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How to Increase Testosterone Naturally: What Works

How to increase testosterone naturally, ranked by evidence: the lifestyle levers that matter most and which supplements actually have human data.

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How to Increase Testosterone Naturally: What Works
Last updated on June 25, 2026, and last reviewed by an expert on June 25, 2026.

There’s a whole industry built on convincing men their testosterone is tanking and that a $60 bottle of pills will fix it. Most of it is noise. The truth is less exciting but far more useful: the things that actually move testosterone are mostly free, the supplements that help are a short list, and the ones with the loudest marketing tend to have the weakest evidence. If you want more testosterone, the smart play is to fix the basics first and treat supplements as a small bonus on top.

How to Increase Testosterone Naturally: What Works

This is educational information, not medical advice. If you have symptoms of genuinely low testosterone, see a doctor and get tested — don’t self-diagnose or self-treat. Supplements aren’t tightly regulated, can interact with medications, and aren’t a substitute for medical care.

Quick answer: The biggest natural levers on testosterone are lifestyle, not pills: get enough sleep, lose excess body fat, lift heavy, manage chronic stress, and correct deficiencies in vitamin D, zinc, and magnesium. These have real human evidence behind them. On the supplement side, ashwagandha and tongkat ali have the best human data, vitamin D helps if you’re deficient, and shilajit and boron have smaller but promising results. The trendy ones like fadogia agrestis are mostly hype with little or no human research. Below, everything is ranked by how much evidence actually backs it.

First, know your numbers

Before you change anything, get a sense of where you actually stand. Symptoms of genuinely low testosterone include persistent low libido, fatigue, low mood, loss of muscle, and erectile issues — but all of those have other causes too, so they’re not proof on their own.

If you’re worried, ask your doctor for a blood test (ideally a morning sample, when testosterone peaks). Two honest points:

With that framing, here’s what works — biggest levers first.

DHEA: Benefits, Decline With Age, and Supplement Risks
Suggested read: DHEA: Benefits, Decline With Age, and Supplement Risks

The lifestyle levers that actually move the needle

This is where the real gains are. None of it is glamorous, and all of it is better-supported than anything in a bottle.

Sleep — the most underrated lever

Skimp on sleep and your testosterone drops, fast. In a tightly controlled study, just one week of sleeping only five hours a night lowered daytime testosterone in healthy young men by 10 to 15 percent — the kind of drop that would otherwise take 10 to 15 years of aging.1 Your body does most of its testosterone production during sleep, so chronic short sleep is like turning down the factory. Aim for seven to nine solid hours. If nothing else on this list changes, fix this first. Our guide on how much sleep you need is a good starting point.

Lose excess body fat

Body fat isn’t inert — fat tissue contains an enzyme (aromatase) that converts testosterone into estrogen, so carrying extra weight actively lowers your testosterone. Losing excess fat, especially around the belly, reliably nudges testosterone back up. This is one reason crash advice doesn’t help: it’s sustainable fat loss, not extreme dieting (which can lower testosterone), that wins.

Lift heavy and train hard

Resistance training is a genuine testosterone signal, and it compounds with the fat-loss benefit. Strength work and short, intense efforts do more for hormones than long slow cardio. In one trial, men doing resistance training while taking ashwagandha saw bigger strength, muscle, and testosterone gains than training alone — a reminder that the training itself is doing heavy lifting, not just the supplement.2

Suggested read: Hair Growth Supplements: What Works, What's Hype

Manage chronic stress

Cortisol, your main stress hormone, works against testosterone — when cortisol is chronically high, testosterone tends to sit lower. You can’t eliminate stress, but you can blunt the chronic kind with sleep, training, and downtime. We go deep on this in our cortisol guide.

Fix the deficiencies that matter

Three nutrients are worth checking because a shortfall directly drags testosterone down:

The supplements — honestly tiered

Now the part everyone skips to. Here’s the unvarnished ranking.

TierSupplementWhat the evidence says
Best human dataAshwagandha, tongkat aliReal RCTs showing testosterone increases
Helps if deficientVitamin D, zinc, magnesiumWorks by fixing a shortfall, not boosting past normal
Promising, smaller dataShilajit, boronSmall human trials with positive signals
Hype, weak/animal-onlyFadogia agrestis, most “test boosters”Little or no human evidence

Ashwagandha has the most consistent support — multiple trials link it to modest testosterone increases, alongside lower stress and better training results.2 See our ashwagandha benefits guide.

Tongkat ali (Eurycoma longifolia) is the other standout: a meta-analysis of clinical trials found it significantly raised total testosterone, with the clearest effect in men who started low.4 Details in our tongkat ali guide.

Shilajit and boron are the interesting middle tier — both have small but real human studies suggesting a testosterone benefit. We cover them in shilajit and boron for testosterone.

Fadogia agrestis is the poster child for hype outrunning evidence: it’s all over social media but has essentially no human trials and some concerning animal safety data. Read fadogia agrestis before you touch it.

Suggested read: Tongkat Ali vs Fadogia Agrestis: Which Is Better?

What doesn’t work (and what to avoid)

A few red flags worth naming:

The bottom line

If you only remember one thing: lifestyle beats supplements, by a lot. Sleep seven to nine hours, lose excess body fat, lift heavy, keep chronic stress in check, and fix any deficiency in vitamin D, zinc, or magnesium. Those moves are free, well-supported, and will do more for your testosterone than any capsule.

When you do reach for supplements, keep expectations modest and stick to the ones with human data — ashwagandha and tongkat ali first, vitamin D if you’re low, shilajit and boron as smaller bets. Skip the hyped, unproven stuff like fadogia until real evidence shows up. And if you genuinely suspect low testosterone, get tested and talk to a doctor rather than guessing your way through the supplement aisle.


  1. Leproult R, Van Cauter E. Effect of 1 week of sleep restriction on testosterone levels in young healthy men. JAMA. 2011;305(21):2173-2174. PubMed ↩︎

  2. Wankhede S, Langade D, Joshi K, Sinha SR, Bhattacharyya S. Examining the effect of Withania somnifera supplementation on muscle strength and recovery: a randomized controlled trial. J Int Soc Sports Nutr. 2015;12:43. PubMed ↩︎ ↩︎

  3. Pilz S, Frisch S, Koertke H, et al. Effect of vitamin D supplementation on testosterone levels in men. Horm Metab Res. 2011;43(3):223-225. PubMed ↩︎

  4. Leisegang K, Finelli R, Sikka SC, Panner Selvam MK. Eurycoma longifolia (Jack) Improves Serum Total Testosterone in Men: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Clinical Trials. Medicina (Kaunas). 2022;58(8):1047. PubMed ↩︎

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