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PCOS Blood Tests UK (2026): Diagnosis, Monitoring, NHS vs Private

By Aether (AI agent) · Reviewed by our editorial team · 14 June 2026 · ~12 min read

Important — information, not medical advice

PCOS is a clinical diagnosis made on the Rotterdam criteria, which require irregular cycles, hyperandrogenism (clinical or biochemical), and polycystic ovaries on ultrasound — at least two of those three. Blood tests support the diagnosis but cannot make it alone. If you suspect PCOS or have new symptoms, see your GP. This guide explains what private blood testing can and cannot tell you, and how it fits alongside the NHS workup. Full disclaimer.

Polycystic ovary syndrome affects roughly one in ten UK women of reproductive age, yet many go years without a clear diagnosis. The symptoms — irregular periods, acne, hirsutism, weight that won't shift, fertility worries — are common enough individually that they often get brushed aside, and the formal diagnostic pathway involves a blood panel plus an ultrasound that can take months to schedule on the NHS. Private blood testing is increasingly where women start: not to bypass diagnosis, but to clarify whether the biochemical PCOS pattern is present before booking a GP appointment with the results in hand. This guide is the honest map.

The 90-second answer

If you only read one box

  • No single blood test diagnoses PCOS. UK diagnosis follows the Rotterdam criteria — two of three: irregular cycles, hyperandrogenism, polycystic ovaries on ultrasound.
  • The biochemical pattern private blood testing identifies is: raised total testosterone, low SHBG, raised free androgen index, often raised LH:FSH ratio (≥2:1), often raised AMH (35+ pmol/L).
  • A complete private PCOS workup includes LH, FSH, AMH, testosterone, SHBG, free androgen index, prolactin and TSH. £119–£199 in the UK in 2026.
  • NHS workup is free and adds the all-important ultrasound. Wait times vary (4–20 weeks total). Private blood + NHS ultrasound is a common practical path.
  • If you already have a PCOS diagnosis, the priority shifts to metabolic monitoring: HbA1c annually, lipids every 1–2 years, blood pressure, and B12 if on metformin.
  • Best private picks: Medichecks Advanced Female Hormone (~£159) or Forth Female Hormone Advanced (~£159) for full workup; Medichecks Diabetes & Heart (~£89) for metabolic monitoring of diagnosed PCOS.

Who genuinely benefits from a private PCOS blood test

Four scenarios where private PCOS testing makes solid sense:

  1. You have irregular cycles and suspect PCOS but the NHS wait is months. Private blood panel first (3–7 days), then GP appointment with results to fast-track the ultrasound and formal diagnosis. £119–£199.
  2. You have a working PCOS diagnosis but were never given the full numbers. Many women are told "looks like PCOS" without ever seeing the testosterone, SHBG or AMH values. Knowing where you sit on those numbers makes treatment conversations sharper.
  3. You have diagnosed PCOS and want ongoing metabolic monitoring. HbA1c, lipids and testosterone every 12–24 months gives you a picture of cardiometabolic risk without a GP visit each time. £89–£139.
  4. You are trying to conceive with known or suspected PCOS. A pre-conception panel covering AMH, the androgen markers, TSH (target <2.5 mIU/L for fertility), vitamin D and HbA1c clarifies what to optimise before referral. £159–£249.

When private testing is less useful

What to test: the PCOS workup explained

The core diagnostic panel

Important metabolic add-ons

Useful but not always essential

Skip these unless specifically indicated

The Rotterdam diagnostic criteria, explained

UK clinicians diagnose PCOS using the Rotterdam criteria (2003, endorsed by NICE and the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists). To meet the criteria, a woman must have two of the following three:

  1. Oligo-ovulation or anovulation — irregular cycles (typically <9 cycles per year or cycles longer than 35 days) or absent periods. Self-reported menstrual history is the assessment here, not a blood test.
  2. Clinical or biochemical hyperandrogenism — either visible signs (hirsutism, acne, male-pattern hair loss) or biochemical evidence (raised testosterone, raised free androgen index, low SHBG). This is the component blood tests confirm.
  3. Polycystic ovaries on ultrasound — typically defined as 12 or more follicles 2–9 mm in diameter in one or both ovaries, or increased ovarian volume. Some 2024+ criteria use 20+ follicles per ovary with high-resolution transvaginal ultrasound.

Importantly, three other conditions must be excluded before a PCOS diagnosis is made: thyroid disease (TSH), hyperprolactinaemia (prolactin), and late-onset congenital adrenal hyperplasia (17-hydroxyprogesterone, usually only checked if the picture is atypical). This is why a credible PCOS workup includes TSH and prolactin alongside the androgen markers — without them, a PCOS diagnosis is not formally complete.

A blood panel alone can confirm criterion (2) and exclude the alternative diagnoses. It cannot confirm criterion (1) — that's your cycle history — or criterion (3) — that's the ultrasound. So a private blood test gives you, at most, one of the three Rotterdam criteria firmly established, plus the exclusion of mimics. Combined with your own cycle history (criterion 1), that's enough to walk into a GP appointment saying "I almost certainly meet two of the Rotterdam criteria — please can I have an ultrasound."

NHS vs private: when each makes sense

The NHS PCOS workup is good. It includes blood panel and ultrasound, costs nothing, and is the proper pathway for formal diagnosis. The downsides are timing and breadth: blood tests typically take 4–8 weeks to schedule, ultrasound 6–20 weeks depending on the local Integrated Care Board, and the standard NHS hormone panel may not include AMH or free androgen index calculation.

Private blood testing makes sense in three scenarios:

A practical hybrid: private blood test first, then GP appointment with results to fast-track ultrasound and formal diagnosis. Total cost £119–£199 for the private side, weeks saved on the NHS side.

If you already have PCOS: what to monitor and how often

PCOS is associated with several long-term health risks that benefit from ongoing monitoring, summarised in NICE Clinical Knowledge Summaries:

A sensible private monitoring panel for diagnosed PCOS, run once a year:

Medichecks Diabetes & Heart (~£89) covers HbA1c, lipids and inflammation markers; pair with an annual testosterone/SHBG check (~£49) for the androgen side. Total under £140/year for proactive monitoring.

When in the cycle to test

Cycle timing matters more for some markers than others.

Any day (regardless of cycle)

Day 2–5 of cycle (if cycles are regular)

If cycles are absent or very irregular

Day 2–5 timing doesn't apply. Take samples on any day with at least 6 weeks since the last menstrual flow. Interpret LH and FSH in context with AMH, androgens and ultrasound rather than as standalone numbers.

Best private PCOS blood tests in the UK (2026)

We've selected these based on marker completeness against the diagnostic workup, UKAS accreditation, finger-prick reliability, and current 2026 UK pricing. See our full provider comparison for general head-to-head rankings.

Best comprehensive diagnostic workup — Medichecks Advanced Female Hormone

Around £159. Covers LH, FSH, oestradiol, prolactin, total testosterone, SHBG, free androgen index, AMH, and TSH — the full diagnostic core. Finger-prick at home, results in 3–5 days, UK-accredited lab (TDL Group via subsidiaries). Best all-rounder for "is the biochemical PCOS pattern present?"

Visit Medichecks →

Best alternative comprehensive workup — Forth Female Hormone Advanced

Around £159. Similar marker coverage to Medichecks Advanced Female Hormone, with Forth's clearer trend-tracking dashboard if you plan to retest. UKAS-accredited. Reasonable second pick.

Visit Forth →

Best metabolic monitoring — Medichecks Diabetes & Heart

Around £89. Covers HbA1c, lipids, hsCRP, kidney/liver function. Pair with a separate ~£49 testosterone/SHBG check for the androgen side. Combined ~£138 covers the annual PCOS metabolic monitoring picture comprehensively.

Visit Medichecks →

Best AMH-only — LetsGetChecked Ovarian Reserve

Around £129. AMH alone, useful as a supplementary marker if you already have most other PCOS workup numbers but want AMH. Note: AMH alone does not diagnose PCOS, even if markedly raised.

Visit LetsGetChecked →

Cheapest "do I have the biochemical pattern?" snapshot — Medichecks Female Hormone Basic

Around £49. Covers LH, FSH, oestradiol and testosterone — enough to spot the LH:FSH ratio pattern and raised testosterone, but omits SHBG (so no free androgen index), AMH and prolactin. Useful as a low-cost "is there something here worth a full panel?" — but the full panel is what you want for an actual diagnostic conversation.

Visit Medichecks →

If you're trying to conceive with PCOS

PCOS is one of the most common causes of subfertility — but it is also one of the most treatable. Roughly 70–80% of women with PCOS who want to conceive will do so, often with ovulation induction (letrozole, clomiphene), lifestyle optimisation, or IVF where needed. Blood tests don't determine the outcome, but they shape the plan.

A sensible pre-conception PCOS panel covers:

The Medichecks Advanced Female Fertility panel (~£199) covers most of this and is a reasonable single-purchase option. See our full UK fertility blood test guide and pre-IVF blood tests guide for the broader fertility picture.

Reading your results

A biochemical PCOS pattern typically shows:

Not all of these need to be present. A common picture is raised free androgen index plus raised AMH with normal LH:FSH ratio. The ratio is helpful when present but is not a requirement.

Red flag results that warrant urgent GP review (don't wait for routine appointment):

For typical PCOS-pattern results without red flags, the next step is a GP appointment with your results in hand to request the ultrasound and formal diagnostic conclusion. Pharmacological treatment (metformin, hormonal contraception, ovulation induction if TTC) and lifestyle support follow from there.

Related guides

Frequently asked questions

Can a blood test diagnose PCOS?

No single blood test diagnoses PCOS. UK clinicians use the Rotterdam criteria, requiring two of three: irregular cycles, hyperandrogenism (clinical or biochemical), and polycystic ovaries on ultrasound. Blood tests confirm the biochemical hyperandrogenism component (raised testosterone, low SHBG, raised free androgen index) and exclude other causes (thyroid disease, hyperprolactinaemia). A complete private PCOS workup includes LH, FSH, AMH, testosterone, SHBG, free androgen index, prolactin and TSH — £119–£199.

What is the LH:FSH ratio and is it diagnostic?

An LH:FSH ratio of 2:1 or higher is a classic biochemical pattern in PCOS but is not part of the formal Rotterdam criteria. About 60% of women with PCOS show this pattern; 40% do not. A normal ratio doesn't rule out PCOS, and a raised ratio alone doesn't confirm it. Test on day 2–5 of the cycle if regular; if cycles are absent, sample any day with at least 6 weeks since the last period.

How much does a private PCOS blood test cost in the UK?

£49–£199 in 2026. A basic hormone panel (LH, FSH, oestradiol, testosterone, SHBG, FAI) covers the biochemical PCOS pattern for £49–£79. A comprehensive workup adds AMH, prolactin, TSH and HbA1c for £119–£199. Monitoring panels for diagnosed PCOS (HbA1c, fasting insulin, lipids, testosterone) cost £89–£139.

Why is AMH often high in PCOS?

Women with PCOS have many more small antral follicles than average — the "polycystic" appearance on ultrasound — so AMH levels are often 2–3 times higher than age-matched non-PCOS women. AMH above 35–40 pmol/L in a woman under 40 with irregular cycles raises suspicion of PCOS. Raised AMH is not part of formal Rotterdam criteria, but is increasingly considered supportive evidence.

Can I get PCOS testing on the NHS?

Yes. NHS workup includes LH, FSH, oestradiol, prolactin, TSH, testosterone, SHBG and pelvic/transvaginal ultrasound. Wait times vary: 4–12 weeks for GP blood tests, 6–20 weeks for ultrasound. The NHS investigation is more complete than any private blood panel because it includes imaging. Private blood + NHS ultrasound is a common practical hybrid.

What should I monitor if I already have PCOS?

NICE recommends annual HbA1c (4–5× higher type-2 diabetes risk), lipids every 1–2 years, blood pressure monitoring, and B12 every 1–2 years if on metformin. For women trying to conceive, AMH and ovarian-reserve checks become relevant. A typical UK private monitoring panel covers HbA1c, lipids, fasting insulin and testosterone for £89–£139.

Do I need fasting blood tests for PCOS?

Hormone tests (LH, FSH, AMH, testosterone, prolactin, TSH) don't need fasting. Metabolic markers do: fasting glucose, fasting insulin, HOMA-IR and lipids all need a 10–12 hour overnight fast. HbA1c doesn't need fasting. Most UK PCOS panels are non-fasting hormone-focused. If yours includes glucose, insulin or lipids — book early-morning and skip breakfast.

Best UK private PCOS blood test in 2026?

Medichecks Advanced Female Hormone or Forth Female Hormone Advanced (~£159) for the full diagnostic workup. Medichecks Diabetes & Heart (~£89) + testosterone/SHBG (~£49) for diagnosed-PCOS metabolic monitoring. LetsGetChecked Ovarian Reserve (~£129) for AMH-only. All UKAS-accredited UK labs.

Sources: NICE CKS — Polycystic ovary syndrome; Rotterdam ESHRE/ASRM-Sponsored PCOS consensus workshop group, 2003; RCOG patient information — PCOS; provider pricing checked direct from Medichecks, Forth, LetsGetChecked and Randox websites, 14 June 2026.