Tonight, ask yourself one question. Do you have a diagnosed hormone deficiency and a doctor who told you to take this? If no, DHEA is a hormone you are self-dosing for an anti-aging benefit that two-year trials could not find. Skip it.
Refilling a hormone you are not short on just hands your body more raw material it does not need, like topping up a fuel tank that is already full. The gauge reads higher. The car does not go further.
That's the general answer. Your stack is different.
Check your whole stackAn actual hormone, sold as an anti-aging supplement.
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Tonight, ask one question: did a doctor diagnose you with a hormone deficiency and tell you to take this? If not, DHEA is a hormone you are self-dosing for an anti-aging benefit that two-year trials could not find. Skip it.
The trials that "worked" were run on people with a real deficiency or in fertility clinics, not on the healthy adult buying the bottle.
Takes 10 seconds. Saves you the money and the risk.There is no consumer anti-aging protocol, because there is no consumer anti-aging benefit. The doses below exist only inside supervised medical care.
| Who | Dose | Timing & Form | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Healthy adult (anti-aging) | No effective dose exists | — | Two-year trials at 50-75 mg/day found no benefit |
| Adrenal insufficiency (supervised) | 25-50 mg/day (about one small capsule) | Morning, oral micronized | Replacement of a genuine deficiency, doctor-led |
| IVF / low ovarian reserve (specialist) | ~75 mg/day pre-cycle | Split through the day, oral micronized | Fertility-specialist protocol, low-certainty evidence |
Absorption is not the issue with DHEA. The issue is that over-the-counter products vary in how much DHEA is actually in them versus the label, and for a hormone, a wrong dose is a real exposure problem, not a rounding error.
This is where DHEA stops behaving like a supplement. You are dosing a sex-hormone precursor, so the side effects are hormonal, not the usual harmless stomach grumble.
DHEA raises estrogen, which can directly work against these medications. Avoid.
Adds an unpredictable sex-hormone load on top of treatment. Clinician only.
May nudge insulin sensitivity. Overall glycemic effect is null, but worth monitoring.
Acne and oily skin are common at higher or longer doses. In women: facial hair, scalp thinning, and voice deepening (partly irreversible), plus lowered "good" HDL cholesterol. There is no established safe upper limit, which reflects how under-studied long-term use is, not how safe it is.
LOW
Low conviction for the consumer anti-aging claim. The hormone-raising effect is well established, but the benefit to a healthy adult is not, and the evidence on that point is consistent.
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Join The Verdict — freeThe pitch is tidy. DHEA is the most abundant hormone your body makes, your levels peak in your twenties and fall sharply with age, so replacing it should hand you back the energy, libido, muscle, mood, and longevity of a younger you. It is marketed as the "mother hormone" and a natural fountain of youth.
There is a second claim in fertility circles, that DHEA "primes" the ovaries and improves IVF success. And a third in supplement shops, that "7-Keto DHEA" gives you the metabolism and fat-loss perks without the hormones. All three start from a true premise (DHEA does decline, and it really does turn into sex hormones) and then make a leap the evidence does not support.
| Claim | Strength | What the data says |
|---|---|---|
| Raises testosterone / estrogen | STRONG | Real and dose-dependent, clearest at 50 mg/day and up. But it is a hormone effect, not a felt benefit. |
| Anti-aging in healthy adults | DEBUNKED | No clear benefit at 50-75 mg/day for two years. |
| Cognition (healthy elderly) | DEBUNKED | Cochrane review: no benefit. |
| Body composition (aging men) | WEAK | Meta-analysis in elderly men: minimal-to-no effect. |
| Adrenal insufficiency (true deficiency) | MODERATE | Small but real improvement in quality of life and sexual function. |
| IVF / low ovarian reserve | EMERGING | Cochrane rates the live-birth evidence low certainty. Specialist-supervised only. |
| Depression | EMERGING | Modest symptom reduction in small trials. Preliminary. |
| Longevity / heart disease | WEAK | Only an observational association of natural levels. No trial shows supplementing changes outcomes. |
What would change the anti-aging verdict: an independent 18-month trial in healthy older adults with a real-life primary outcome, showing benefit that survives scrutiny.
DHEA and its storage form DHEA-S are prohormones. On their own they do very little. Their job is to be raw material: your tissues convert DHEA into testosterone and estrogen as needed. That conversion is the whole story. DHEA does not have a confirmed receptor of its own that drives the "youth" effects people buy it for. Whatever it does downstream, it does as the sex hormones it becomes.
That is exactly why the blood-level studies all come back positive. You swallow a hormone precursor, your body makes hormones, your levels go up. Predictable, and the easy part. The hard part, the part that fails, is turning that blood change into something a healthy person can feel. DHEA also nudges a growth signal called IGF-1 upward, which is not unambiguously good news, since higher IGF-1 is tied to some cancer-risk models.
The hormone moved; the outcome did not. Repleting a steroid in someone who isn't deficient changes blood, not life. The biomarker pooling was so inconsistent that even the size of the hormone change isn't stable.
The positive trials are small, unblinded, and non-randomized. When the bias filter goes on, the effect shrinks toward zero. Classic small-study inflation.
The positive trials enrolled people with a real deficiency or a defined condition. The retail buyer is a healthy 50-something with normal levels, the exact group where the benefit disappears. The studies that worked were not run on the person buying the bottle.
A consumer checks "my testosterone went up" and reads it as success. The literature says that blood change and any real-life change are two different things, and only the first reliably happens.
DHEA is sold over the counter in the US only because of a 1994 regulatory carve-out. In the UK, much of the EU, Canada, and Australia it is a prescription or controlled medicine.
The legitimate uses are narrow and supervised: replacing a genuine deficiency (adrenal insufficiency), fertility treatment, and a preliminary signal in depression. For everyone else, there is no food alternative to suggest, because DHEA is not a nutrient you can eat. It is a hormone your adrenal glands make. The honest comparison is not "this versus a better supplement," it is "a hormone with no proven consumer payoff versus keeping your money."
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