Low libido in women is common. It’s also wildly oversimplified.

Desire doesn’t disappear because women “lose interest.” It declines when biology, stress, and context collide.

This article explains:

  • Common causes of low libido in women
  • Hormonal and non-hormonal contributors
  • What actually helps
  • When it’s time to seek medical support

Hormonal Causes of Low Libido

Key hormones involved:

  • Testosterone
  • Estrogen
  • Progesterone
  • Cortisol
  • Thyroid hormones

Low testosterone is the most under-recognized cause.

Non-Hormonal Contributors

Libido is not purely biological.

Contributors include:

  • Chronic stress
  • Poor sleep
  • Body image issues
  • Relationship strain
  • Medications
  • Mental load and burnout

Ignoring these leads to incomplete treatment.

Treatment Options

Effective approaches include:

  • Hormone optimization
  • Stress reduction
  • Sleep improvement
  • Addressing relationship dynamics
  • Medical therapies when appropriate

Desire returns when barriers are removed.

When to Seek Help

If low libido is:

  • Persistent
  • Distressing
  • Affecting relationships or self-image

It deserves medical evaluation, not dismissal.

Conclusion

Low libido is not a personality flaw. It’s a signal.

With proper assessment, many women experience significant improvement.

Hormone Assessment

If libido has declined and no one has given you a clear answer, start with data.

Book a hormone assessment with 1st Optimal to evaluate root causes and options.