Supplements: Natural Testosterone Boosters
Rogerson et al. (2007, PMID 17530942): 5 weeks of Tribulus terrestris supplementation produced no significant changes in testosterone, body composition, or strength in elite rugby players vs placebo. Multiple independent RCTs replicate this null result.
| Measure | Value | Unit | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Evidence Tier | 3 | tier | Weak across the category; individual ingredients range from Tier 2 (deficiency correction) to Tier 4 |
| Market Size | 1.8 | billion USD/year | Estimated natural testosterone booster market with no reliably effective OTC product |
| Resistance Training T Increase | 15–25 | % acute | Heavy compound resistance training produces reliable acute testosterone elevation |
| D-Aspartic Acid Effect (Sedentary) | +42 | % LH increase | Topo 2009 in sedentary men; effect NOT replicated in trained athletes (Willoughby 2013) |
| D-Aspartic Acid Effect (Trained) | no significant change | — | Willoughby & Leutholtz 2013: 28-day RCT in trained men — null result for T and body composition |
| Tribulus RCTs Showing T Increase | 0 | independent RCTs | Multiple independent RCTs in athletes show no testosterone effect (Rogerson 2007, others) |
The natural testosterone booster category is defined by a gap between consumer expectation and scientific reality. Understanding why requires looking at each major ingredient’s evidence base rather than the category’s marketing narrative.
What Actually Moves Testosterone
Before evaluating supplements, the non-supplement interventions:
- Resistance training: heavy compound movements (squats, deadlifts) produce acute testosterone elevations of 15–25%
- Sleep: testosterone synthesis occurs primarily during sleep; men sleeping 5 hours per night have testosterone levels 10–15% lower than those sleeping 8 hours
- Body fat: visceral fat expresses aromatase, the enzyme that converts testosterone to estradiol; fat loss measurably increases free testosterone
- Zinc and vitamin D: both are cofactors in testosterone synthesis; deficiency is common (~20–40% of athletes); correction normalizes levels
The Supplement Evidence
| Ingredient | Proposed Mechanism | Effect in Sedentary Men | Effect in Trained Athletes | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tribulus terrestris | LH stimulation | No effect (multiple RCTs) | No effect (Rogerson 2007) | Ineffective for testosterone |
| D-Aspartic Acid | NMDA receptor → LH release | +42% LH (Topo 2009) | No effect (Willoughby 2013) | Training status nullifies effect |
| Fenugreek | 5-AR and aromatase inhibition | Mixed testosterone data | Modest body composition effect | Modifier, not booster |
| DHEA | Androgen precursor | Effective if DHEA-S low | No effect if DHEA-S normal | Deficiency-dependent; banned in sport |
| Ashwagandha (KSM-66) | HPA axis → cortisol reduction | +14–15% T in stressed men | Likely smaller effect in optimized athletes | See ashwagandha-testosterone page |
| Zinc | Cofactor in T synthesis | Corrects deficiency | Corrects deficiency only | Deficiency-dependent |
| Boron | Reduces SHBG? | Modest in low dietary boron | Inconsistent evidence | Tier 3 at best |
The Trained Athlete Ceiling
A pattern emerges across the data: ingredients that show testosterone effects in sedentary or deficient populations routinely fail to replicate in trained athletes. The likely explanation is that trained athletes already have optimized hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis function. When the axis is already running near its natural ceiling, oral supplements targeting the same signaling pathways have no additional floor to move.
The $1.8 Billion Market
Products in this category typically combine 5–15 ingredients, label them with confident marketing language (“clinically dosed,” “hormone optimizing formula”), and charge $40–80 per month. The majority contain tribulus, DAA, fenugreek, and zinc at various doses — none of which reliably raise testosterone in trained men.
If you are a healthy, trained male with normal sleep, adequate protein and calories, and no documented micronutrient deficiencies: no supplement will meaningfully raise your testosterone. The ceiling is set by your hypothalamic-pituitary set point, not by what you can buy.
Related Pages
Sources
- Rogerson S, et al. The effect of five weeks of Tribulus terrestris supplementation on muscle strength and body composition during preseason training in elite rugby league players. J Strength Cond Res. 2007;21(2):348-353. PMID 17530942
- Willoughby DS, Leutholtz B. D-aspartic acid supplementation combined with 28 days of heavy resistance training has no effect on body composition, muscle strength, and serum hormones associated with the hypothalamo-pituitary-gonadal axis in resistance-trained men. Nutr Res. 2013;33(10):803-810. PMID 23031687
- Topo E, et al. The role and molecular mechanism of D-aspartic acid in the release and synthesis of LH and testosterone in humans and rats. Reprod Biol Endocrinol. 2009;7:120. PMID 19860889
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Tribulus terrestris increase testosterone?
No, not in healthy men with normal testosterone. Rogerson et al. (2007, PMID 17530942) found no testosterone increase in elite rugby players after 5 weeks. Multiple independent RCTs replicate this null result. Tribulus may increase libido in animal models via mechanisms unrelated to testosterone — possibly through androgen receptor sensitivity — but it does not raise serum testosterone in humans.
Does D-Aspartic Acid boost testosterone in trained athletes?
No. While Topo et al. (2009) found a +42% LH increase and testosterone elevation in sedentary men, this effect does not replicate in resistance-trained athletes. Willoughby & Leutholtz (2013, PMID 23031687) found no significant testosterone change after 28 days in trained men. The hypothesis is that trained athletes already have optimized LH-testosterone signaling, leaving no room for DAA to produce additional effect.
What about DHEA for testosterone?
DHEA is a precursor hormone naturally produced by the adrenal glands. In men with documented low DHEA-S levels — common in older men and those with adrenal dysfunction — DHEA supplementation can modestly raise testosterone via conversion pathways. In younger men with normal DHEA-S, supplemental DHEA does not meaningfully raise testosterone. DHEA is also banned by WADA and most sports organizations.
What actually increases testosterone naturally?
Four factors with strong evidence: (1) resistance training, particularly heavy compound movements — acute +15–25% testosterone post-workout; (2) adequate sleep — testosterone production is highest during sleep, and chronic sleep restriction reduces testosterone by 10–15%; (3) reducing visceral body fat — visceral adipose tissue converts testosterone to estrogen via aromatase; (4) correcting zinc and vitamin D deficiencies if present.
Is fenugreek a real testosterone booster?
Fenugreek's mechanism is not testosterone synthesis — it inhibits 5-alpha reductase and aromatase, which reduces conversion of testosterone to DHT and estrogen respectively. This can raise measured total testosterone without actually increasing production. Some studies show improved body composition and libido. It is not a testosterone booster in the conventional sense; it is a testosterone conversion modifier with modest evidence.