Posted: December 9, 2025
By your mid-thirties, it is common to feel a shift in how your body performs. Workouts feel harder. Fatigue shows up more often. Motivation is not as steady as it once was. Most people will tell you that this is aging and that there is nothing you can do about it.
But sometimes there is more to the story.
Starting around age 35, natural testosterone levels decline by about one percent per year. Over time, that drop can influence energy, drive, physical strength, and sexual health. The challenge is that the signs of Low T often look exactly like stress, poor sleep, or burnout.
Here are five ways to tell whether your symptoms are part of normal aging or whether your hormones may be involved.
Aging
A gradual shift in stamina, strength, and libido. You still enjoy workouts and intimacy, but performance is slightly lower than it used to be.
Low T
A sharper change in mood, energy, and physical performance. You may see muscle loss even though your routine has not changed. You may notice belly fat forming around the waist. Sex drive and morning erections drop at the same time and do not improve on their own.
Tip
If the change feels fast or disproportionate to your lifestyle, hormones may be involved.
Stress
Work pressure, financial strain, or family responsibilities can raise cortisol. Cortisol can temporarily lower testosterone, but levels often rebound once stress decreases.
Low T
Fatigue, irritability, and brain fog remain even when life calms down. You may sleep through the night yet wake up tired. Concentration feels heavy instead of sharp.
Tip
If burnout lasts for months instead of weeks, hormone testing can offer clarity.
Emotional strain
Arguments, loss, or distance can affect energy and interest in intimacy. These changes often shift with life events.
Low T
A low, steady lack of motivation. Less interest in sex. Fewer spontaneous thoughts about intimacy. A sense of emotional flatness that does not change with circumstances.
Tip
If work, hobbies, and relationships all feel dull, hormonal imbalance may be part of the picture.
Diet and lifestyle
Poor sleep, low protein intake, heavy drinking, or inconsistent exercise can lower testosterone for short periods. These changes often improve in a few weeks with better habits.
Low T
You clean up your habits yet continue to feel tired. Belly fat remains or increases. Muscle mass is difficult to maintain. Focus does not improve with sleep or diet changes.
Tip
If lifestyle changes do not help within four to six weeks, testing can bring answers.
Normal recovery
Soreness that improves within a day or two. Strength and motivation return after rest.
Low T-related patterns
Workouts feel harder than they should. Strength plateaus. Soreness lasts longer. You leave the gym feeling drained instead of energized.
Tip
Testosterone plays a key role in muscle repair. If recovery feels unusually slow, this can be a sign that testosterone levels should be evaluated.
A simple blood test can measure both total testosterone and free testosterone which is the form your body uses.
General adult male range
About 350 to 1000 ng per dL
Your provider will review your level along with your symptoms, health history, and lifestyle to determine whether your testosterone level is appropriate for your age. If your level is lower than expected or if your symptoms match a hormonal pattern, your provider can discuss next steps.
You may want a free testosterone test if you have noticed any of the following
Feeling tired most days despite reasonable sleep
A drop in sex drive or fewer morning erections
Loss of muscle or increased fat around the waist
Low motivation or poor focus
Workouts that no longer feel productive
A fast, simple test can help you understand whether your symptoms are related to age, stress, or hormone levels.
Low T Center offers free testosterone testing so you can get clear information about your health. Testing is quick and allows you to talk with a medical provider about the patterns you are experiencing.
Book your free T test today.
Harvard Health Publishing – Testosterone: What It Does and Does Not Do
https://www.health.harvard.edu/drugs-and-medications/testosterone-what-it-does-and-doesnt-do
Cleveland Clinic – Low Testosterone
https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases/15603-low-testosterone-hypogonadism
National Institutes of Health – Trends in Testosterone Levels in Men
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21646319/
Disclaimer: This article is made available for general, entertainment and educational purposes only. The opinions expressed herein do not necessarily reflect those of Low T Center. You should always seek the advice of a licensed healthcare professional.