The Bottom Line First
NHS TRT: Free medication, limited access, restricted protocols.
Private TRT: £2,000–3,500 per year for well-managed treatment including consultation, medication, and monitoring.
Most men considering TRT care about the actual cost of staying on treatment long-term. This guide breaks it down honestly.
NHS TRT: Free But Restrictive
If you can access TRT via the NHS, medication is free. However:
Access Barriers
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GP gatekeeping: Not all GPs are willing to prescribe TRT. Some require extensive investigation first. Some refuse TRT altogether.
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Symptom duration: Many GPs require symptoms for 6+ months before testing.
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Testosterone threshold: Some NHS trusts have a requirement that total testosterone be < 300 ng/dL before they'll treat. Others are more flexible.
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Limited options: NHS typically prescribes Sustanon (only option on many formularies). Enanthate and gels are less common. Undecanoate is rare.
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Monitoring variation: Some NHS clinics monitor closely (baseline, 6 weeks, then regularly). Others monitor minimally (once a year). Quality varies widely.
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Protocol restrictions: Some NHS clinics don't offer HCG as standard, making fertility preservation difficult.
Actual NHS TRT Cost (If You Can Access It)
Medication: Free (testosterone is on the NHS drugs list)
Blood tests: Free
GP appointments: Free
Monitoring: Variable, sometimes good, sometimes poor
Total annual NHS cost: £0
Realistic timeline: 3–6 months to diagnosis, then access to treatment.
NHS Reality
The NHS model works well for men who meet criteria and have a supportive GP. It doesn't work for men with borderline low testosterone (380–450 ng/dL with symptoms), or men in areas where local GPs are reluctant to prescribe TRT.
Private TRT: Costs Itemised
Initial Consultation
Private doctor or clinic first appointment: £150–300
This includes taking a full history, examining you, and discussing options.
Some clinics offer this free if you proceed with treatment through them.
Blood Testing: Baseline
Before starting TRT, comprehensive testing includes:
- Initial panel: Total testosterone, free testosterone, SHBG, LH, FSH, prolactin, oestradiol = £100–150 (private lab)
- Additional baseline: Full blood count, lipid panel, liver function, PSA, cortisol = another £50–100
Baseline testing total: £150–250
(NHS: free, but slow)
TRT Medication: Monthly Cost
Testosterone Enanthate (most common private choice):
- Cost: £30–60/month
- Dose: 100–200 mg weekly (standard)
Testogel:
- Cost: £30–60/month depending on dose
- Dose: 2–4 sachets daily
Sustanon (if NHS prescribed):
- Cost: Free on NHS, £40–80/month private
HCG (if including for fertility preservation):
- Cost: £40–100/month
- Dose: 500–1000 IU, 2–3x weekly
Aromatase inhibitor (if needed for oestradiol management):
- Cost: £15–30/month
- Usually not needed but sometimes required
Typical monthly medication: £50–150 (most men spend £80–120)
Annual medication: £600–1800 (most men: £1000–1500)
Monitoring Blood Tests: Ongoing
6-week check: £100–150 (essential — confirms dose is right)
12-week check: £100–150
6-month check: £100–150
Annual checks: £100–150 (at minimum annually, often 6-monthly)
Realistic ongoing bloodwork: £200–600/year (most clinics do 2–4 panels yearly)
Clinic Consultation: Ongoing
Follow-up consultation: £100–200 every 3–6 months
This includes review of symptoms, blood results, dose adjustment, prescriptions.
Annual consultations: 2–4 visits = £200–800/year
Optional: Semen Analysis (If Fertility Preservation Matters)
Semen analysis: £100–200, typically done once at baseline if fertility is a priority, then occasionally if needed
Total Annual Private TRT Cost Breakdown
Scenario 1: Modest Private TRT (Enanthate, No HCG)
- Medication: £100–150/month = £1,200–1,800/year
- Bloodwork: £300–500/year
- Consultations: £300–600/year
- Total: £1,800–2,900/year
Scenario 2: Comprehensive Private TRT (Enanthate + HCG + Good Monitoring)
- Medication: (testosterone £100 + HCG £50)/month = £150/month = £1,800/year
- Bloodwork: £400–600/year (quarterly panels)
- Consultations: £400–800/year (4x yearly)
- Total: £2,600–3,200/year
Scenario 3: Premium TRT (Clinic with Frequent Monitoring)
- Medication: £150–200/month = £1,800–2,400/year
- Bloodwork: £600–900/year (frequent testing)
- Consultations: £600–1,200/year (monthly or 6-weekly)
- Total: £3,000–4,500/year
Most men on private TRT spend £2,000–3,000/year for well-managed treatment.
Comparison: NHS vs Private
| Factor | NHS | Private | |--------|-----|---------| | Medication cost | Free | £1,200–2,000/year | | Bloodwork cost | Free | £300–600/year | | Consultation cost | Free (but long waits) | £300–1,000/year | | Access speed | 3–6 months | 1–4 weeks | | Protocol options | Limited | Extensive | | HCG availability | Rare | Standard | | Monitoring quality | Variable | Usually good | | Flexibility/adjustments | Limited | High | | Total first-year cost | £0 (+ time waiting) | £2,000–3,500 |
Where Money Actually Goes
If you're spending £2,500/year on TRT, here's the breakdown:
- 50–60% on medication (testosterone, HCG, sometimes AI)
- 20–25% on bloodwork (testing to ensure you're safe and at right dose)
- 15–20% on consultations (doctor time for supervision and adjustment)
This is reasonable. The bloodwork and consultations aren't optional — they're essential for safe TRT.
Private Clinic Options in the UK
Full-Service Men's Health Clinics
Price range: £2,000–3,500/year
Clinics like Optimale, Thorne Health, and others offer:
- Initial consultation
- Medication (usually sourced by the clinic)
- Regular monitoring and bloodwork
- Prescription management
Typical monthly cost: £100–200 (inclusive)
Independent Doctors + Separate Lab
Price range: £1,800–2,500/year
You find a doctor (sometimes via telemedicine), they prescribe, you source medication and bloodwork separately.
Pros: Potentially cheaper, flexible Cons: More coordination needed, less integrated care
Cosmetic/Anti-Ageing Clinics
Price range: £2,500–4,000+/year
Some cosmetic clinics offer TRT. Often more expensive. Quality varies.
Cost of Self-Sourcing TRT (Not Recommended)
Some men source testosterone independently from online pharmacies.
Cost: £200–500/year for medication alone
Issues:
- No medical supervision
- No monitoring (you don't know if it's safe for you)
- No dose adjustment by experience doctor
- Quality and purity unknown (fake/contaminated products exist)
- Legal grey area (not prescribed, self-administering)
- Higher risk of side effects going undetected
While cheaper, self-sourcing TRT is unwise. You skip the monitoring that actually keeps TRT safe. The medical costs (£2,000+/year) exist because they're necessary.
Cost-Benefit: Is TRT Worth the Money?
This is personal, but consider:
What you're paying for:
- Safe hormone replacement: Proper dose, proper monitoring, proper adjustment
- Side effect management: Regular bloodwork catches polycythaemia, liver issues, oestradiol problems before they're serious
- Optimised protocol: HCG if you want fertility, AI if you need it, proper frequency
- Peace of mind: You know you're doing this safely
What you get out:
If TRT is genuinely indicated (low testosterone with symptoms, proper testing):
- Restored energy and motivation
- Improved libido and sexual function
- Improved mood and confidence
- Better body composition (easier to build/maintain muscle)
- Improved cognitive function
- Better sleep quality
For the right man, this is worth £2,000–3,000/year. Many spend far more on far less effective health interventions.
For the wrong man (low-normal testosterone with no real symptoms, or depression/fatigue from other causes), TRT isn't worth the cost or risk.
Cost-Saving Strategies (Legitimate)
1. NHS First
If you can access NHS TRT, start there. Free medication. Don't skip this option if available.
2. Choose Injections Over Gels
Injections are cheaper per month (£100–150 vs £150–200 for gels). Over a year, you save £600–1,200.
3. Negotiate Clinic Packages
Some clinics offer annual packages (e.g., "£2,000/year all-inclusive") cheaper than monthly billing.
4. Less Frequent Monitoring If Stable
Once stable on TRT (after 3–6 months), you might negotiate less frequent consultations (annual instead of 6-monthly). This saves £200–400/year.
5. Use Cheaper Labs for Routine Testing
After baseline comprehensive testing, routine haematocrit, lipids, testosterone testing is cheaper at places like Medichecks (£50–100 per panel) vs clinic labs (£100–150).
Budget Planning: 3-Year Outlook
Year 1 Private TRT
- Initial consultation: £200
- Baseline bloodwork: £200
- Monthly medication/monitoring/consultation: £2,000
- Year 1 total: £2,400
Year 2 Private TRT
- Medication: £1,500
- Bloodwork: £400
- Consultations: £400
- Year 2 total: £2,300
Year 3 Private TRT
- Medication: £1,500
- Bloodwork: £300 (less frequent if stable)
- Consultations: £300
- Year 3 total: £2,100
3-year total: £6,800 (or roughly £2,267/year average)
When TRT Becomes Affordable
TRT is:
- Expensive if you earn < £25,000/year (unaffordable)
- Moderate cost if you earn £25–50,000/year (meaningful but manageable)
- Minor cost if you earn > £50,000/year (1–2% of income)
For many men, £2,000–3,000/year is equivalent to a gym membership, supplements, and occasional private healthcare. It's a reasonable health investment for the right person.
The Bottom Line
NHS TRT: Free but with access barriers and limited options. If you can get it, excellent value.
Private TRT: £2,000–3,500/year for good, well-monitored treatment. This includes medication, monitoring, and consultations.
Self-sourced TRT: Cheaper upfront (£200–500/year) but lacks safety oversight and monitoring. Not recommended.
Is it worth it? For a man with genuine low testosterone causing real symptoms, properly monitored TRT is one of the best health investments you can make.
The cost of NOT addressing low testosterone (lost productivity, failed gym sessions, relationship strain, depression-like symptoms) often exceeds the cost of TRT itself.
If you're considering TRT, budget £2,000–3,000/year for proper, safe treatment. Don't cheap-skate on monitoring — that's where the real value lives.