Testosterone Cream
$50 per month
Our specially formulated topical cream has been designed for women by women. Testosterone therapy works by restoring hormone levels that naturally decline during perimenopause and menopause, supporting sexual desire, arousal, and satisfaction. By replenishing this essential hormone, testosterone can help address the diminished libido, reduced sexual thoughts, and decreased responsiveness that many women find distressing.
Lab tests are required to establish a baseline and monitor changes in testosterone. There are no FDA-approved testosterone medications for women currently available in the United States.
Compounded drugs are permitted to be prescribed under federal law but are not FDA-approved. For more information on side effects and other safety information, see full important safety information.

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FAQs
When prescribed at appropriate doses by a knowledgeable clinician with regular monitoring, testosterone therapy has a favorable safety profile for many women. Research involving thousands of women in clinical trials has shown no cardiovascular harm or increased risk of breast cancer when used at dose levels of what women typically produce naturally.
However, safety requires careful oversight. Your Inflexxion Health clinician will review your complete health history, order baseline lab work, and monitor your testosterone levels regularly.
No. While testosterone therapy has been FDA-approved for men's health conditions since the 1950s, the agency has never approved a testosterone formulation specifically indicated for women in the United States. This lack of approval stems primarily from insufficient research funding and attention to women's health needs, rather than safety concerns.
As a result, clinicians prescribe FDA-approved testosterone "off-label" (using medications approved for men), which is common and legal, or through compounded formulations.
At Inflexxion Health, we worked closely with our compound pharmacy partner to create a testosterone replacement therapy cream that is optimal for midlife women.
The strongest evidence supports testosterone therapy for sexual health concerns in postmenopausal women, particularly decreased sexual desire, difficulty with arousal, and reduced ability to achieve orgasm. At Inflexxion Health, we also treat perimenopausal women who have not yet stopped getting their periods for good. Many women see meaningful improvements in sexual desire and response within 3 to 4 months of starting treatment.
Despite common claims, high-quality research has not demonstrated meaningful benefits from testosterone replacement for brain fog, general fatigue, mood issues, or muscle function at doses appropriate for women. If you're experiencing these symptoms, they deserve evaluation and treatment but testosterone may not be the answer.
DHEA supplements are available over-the-counter without a prescription and are not FDA-regulated. When taken as a supplement, your body may convert some of it to testosterone, but the amount of conversion varies greatly between individuals and isn't predictable or controllable. There's limited high-quality research on oral DHEA supplements for menopause symptoms.
Combining oral DHEA with testosterone cream may be a good combination for some women but DHEA is not testosterone therapy despite claims on some telehealth sites.
