewarded if I say yes?
Want the deeper numbers? Read the full cost breakdown, or read the full guide: What TRT Is and How It Works. Both are the best of what I could pull together from current research. Your doctor knows you. I do not. Bring this with you, ask hard questions, and make your own call.
Still not sure TRT is your road?
Good. That means you are paying attention.
Before you commit to a hormone path, see what else exists.