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Spearmint Tea for PCOS: Anti-Androgen Evidence and Use

Spearmint tea has actual randomized trial evidence as an anti-androgen for PCOS — modest but real. Here's the dose, timeline, and what to expect.

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Spearmint Tea for PCOS: Dose, Evidence, and Timeline
Last updated on May 19, 2026, and last reviewed by an expert on May 19, 2026.

Spearmint tea is one of the few “natural” PCOS interventions that has actual randomized controlled trial evidence — not for being a cure, but specifically as a modest anti-androgen. For women with PCOS who deal with hirsutism (excess hair growth), acne, or other symptoms of androgen excess, two cups of spearmint tea daily measurably reduces testosterone levels. It’s not transformative, but it’s real, cheap, and safe.

Spearmint Tea for PCOS: Dose, Evidence, and Timeline

This guide covers what the trial evidence actually shows, the right dosing, how long it takes to work, and how spearmint fits alongside other PCOS interventions.

Quick answer

What the strongest study found

The landmark trial was published in Phytotherapy Research in 2010: a two-center, 30-day randomized controlled trial of spearmint herbal tea versus placebo herbal tea in 42 women with PCOS-related hirsutism.1

Protocol:

Results:

OutcomeSpearmint groupPlacebo group
Free testosteroneSignificantly reduced (p < 0.05)No change
Total testosteroneSignificantly reduced (p < 0.05)No change
LHSignificantly increased (p < 0.05)No change
FSHSignificantly increased (p < 0.05)No change
Self-reported hirsutism (DQLI)Significantly improved (p < 0.05)No change
Objective hirsutism score (Ferriman-Galwey)No significant changeNo change

The hormonal changes were clear within 30 days. The objective hirsutism score didn’t change in 30 days — but the authors specifically noted this is because hair follicle cycles take longer than 30 days to respond to hormonal changes. The original Turkish studies that prompted this research were only 5 days long; even 30 days is short for visible cosmetic effects on existing hair.

The lesson: spearmint changes the underlying hormones in 30 days, but visible improvement in unwanted hair growth requires several months because hair follicles cycle slowly.

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How spearmint works

The mechanism isn’t completely nailed down but likely involves multiple pathways:

  1. Anti-androgenic compounds in spearmint (particularly carvone and other monoterpenes)
  2. Possible inhibition of androgen synthesis in the ovary
  3. Possible modulation of androgen receptor activity
  4. Indirect effects via altered LH/FSH ratio — increased FSH and LH suggest pituitary-level effects

The traditional name “spearmint” refers to Mentha spicata — distinct from peppermint (Mentha piperita). The PCOS evidence is specifically for spearmint, not peppermint. Peppermint has different traditional uses and a different chemical profile.

For the broader spearmint context: health benefits of spearmint.

How to actually use it

Standard PCOS protocol

Sourcing dried spearmint

Fresh spearmint?

The trial used dried leaves brewed as tea. Fresh spearmint should also work but the active compound concentration may be different. Using fresh: 2–3 tablespoons of fresh leaves per cup, lightly bruised, steeped 5–10 minutes.

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Timing

Realistic timeline

What to expect:

TimeframeWhat changes
Week 1–4Hormonal changes begin (not visible without bloodwork)
Month 1Bloodwork shows reduced testosterone
Month 1–3Subjective hirsutism improvement (per the DQLI score in the study)
Month 3–6Objective hair growth changes start to be visible
Month 6+Continued gradual improvement; new hair growth in untreated areas may decrease

The key insight: hair you already have doesn’t disappear — but new hair growing in may be finer, slower-growing, or less pigmented. The cosmetic benefit accumulates over months as hair follicles cycle.

For existing unwanted hair, you’ll still need cosmetic management (waxing, laser, electrolysis, etc.) — spearmint helps prevent new growth and slow regrowth more than removing what’s there.

How spearmint compares to other PCOS anti-androgens

InterventionMechanismEffect sizeNotes
Spironolactone (Rx)Anti-androgen, aldosterone antagonistStrongPrescription, daily
Combined oral contraceptivesSuppress androgen productionStrongPrescription
Finasteride (Rx)5-alpha-reductase inhibitorStrongOff-label for women
Spearmint teaAnti-androgen, mechanism partialModestOTC, food-grade
Saw palmettoMild anti-androgenWeak in womenLimited evidence in PCOS

Spearmint is the gentlest, lowest-risk anti-androgen option but also the smallest effect. It’s most useful as:

For severe hirsutism, medical anti-androgens work much better. Spearmint tea is reasonable to try first or alongside.

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What spearmint won’t do

A few things to be clear about:

Side effects and safety

Spearmint tea at the studied dose (2 cups/day) is remarkably safe:

Important contraindications:

No significant drug interactions at culinary doses. At higher concentrated extract doses (spearmint essential oil capsules), more caution is warranted — but those weren’t what the PCOS studies used.

Spearmint tea as part of a broader PCOS approach

The realistic frame: spearmint is one of multiple tools, not the answer. A sensible PCOS approach combines:

For the supplement landscape: PCOS supplements. For broader inflammation/anti-androgen context, the diets to lower estrogen framework also applies to managing hormones from the food side.

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What about spearmint capsules or essential oil?

These deliver concentrated spearmint compounds but weren’t what the RCT used. Two considerations:

Stick with the tea form unless you specifically can’t tolerate it. The cost is low ($5–15/month) and the evidence is what it is.

Common questions

Can I drink more than 2 cups per day? Probably fine, but the evidence base is for 2 cups. More may not help proportionally. Up to 4 cups/day is generally considered safe for daily use.

Decaf or regular? Spearmint tea is naturally caffeine-free. Be careful with “mint blends” that contain green tea or other caffeinated ingredients.

Hot or cold? Either works. The active compounds are extracted by hot water; you can then cool the tea and drink it iced.

Does spearmint candy or gum work? No — the concentration of active compounds is too low, and most products use spearmint flavoring rather than actual spearmint extract.

Can men with high androgens use spearmint? Some have tried it, but the effects in men aren’t well studied. Reducing androgens in men has different implications than in women.

Bottom line

Spearmint tea for PCOS has actual randomized controlled trial evidence as a mild anti-androgen — it reduces free and total testosterone within 30 days at 2 cups daily. The catch: visible improvements in hirsutism take 3–6+ months because hair follicles cycle slowly. It’s safe, cheap, and well-tolerated. It complements but doesn’t replace insulin-targeting interventions like inositol for PCOS, the PCOS diet, and exercise. Skip during pregnancy or active conception attempts. For the broader supplement framework: PCOS supplements. For the cause picture: what causes PCOS.


  1. Grant P. Spearmint herbal tea has significant anti-androgen effects in polycystic ovarian syndrome. A randomized controlled trial. Phytotherapy Research. 2010;24(2):186-8. PubMed | DOI ↩︎

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