

1-in-4
men have low testosterone1
80%
of men with low testosterone go untreated2
22%
Average testosterone levels have dropped 22% in the last 17 years3
Rugiet testosterone treatment could be a good fit

- 01
Baseline your T with labs
One blood draw. 9 biomarkers — crucial for finding out if low testosterone could be to blame.
- 02
Online health assessment
Take a 5-minute questionnaire about your health and symptoms. Secure, private, and zero judgment.
- 03
Get personalized treatment
Talk to a board-certified clinician, who interprets your results and recommends your treatment plan, if eligible.
- 04
Optimize over time
Total care that works: Ongoing labs to track biomarkers. Unlimited doctor follow-ups. Dose adjustments. Treatment switches. We optimize until you're satisfied.
How treatment works
- 01
Baseline your T with labs
One blood draw. 9 biomarkers — crucial for finding out if low testosterone could be to blame.
- 02
Online health assessment
Take a 5-minute questionnaire about your health and symptoms. Secure, private, and zero judgment.
- 03
Get personalized treatment
Talk to a board-certified clinician, who interprets your results and recommends your treatment plan, if eligible.
- 04
Optimize over time
Total care that works: Ongoing labs to track biomarkers. Unlimited doctor follow-ups. Dose adjustments. Treatment switches. We optimize until you're satisfied.
What do you want?
Frequently
asked questions
We hold ourselves to the highest scientific standards
A large U.S. population study found ~25% of adult men have total testosterone below 300 ng/dL, a standard clinical threshold for low testosterone. (D Liu et al., BMC Public Health 2024).
In a large U.S. commercial insurance claims analysis (MarketScan, 2008–2017), only 20.8% of men diagnosed with hypogonadism received testosterone therapy in the most recent year studied (J Auerbach et al., International Journal of Impotence Research 2022).
A major population study found that age-matched men today have substantially lower testosterone than men the same age a generation ago—about a 22% decline over ~17 years. (T Travison et al., The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism 2007).







