Skip to content

HSA / FSA Eligible

Back to Blog
Fertility

AMH and Ovarian Reserve: Understanding Your Fertility Numbers

December 18, 20257 min read

AMH (Anti-Mullerian Hormone) has become one of the most important tests for understanding ovarian reserve. Here's what you need to know.

What Is AMH?

AMH is produced by small follicles in your ovaries. It reflects the size of your remaining egg supply (ovarian reserve).

What AMH Tells You

  • Higher AMH: Larger ovarian reserve
  • Lower AMH: Smaller ovarian reserve
  • Very high AMH: May indicate PCOS

AMH Levels by Age

  • 25-30: 3.0-7.0 ng/mL typical
  • 30-35: 2.5-5.5 ng/mL typical
  • 35-40: 1.5-4.0 ng/mL typical
  • 40-45: 0.5-2.5 ng/mL typical

Note: These are averages. Individual variation is normal.

What AMH Doesn't Tell You

  • Egg quality (that's more related to age)
  • Whether you can get pregnant
  • When you'll go through menopause

When to Test

AMH can be tested any day of your cycle - it doesn't fluctuate significantly.

Important Considerations

  • AMH naturally declines with age
  • Very low AMH doesn't mean you can't conceive
  • Very high AMH may indicate PCOS
  • Birth control may temporarily lower AMH

Other Ovarian Reserve Tests

  • Day 3 FSH
  • Antral follicle count (ultrasound)
  • Day 3 estradiol

References

  • Dewailly, D., et al. (2014). The physiology and clinical utility of anti-Mullerian hormone in women. *Human Reproduction Update*, 20(3), 370-385.
  • La Marca, A., et al. (2010). Anti-Mullerian hormone (AMH) as a predictive marker in assisted reproductive technology (ART). *Human Reproduction Update*, 16(2), 113-130.

Ready to get tested?

Take our symptom quiz to get personalized biomarker recommendations.

Take the Quiz

EllaDx