Nelson Vergel
Founder, ExcelMale.com
By Nelson Vergel, B.S.Ch.E., M.B.A. | Founder, ExcelMale.com
Last updated: June 2026
If your doctor flagged a high hematocrit after starting testosterone therapy, this is one of the most common issues men on TRT face, and also one of the most manageable. Elevated hematocrit does carry real cardiovascular risks if left unaddressed for months, but stopping testosterone is rarely the answer. This guide walks through what causes it, at what level you need to act, and what ExcelMale members have actually tried over the years.
What you'll learn:
Testosterone stimulates your kidneys to produce more erythropoietin (EPO), the hormone that signals your bone marrow to make more red blood cells. This is the same mechanism that happens when you move to high altitude. Men who live above 4,000 feet naturally have higher hematocrit and higher testosterone than men at sea level.
When red blood cell production increases faster than normal turnover, the fraction of red blood cells in your total blood volume goes up. That percentage is your hematocrit. On most TRT protocols, it begins rising within the first month and can take 9 to 12 months to reach its peak on a given dose.
Most TRT physicians use 52% as the threshold for action, with anything above 54% treated as more urgent. A reading of 52% or above warrants either a protocol review or a phlebotomy, not a conversation about stopping TRT.
One variable that gets overlooked: hydration has a real effect on the reading. One ExcelMale member documented a 4-point swing from 55% to 51% within hours because he became dehydrated from illness and then rehydrated before a second draw the same day. Draw your labs well-hydrated for a reliable number.
This is the most widely used approach in our community. A single unit (one pint) of whole blood typically drops hematocrit by around 3 percentage points. In practice, the drop can be larger depending on hydration and individual response.
One member who started at 54.7% had 500mL removed and saw a 5.7-point reduction within 10 days. He attributed some of the larger-than-expected drop to being better hydrated at the follow-up draw than at the original lab. Another member tracked his progress over five months: he started at RBC 6.24 with hematocrit 55.9, donated on September 5, and was at 53.0 by October 30. He also noticed his blood pressure dropped from 144 to 136 by his third donation.
When to donate: At 51–52% hematocrit, before it climbs higher and requires more aggressive intervention. Wait at least 10 to 11 weeks between donations to give ferritin time to recover.
If the blood bank turns you away: Blood banks typically reject donors with hematocrit above 53%. If that happens, ask your prescribing physician for a therapeutic phlebotomy order. The billing codes are CPT 99107 and ICD-9 289.0. Some insurers require a letter of medical necessity. With a physician order, most hospital-based labs and many Vitalant locations will accept you.
For a state-by-state resource guide, see the ExcelMale thread: Where to Get Therapeutic Phlebotomies in the US
Power Red removes two units of red blood cells in a single session, returning your plasma and platelets to you. It produces a larger hematocrit reduction than a whole blood donation, which is useful when your level is high enough that a single unit won't bring it into range fast enough.
One member with a LabCorp reading of 56.1% used Power Red to get a meaningful drop in one session. The trade-off: double red donations deplete ferritin more aggressively, and you're restricted from donating again for 16 weeks instead of 8. Experienced members on ExcelMale advise using it as an occasional intervention rather than a regular rotation.
For some men, the dose is simply higher than needed to address hypogonadism. One member found that at 250mg per week, his hematocrit climbed fast and caused sleep problems. Dropping to 150mg per week kept his hematocrit in range, though his total testosterone settled in the 700s rather than the range he preferred.
The trade-off is real: if hematocrit normalizes at a lower dose but your symptoms return, the answer is to work with your doctor on the protocol rather than simply managing a lab number at the cost of symptom relief.
Keep in mind that dose reduction doesn't work for everyone. One long-time member reported his hematocrit held at 55–56% regardless of whether he was on 80mg or 200mg per week, and regardless of whether he injected daily or once weekly. For men whose erythrocytosis is driven by high individual EPO sensitivity, phlebotomy is the reliable solution.
A 2020 study comparing intramuscular testosterone cypionate to subcutaneous testosterone enanthate found that subcutaneous patients had 41% lower hematocrit after therapy and 26.5% lower estradiol than the IM group. The likely reason: subcutaneous absorption is slower and flatter, reducing peak-to-trough variation in testosterone levels, which appears to drive less erythrocytic stimulation at the same average weekly dose.
Member results on ExcelMale are mixed. One member who switched from IM to subQ saw a 1 to 2-point drop but stayed above 52%. Another found no change. A third found that daily injections raised his hematocrit above what he saw on twice-weekly dosing.
Switching to subQ or spreading injections more frequently is worth trying, particularly for men who also want better estrogen control. Expect individual variation.
Related reading: SubQ vs IM Impact on Hematocrit
Frequent phlebotomy depletes ferritin, the protein your body uses to store iron. Low ferritin causes fatigue, disrupted sleep, and brain fog, and many men on TRT end up managing both high hematocrit and low ferritin at the same time. Monitoring ferritin at every blood draw is as important as tracking hematocrit itself.
The Vorck Protocol was developed by a TRT user who had been on testosterone since 2001 and found that standard iron supplementation failed to restore his ferritin after donations. After consulting with a hematologist in May 2021, he designed and tested the following approach:
Three 60mg doses of ferrous bisglycinate chelate per day, taken at 9am, 3pm, and 8pm, for at least three consecutive days.
The spacing matters. Hepcidin, the hormone that regulates iron absorption in the gut, is suppressed for several hours after each dose. Taking iron at intervals rather than all at once allows more total absorption per day. This protocol works best started right after a donation, when ferritin stores are freshly depleted and baseline hepcidin is already low.
This is among the most referenced protocols on ExcelMale for ferritin recovery. Full discussion here: Iron Supplementation Protocol to Raise Ferritin Fast While on TRT
One ExcelMale member reported a different combination that worked for him: apolactoferrin paired with IP6 (inositol hexaphosphate). His hematocrit dropped and stayed lower through the summer. When he switched from apolactoferrin to colostrum, his hematocrit rose again. His experience suggests iron-binding supplements may affect erythropoiesis beyond ferritin storage, though this remains anecdotal.
This approach comes from a member who cycled through repeated donations and wound up iron-anemic. He stopped the phlebotomy cycle and instead took heme iron four days per week. Over 3.5 months, his RBC production stabilized, hematocrit remained slightly elevated but consistent, serum iron stayed adequate, and ferritin improved.
He also switched to subQ injections and added L-citrulline during this period, so it's hard to isolate the heme iron contribution. The working hypothesis: regular moderate iron intake raises hepcidin, which blunts iron availability for red blood cell synthesis without depleting ferritin stores. It aligns with what's known about hepcidin biology, but it's based on individual reports rather than controlled data.
If your ferritin is already low and phlebotomy keeps crashing it further, this is worth discussing with your physician before doing another donation.
Donate when hematocrit reaches 51–52%. Catching it early gives you more flexibility. Waiting until it's 56% or above means you may need more aggressive intervention to get it back into a safe range.
On average, about 3 percentage points per unit of whole blood. Some members see larger drops of 5 to 6 points, often influenced by hydration differences between the donation and the follow-up lab draw.
Yes. Ask your TRT physician for a therapeutic phlebotomy order. Most hospital outpatient labs and many Vitalant locations accept you with a physician order even when your hematocrit is above their standard cutoff for self-directed donation.
Not necessarily. Some men produce red blood cells aggressively at any testosterone dose. Dose reduction resolves the problem for some men and has no effect for others. The response is individual and can't be predicted from dose alone.
It's an iron supplementation strategy that uses three spaced daily doses of ferrous bisglycinate chelate to restore ferritin rapidly after blood donation. It works by manipulating hepcidin signaling to maximize iron absorption across the day. It has a strong track record on ExcelMale for ferritin recovery, though results vary and some members find it works better started immediately post-donation than at other times.
It may. A 2020 clinical study found subcutaneous testosterone enanthate produced 41% lower post-treatment hematocrit compared to intramuscular testosterone cypionate. ExcelMale member results are mixed: some see a 1 to 2-point improvement, others see no change. It's a reasonable protocol adjustment to try, particularly for men who also struggle with elevated estradiol.
No single strategy works for every man. Some manage hematocrit with a dose adjustment and never need to donate. Others donate every 10 to 11 weeks indefinitely as part of their routine and feel well doing it. A smaller group finds that nothing in the protocol changes the number much, and quarterly phlebotomy is simply the cost of staying on testosterone.
The consistent finding across the ExcelMale community: monitoring is what protects you. Get a complete blood count with hematocrit, hemoglobin, and ferritin together at every lab draw. If you're donating regularly, ferritin deserves as much attention as hematocrit. Low ferritin at a technically acceptable hematocrit still affects energy, recovery, and sleep in ways that are easy to mistake for other TRT problems.
This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before starting, stopping, or modifying any hormone therapy or medical treatment.
Last updated: June 2026
If your doctor flagged a high hematocrit after starting testosterone therapy, this is one of the most common issues men on TRT face, and also one of the most manageable. Elevated hematocrit does carry real cardiovascular risks if left unaddressed for months, but stopping testosterone is rarely the answer. This guide walks through what causes it, at what level you need to act, and what ExcelMale members have actually tried over the years.
What you'll learn:
- Why TRT raises hematocrit and what level triggers concern
- Blood donation as a first-line strategy, with real member lab data
- Dose, injection route, and frequency adjustments that help some men
- How to protect ferritin when you're donating regularly
- When Power Red is and isn't the right call
Why Testosterone Raises Your Hematocrit
Testosterone stimulates your kidneys to produce more erythropoietin (EPO), the hormone that signals your bone marrow to make more red blood cells. This is the same mechanism that happens when you move to high altitude. Men who live above 4,000 feet naturally have higher hematocrit and higher testosterone than men at sea level.
When red blood cell production increases faster than normal turnover, the fraction of red blood cells in your total blood volume goes up. That percentage is your hematocrit. On most TRT protocols, it begins rising within the first month and can take 9 to 12 months to reach its peak on a given dose.
What Level Actually Requires Action
Most TRT physicians use 52% as the threshold for action, with anything above 54% treated as more urgent. A reading of 52% or above warrants either a protocol review or a phlebotomy, not a conversation about stopping TRT.
One variable that gets overlooked: hydration has a real effect on the reading. One ExcelMale member documented a 4-point swing from 55% to 51% within hours because he became dehydrated from illness and then rehydrated before a second draw the same day. Draw your labs well-hydrated for a reliable number.
Strategy 1: Blood Donation and Therapeutic Phlebotomy
This is the most widely used approach in our community. A single unit (one pint) of whole blood typically drops hematocrit by around 3 percentage points. In practice, the drop can be larger depending on hydration and individual response.
One member who started at 54.7% had 500mL removed and saw a 5.7-point reduction within 10 days. He attributed some of the larger-than-expected drop to being better hydrated at the follow-up draw than at the original lab. Another member tracked his progress over five months: he started at RBC 6.24 with hematocrit 55.9, donated on September 5, and was at 53.0 by October 30. He also noticed his blood pressure dropped from 144 to 136 by his third donation.
When to donate: At 51–52% hematocrit, before it climbs higher and requires more aggressive intervention. Wait at least 10 to 11 weeks between donations to give ferritin time to recover.
If the blood bank turns you away: Blood banks typically reject donors with hematocrit above 53%. If that happens, ask your prescribing physician for a therapeutic phlebotomy order. The billing codes are CPT 99107 and ICD-9 289.0. Some insurers require a letter of medical necessity. With a physician order, most hospital-based labs and many Vitalant locations will accept you.
For a state-by-state resource guide, see the ExcelMale thread: Where to Get Therapeutic Phlebotomies in the US
Strategy 2: Power Red (Double Red Cell) Donation
Power Red removes two units of red blood cells in a single session, returning your plasma and platelets to you. It produces a larger hematocrit reduction than a whole blood donation, which is useful when your level is high enough that a single unit won't bring it into range fast enough.
One member with a LabCorp reading of 56.1% used Power Red to get a meaningful drop in one session. The trade-off: double red donations deplete ferritin more aggressively, and you're restricted from donating again for 16 weeks instead of 8. Experienced members on ExcelMale advise using it as an occasional intervention rather than a regular rotation.
Strategy 3: Reducing Your TRT Dose
For some men, the dose is simply higher than needed to address hypogonadism. One member found that at 250mg per week, his hematocrit climbed fast and caused sleep problems. Dropping to 150mg per week kept his hematocrit in range, though his total testosterone settled in the 700s rather than the range he preferred.
The trade-off is real: if hematocrit normalizes at a lower dose but your symptoms return, the answer is to work with your doctor on the protocol rather than simply managing a lab number at the cost of symptom relief.
Keep in mind that dose reduction doesn't work for everyone. One long-time member reported his hematocrit held at 55–56% regardless of whether he was on 80mg or 200mg per week, and regardless of whether he injected daily or once weekly. For men whose erythrocytosis is driven by high individual EPO sensitivity, phlebotomy is the reliable solution.
Strategy 4: Subcutaneous Injections and Injection Frequency
A 2020 study comparing intramuscular testosterone cypionate to subcutaneous testosterone enanthate found that subcutaneous patients had 41% lower hematocrit after therapy and 26.5% lower estradiol than the IM group. The likely reason: subcutaneous absorption is slower and flatter, reducing peak-to-trough variation in testosterone levels, which appears to drive less erythrocytic stimulation at the same average weekly dose.
Member results on ExcelMale are mixed. One member who switched from IM to subQ saw a 1 to 2-point drop but stayed above 52%. Another found no change. A third found that daily injections raised his hematocrit above what he saw on twice-weekly dosing.
Switching to subQ or spreading injections more frequently is worth trying, particularly for men who also want better estrogen control. Expect individual variation.
Related reading: SubQ vs IM Impact on Hematocrit
Strategy 5: Protecting Ferritin When You Donate Regularly
Frequent phlebotomy depletes ferritin, the protein your body uses to store iron. Low ferritin causes fatigue, disrupted sleep, and brain fog, and many men on TRT end up managing both high hematocrit and low ferritin at the same time. Monitoring ferritin at every blood draw is as important as tracking hematocrit itself.
The Vorck Protocol
The Vorck Protocol was developed by a TRT user who had been on testosterone since 2001 and found that standard iron supplementation failed to restore his ferritin after donations. After consulting with a hematologist in May 2021, he designed and tested the following approach:
Three 60mg doses of ferrous bisglycinate chelate per day, taken at 9am, 3pm, and 8pm, for at least three consecutive days.
The spacing matters. Hepcidin, the hormone that regulates iron absorption in the gut, is suppressed for several hours after each dose. Taking iron at intervals rather than all at once allows more total absorption per day. This protocol works best started right after a donation, when ferritin stores are freshly depleted and baseline hepcidin is already low.
This is among the most referenced protocols on ExcelMale for ferritin recovery. Full discussion here: Iron Supplementation Protocol to Raise Ferritin Fast While on TRT
Apolactoferrin and IP6
One ExcelMale member reported a different combination that worked for him: apolactoferrin paired with IP6 (inositol hexaphosphate). His hematocrit dropped and stayed lower through the summer. When he switched from apolactoferrin to colostrum, his hematocrit rose again. His experience suggests iron-binding supplements may affect erythropoiesis beyond ferritin storage, though this remains anecdotal.
Strategy 6: Heme Iron to Stabilize Hematocrit
This approach comes from a member who cycled through repeated donations and wound up iron-anemic. He stopped the phlebotomy cycle and instead took heme iron four days per week. Over 3.5 months, his RBC production stabilized, hematocrit remained slightly elevated but consistent, serum iron stayed adequate, and ferritin improved.
He also switched to subQ injections and added L-citrulline during this period, so it's hard to isolate the heme iron contribution. The working hypothesis: regular moderate iron intake raises hepcidin, which blunts iron availability for red blood cell synthesis without depleting ferritin stores. It aligns with what's known about hepcidin biology, but it's based on individual reports rather than controlled data.
If your ferritin is already low and phlebotomy keeps crashing it further, this is worth discussing with your physician before doing another donation.
Frequently Asked Questions
At what hematocrit level should I donate blood on TRT?
Donate when hematocrit reaches 51–52%. Catching it early gives you more flexibility. Waiting until it's 56% or above means you may need more aggressive intervention to get it back into a safe range.
How much will one blood donation lower my hematocrit?
On average, about 3 percentage points per unit of whole blood. Some members see larger drops of 5 to 6 points, often influenced by hydration differences between the donation and the follow-up lab draw.
Can I donate if the blood bank rejects me for high hematocrit?
Yes. Ask your TRT physician for a therapeutic phlebotomy order. Most hospital outpatient labs and many Vitalant locations accept you with a physician order even when your hematocrit is above their standard cutoff for self-directed donation.
Does high hematocrit mean my TRT dose is too high?
Not necessarily. Some men produce red blood cells aggressively at any testosterone dose. Dose reduction resolves the problem for some men and has no effect for others. The response is individual and can't be predicted from dose alone.
What is the Vorck Protocol and does it work?
It's an iron supplementation strategy that uses three spaced daily doses of ferrous bisglycinate chelate to restore ferritin rapidly after blood donation. It works by manipulating hepcidin signaling to maximize iron absorption across the day. It has a strong track record on ExcelMale for ferritin recovery, though results vary and some members find it works better started immediately post-donation than at other times.
Will switching to subQ injections lower my hematocrit?
It may. A 2020 clinical study found subcutaneous testosterone enanthate produced 41% lower post-treatment hematocrit compared to intramuscular testosterone cypionate. ExcelMale member results are mixed: some see a 1 to 2-point improvement, others see no change. It's a reasonable protocol adjustment to try, particularly for men who also struggle with elevated estradiol.
Putting It Together
No single strategy works for every man. Some manage hematocrit with a dose adjustment and never need to donate. Others donate every 10 to 11 weeks indefinitely as part of their routine and feel well doing it. A smaller group finds that nothing in the protocol changes the number much, and quarterly phlebotomy is simply the cost of staying on testosterone.
The consistent finding across the ExcelMale community: monitoring is what protects you. Get a complete blood count with hematocrit, hemoglobin, and ferritin together at every lab draw. If you're donating regularly, ferritin deserves as much attention as hematocrit. Low ferritin at a technically acceptable hematocrit still affects energy, recovery, and sleep in ways that are easy to mistake for other TRT problems.
Related ExcelMale Resources
- How to Lower High Hematocrit on TRT (comprehensive guide)
- Effects on RBC and Hematocrit from Blood Donation (member lab tracking)
- SubQ vs IM Impact on Hematocrit
- The Vorck Protocol: Ferritin Recovery After Phlebotomy
- Where to Get Therapeutic Phlebotomies in the US
- Elevated Hematocrit from TRT vs High-Altitude Adaptation: A Comparative Analysis
This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before starting, stopping, or modifying any hormone therapy or medical treatment.