CoQ10 for fertility has become one of the more popular preconception supplements — particularly for women over 35 or those going through IVF. Unlike most fertility supplements, this one actually has trial evidence behind it, though the picture is specific: CoQ10 mostly helps women with reduced ovarian reserve or age-related egg quality decline. It’s not a magic bullet for everyone trying to conceive.

This guide covers what the research actually shows, who benefits, the right dose and form, when to start, and how to set realistic expectations.
Quick answer
Dose: 200–600 mg/day of ubiquinol (the active form) or 300–800 mg/day of ubiquinone. When to start: At least 60–90 days before active trying to conceive or before an IVF cycle (eggs take ~90 days to mature from early follicle stage). Who benefits most: Women over 35, women with poor ovarian reserve (low AMH, high FSH), and women undergoing IVF. What the strongest study found: In poor-responder IVF patients pretreated with CoQ10, oocyte retrieval, fertilization rates, and embryo quality all improved significantly.1 Realistic expectation: Modest improvement in egg quality and IVF outcomes. Not a treatment for anatomical infertility or sperm-side problems.
What CoQ10 actually does in eggs
Egg quality is largely about mitochondrial function. Each oocyte contains hundreds of thousands of mitochondria — far more than any other cell in the body. The energy these mitochondria produce (in the form of ATP) is what drives:
- Chromosome segregation during meiosis
- Successful fertilization
- The first 5 days of embryo development before implantation
As women age, mitochondrial function in oocytes declines. This is one of the main drivers of the age-related drop in egg quality and the rise in chromosomal abnormalities in eggs from women over 35.
CoQ10 is a critical component of the electron transport chain — the part of mitochondria that produces ATP. Endogenous CoQ10 production also declines with age. The hypothesis is straightforward: supplementing CoQ10 → improves mitochondrial function in oocytes → improves egg quality.2
What the strongest study found
The most rigorous trial of CoQ10 for fertility was a 2018 randomized controlled study by Xu and colleagues, published in Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology.1 The setup:
- 186 women under 35 with poor ovarian response/reduced ovarian reserve
- Randomized to CoQ10 pretreatment for 60 days before IVF, or no pretreatment
- 169 completed analysis (76 CoQ10, 93 controls)
Results (CoQ10 vs control):
| Outcome | CoQ10 group | Control group | Significance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gonadotropin required for stimulation | Lower | Higher | p < 0.05 |
| Peak estradiol levels | Higher | Lower | p < 0.05 |
| Oocytes retrieved (median) | 4 (IQR 2–5) | Fewer | p < 0.05 |
| Fertilization rate | 67.5% | Lower | p < 0.05 |
| High-quality embryos (median) | 1 (IQR 0–2) | Fewer | p < 0.05 |
| Cancelled embryo transfer | 8.3% | 22.9% | p = 0.04 |
| Cryopreservable embryos | 18.4% | 4.3% | p = 0.012 |
Clinical pregnancy and live birth rates trended higher in the CoQ10 group but didn’t reach statistical significance — likely because the trial wasn’t powered for those outcomes.
A 2023 review in Human Fertility synthesizing the broader CoQ10 fertility literature concluded that CoQ10 supplementation improved fertilization rates, embryo maturation rates, and embryo quality when used before and during IVF or IVM in women aged 31 and over, with effects on oocyte mitochondrial function and chromosomal stability.2
So: CoQ10 demonstrably helps the biological outcomes that lead to pregnancy in this population. Whether that translates to more babies is suggested but not yet definitively proven.

Who benefits most
The clearest evidence is for:
- Women over 35 (egg quality decline is mainly a 35+ phenomenon)
- Poor ovarian reserve (low AMH, high baseline FSH)
- Poor IVF responders (fewer oocytes retrieved, low fertilization rates)
- Women preparing for IVF or IUI
Less clear evidence for:
Suggested read: NAD Benefits: What Research Actually Shows
- Women under 35 with normal ovarian reserve — likely small or no effect
- Male factor infertility — separate research; CoQ10 may help sperm parameters in some men but it’s a different question
- Anatomical/tubal infertility — won’t help
- Unexplained infertility — limited specific data
How much to take
Two forms of CoQ10:
- Ubiquinone — the oxidized, more stable form. Cheaper.
- Ubiquinol — the reduced, more bioavailable form. More expensive. Generally preferred for women over 40, since conversion of ubiquinone to ubiquinol becomes less efficient with age.
Dosing:
| Situation | Dose |
|---|---|
| General preconception support, age 35–40 | 200 mg/day ubiquinol or 300 mg/day ubiquinone |
| Poor ovarian reserve / over 40 | 400–600 mg/day ubiquinol or 600–800 mg/day ubiquinone |
| Preparing for IVF | 600 mg/day ubiquinol, starting 60–90 days before retrieval |
Take with food — CoQ10 is fat-soluble and absorption improves significantly with a fat-containing meal.
Split the dose if you’re taking more than 300 mg/day — your body can only absorb so much at once. 200 mg at breakfast and 200 mg at lunch is better than 400 mg all at once.
When to start
Eggs take roughly 90 days to mature from the early antral follicle stage to the dominant follicle that ovulates. The CoQ10 effect on egg quality requires being in the follicular pool while these eggs are developing.
Practical implication:
- For natural conception: Start CoQ10 at least 60–90 days before you start actively trying
- For IVF: Start CoQ10 60–90 days before your retrieval cycle, ideally 90 days
- Continue through implantation — there’s no clear reason to stop earlier
Starting CoQ10 the cycle you’re doing IVF is largely too late for the developing eggs in that cycle. It might help for the next cycle but won’t transform the current one.
Suggested read: Ovulation Phase: Timing, Signs, and How to Detect It
What CoQ10 won’t do
A realistic frame matters:
- It won’t reverse age-related egg loss. You have the eggs you have; CoQ10 can improve the function of remaining ones but can’t restore a depleted ovarian reserve.
- It won’t fix anatomical problems. Blocked tubes, fibroids, endometriosis — CoQ10 is not the answer.
- It won’t fix sperm-side infertility. Different supplement decisions apply for male factor.
- It probably won’t dramatically change outcomes for women with normal ovarian reserve. The biggest effects are in poor responders and older women.
The honest framing: CoQ10 may move the needle 5–15% on egg quality in the women most likely to benefit. That’s not nothing — for someone on the edge of IVF success vs failure, that’s meaningful. But it’s not transformative.
Side effects and safety
CoQ10 is generally very safe. Common (mild) side effects:
- Mild GI upset — usually with higher doses; split the dose with food
- Insomnia if taken late in the day — take in the morning or early afternoon
- Headache in some people, particularly when first starting
Drug interactions:
- Warfarin — CoQ10 may reduce warfarin effectiveness. If you’re on warfarin, ask your doctor.
- Blood pressure medications — CoQ10 can mildly lower blood pressure; monitor if you’re on antihypertensives
- Statins — actually a good combination; statins deplete CoQ10. Many doctors recommend CoQ10 supplementation for patients on statins.
CoQ10 versus other fertility supplements
How does CoQ10 stack up against other fertility-marketed supplements?
| Supplement | Evidence quality | Best use case |
|---|---|---|
| Prenatal vitamin with folate | Very strong | All women trying to conceive |
| CoQ10 | Moderate | Women 35+, poor ovarian reserve, IVF |
| Omega-3 / DHA | Moderate | Reproductive health, baseline nutrition |
| Vitamin D (if deficient) | Moderate | Correcting deficiency |
| Inositol | Moderate | PCOS-related anovulation |
| Maca | Weak | Libido; limited fertility evidence |
| Royal jelly | Weak | Marketed for egg quality, limited evidence |
| DHEA | Mixed | Poor ovarian reserve, specialist-managed |
CoQ10 is in the second tier with omega-3 and vitamin D — better evidence than the herbal/maca tier, less universal than a basic prenatal vitamin.
For the broader supplement and food picture, see the fertility diet, prenatal vitamins, and omega-3 for fertility. For general CoQ10 information beyond fertility, CoQ10 benefits and CoQ10 dosage cover the broader picture.
Suggested read: NAD+: What It Is, How It Works, and Supplement Evidence
Combining with other interventions
For women under 35 trying naturally:
- Basic prenatal vitamin with folate
- Adequate sleep, exercise, body weight in 20–25 BMI range
- Skip CoQ10 unless you have a specific reason (over 35, poor ovarian reserve, IVF prep)
For women 35–40 trying naturally:
- Prenatal vitamin with folate
- CoQ10 200 mg/day ubiquinol
- Omega-3 DHA 200+ mg/day
- The basic fertility diet
For women preparing for IVF:
- Prenatal vitamin with folate
- CoQ10 400–600 mg/day ubiquinol, started 90 days before retrieval
- Omega-3 DHA 200+ mg/day
- Vitamin D corrected to >30 ng/mL serum level
- Talk to your reproductive endocrinologist about DHEA (separate question, specialist-managed)
Bottom line
CoQ10 for fertility has real but specific evidence — strongest for women over 35, women with poor ovarian reserve, and women preparing for IVF. The 2018 Xu et al. trial showed clear improvements in oocyte numbers, fertilization rates, and embryo quality with 60 days of pretreatment. Use 200–600 mg/day of ubiquinol with food, split into two doses, started at least 60–90 days before active trying or IVF. Don’t expect transformation — expect a modest, real improvement in egg quality for those most likely to benefit. Skip it if you’re under 35 with normal ovarian reserve unless you have a specific reason.
Xu Y, Nisenblat V, Lu C, et al. Pretreatment with coenzyme Q10 improves ovarian response and embryo quality in low-prognosis young women with decreased ovarian reserve: a randomized controlled trial. Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology. 2018;16(1):29. PubMed | DOI ↩︎ ↩︎
Brown AM, McCarthy HE. The Effect of CoQ10 supplementation on ART treatment and oocyte quality in older women. Human Fertility. 2023;26(6):1544-1552. PubMed | DOI ↩︎ ↩︎





