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HRT for men (testosterone) and GLP-1 medications: what the connection really is

Low testosterone and excess weight are linked — but the arrow often points from weight to testosterone, not the other way, and that changes when testosterone therapy actually helps. Here's who benefits from TRT, and why losing weight on a GLP-1 can raise testosterone on its own.

Updated Jul 16, 2026

The link between low testosterone and carrying extra weight is real — but it often runs the opposite direction from what many men assume. That direction matters, because it changes when testosterone therapy actually helps and when it doesn't.

What HRT means for men

For men, hormone replacement usually means testosterone replacement therapy (TRT) — replacing testosterone in men with hypogonadism, meaning clinically low testosterone plus symptoms. It's given as gels, injections, patches, or pellets.

The obesity–testosterone cycle

Obesity and low testosterone feed each other: excess fat lowers testosterone, and low testosterone promotes more fat and less muscle — a bidirectional "hypogonadal–obesity cycle."

But here's the crucial nuance: much of the low testosterone seen with obesity is not true hypogonadism. It's largely a reversible drop driven by lower levels of the carrier protein SHBG — sometimes called the "pseudo-hypogonadism of obesity." The pituitary signals (LH, FSH) are usually normal, which points to a reversible state rather than a broken hormonal axis.

Who actually benefits from TRT

  • Men with genuine, pathologic hypogonadism — from structural or genetic disorders of the hormonal axis — have a real deficiency and generally need lifelong TRT.
  • Men whose low testosterone is really driven by obesity usually do not need TRT. Treating the root causes — weight loss, and managing related conditions like type 2 diabetes, sleep apnea, and depression — typically reverses it. Unwarranted off-label TRT carries real downsides: impaired fertility, raised red-blood-cell count and clotting risk, and testosterone dependence.

So the first question isn't "should I take testosterone" — it's "is my low testosterone the reversible, obesity-related kind, or true hypogonadism?" That takes proper testing.

Where GLP-1s come in

  • Weight loss raises testosterone. A meta-analysis found that both low-calorie diets and bariatric surgery significantly increase testosterone, with bigger gains in men who lose more weight. By extension, the substantial weight loss many men achieve on a GLP-1 would be expected to raise testosterone when the low level was obesity-related — potentially removing the reason to consider TRT at all.
  • Root cause vs. specific diagnosis. For many men, a GLP-1 plus lifestyle change addresses the actual driver; TRT treats a different, specific diagnosis.
  • Protect your muscle either way. GLP-1 weight loss can cost lean mass, so protein and resistance training matter (see the movement and strength guides). Testosterone supports muscle too — but that's not a reason to take it without a real indication.

Bottom line

If your testosterone is low and you're carrying excess weight, losing that weight — including on a GLP-1 — often raises it on its own. TRT is for diagnosed hypogonadism, not a default add-on to weight loss. Get properly tested and decide with a clinician. See also the companion pages on HRT for women and the HRT + GLP-1 overview.

This is general education, not medical advice. Testosterone therapy is a medical decision that requires proper diagnosis — talk to your clinician.

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Common questions

Questions people often ask about this topic.

  • Does losing weight raise testosterone?

    Often, yes. A lot of the low testosterone seen with obesity is reversible — driven by lower SHBG — and studies show weight loss (from diet or surgery) significantly raises testosterone, more so with greater loss. Weight loss on a GLP-1 would be expected to do the same.

  • Do I need testosterone therapy (TRT) if my level is low?

    Not necessarily. TRT is for genuine (pathologic) hypogonadism. If your low testosterone is really driven by obesity, weight loss and treating related conditions usually reverses it, and unwarranted TRT carries risks like impaired fertility and raised clotting risk.

  • What's the difference between real hypogonadism and obesity-related low testosterone?

    True hypogonadism comes from a disorder of the hormonal axis and generally needs lifelong TRT. Obesity-related low testosterone ('pseudo-hypogonadism') usually has normal pituitary signals and is reversible with weight loss. Proper testing tells them apart.

  • Can I take TRT and a GLP-1 together?

    They treat different things and can be part of the same care plan, but the first step is figuring out whether you actually have hypogonadism. For many men, a GLP-1 plus lifestyle change addresses the root cause without needing TRT — decide with a clinician.

Evidence: For & Against

Both sides of the topic, so you can weigh the evidence yourself.

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Related terms

  • Testosterone replacement therapy (TRT)Replacing testosterone in men who have hypogonadism (clinically low testosterone plus symptoms), delivered as a gel, injection, patch, or pellet. It is for a specific diagnosis, not a default treatment for the reversible low testosterone that often accompanies obesity.
  • HypogonadismA condition of low sex-hormone production. In men it means low testosterone with symptoms; importantly, the low testosterone that often accompanies obesity is frequently a reversible state ('pseudo-hypogonadism') rather than true, pathologic hypogonadism.
  • SHBG (sex hormone-binding globulin)A protein that binds and transports sex hormones (including testosterone) in the blood. Obesity lowers SHBG, which reduces measured total testosterone and is a major reason obesity can look like low testosterone on a lab test.
  • Menopausal hormone therapy (MHT)Estrogen, usually combined with a progestogen (when the uterus is present), used to relieve menopausal symptoms such as hot flashes and to protect bone. Often just called 'HRT.' It is associated with less visceral fat but is not a weight-loss treatment.
  • Hormone replacement therapy (HRT)Treatment that replaces a hormone the body no longer produces in adequate amounts — most commonly estrogen (usually with a progestogen) for menopausal women, or testosterone for men with hypogonadism. It is not a weight-loss treatment and is separate from GLP-1 medications.

Related guides

  • Hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and GLP-1 medications: an overviewHRT and GLP-1s are different tools that keep coming up together, because the life stages where people reach for hormones — menopause in women, low testosterone in men — are also times of weight and body-composition change. Here's how they relate, who benefits, and how to think about using them together.