TSH (Thyroid-Stimulating Hormone): Normal Range, What High and Low Mean

Reviewed by AskAnything Clinical Team, MD-reviewedLast updated 2026-04-26

Thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) is the brain's signal to the thyroid gland — and it is the most sensitive single test of thyroid function. The pituitary releases more TSH when thyroid hormone is too low and pulls back when it is too high, so the TSH number on your panel is essentially your body reporting whether your thyroid is keeping up.

The headline range — roughly 0.4 to 4.0 mIU/L — covers most of what most labs flag as abnormal, but the useful range is narrower. Many endocrinologists treat values above 2.5–3.0 as worth a second look in the right clinical context, and increasing evidence suggests the population reference range was set too wide.

What TSH measures

The pituitary gland in the brain releases TSH to instruct the thyroid to make more thyroid hormones — primarily T4 (thyroxine) and a smaller amount of T3 (triiodothyronine). The relationship is inverse and logarithmic:

  • Thyroid hormone too low → pituitary releases more TSH → TSH rises (often dramatically).
  • Thyroid hormone too high → pituitary suppresses TSH → TSH falls toward zero.

Because the response is logarithmic, TSH is far more sensitive to thyroid changes than the actual hormone levels. A small drop in T4 produces a large rise in TSH. This is why TSH is the right first test, almost always.

TSH varies by time of day (peaks in the early morning and around midnight, lowest mid-afternoon), by recent illness, by medications, and by stage of life. A single TSH on a Tuesday afternoon is one snapshot, not a verdict.

TSH reference range

DemographicLowHighUnit
Optimal0.42.5mIU/L
Reference range (most labs)0.44mIU/L
Subclinical hypothyroidism410mIU/L
Overt hypothyroidism10100mIU/L
Subclinical hyperthyroidism0.10.4mIU/L
Pregnancy — first trimester0.12.5mIU/L

Most labs report 0.4–4.0 mIU/L as the reference range. The American Thyroid Association uses similar cutoffs but acknowledges that the upper limit is debated.

  • 0.4–2.5 mIU/L: the range where most healthy adults sit.
  • 2.5–4.0 mIU/L: within reference but increasingly considered "watch this" — associated with subclinical hypothyroidism in some studies.
  • 4.0–10.0 mIU/L: subclinical hypothyroidism. Treatment is debated; depends on age, symptoms, and antibody status.
  • Above 10 mIU/L: overt hypothyroidism in most cases. Treatment is usually warranted.
  • 0.1–0.4 mIU/L: subclinical hyperthyroidism.
  • Below 0.1 mIU/L: overt hyperthyroidism, usually warranting evaluation.

Pregnancy uses different cutoffs — first trimester upper limit is roughly 2.5 mIU/L, second and third trimester slightly higher. TSH targets in pregnancy are tighter because fetal brain development depends on adequate maternal thyroid hormone.

What high TSH means

High TSH means the pituitary is shouting at an underperforming thyroid. The most common causes:

  • Hashimoto's thyroiditis — autoimmune destruction of the thyroid, the leading cause of hypothyroidism in iodine-sufficient populations. Anti-TPO antibodies confirm the diagnosis in most cases.
  • Iodine deficiency — uncommon in countries with iodized salt but still relevant globally.
  • Post-thyroid surgery or radiation — induced hypothyroidism.
  • Medications — lithium, amiodarone, interferon, some immune checkpoint inhibitors used in cancer treatment.
  • Recovery from acute illness — TSH transiently rises as the body recovers from severe illness ("euthyroid sick syndrome" rebound).

Symptoms of hypothyroidism — fatigue, cold intolerance, weight gain, dry skin, hair loss, constipation, slowed thinking — are non-specific. Many people with TSH between 4 and 10 have no symptoms at all, while others feel poorly at TSH of 3.0. Treatment decisions consider symptoms, antibody status, age, pregnancy plans, and whether the elevation is reproducible on a second test.

The standard treatment is levothyroxine, with re-checks every 6–8 weeks during titration and annually once stable.

What low TSH means

Low TSH means the thyroid is producing too much hormone (hyperthyroidism) or the pituitary itself is not signaling normally (rare).

  • Graves' disease — autoimmune hyperthyroidism, the most common cause in adults. Diagnosed with TSH receptor antibodies.
  • Toxic nodule or multinodular goiter — autonomous hormone production.
  • Thyroiditis (early phase) — temporary release of stored hormone before later hypothyroidism. Common after pregnancy.
  • Excess thyroid hormone replacement — over-treatment with levothyroxine.
  • Pituitary disease — rare; usually presents with low TSH and low T4 simultaneously.
  • Subclinical hyperthyroidism — low TSH with normal T4 and T3. Increasingly recognized as a cardiovascular and bone risk factor in older adults.

Symptoms of hyperthyroidism — palpitations, weight loss, heat intolerance, anxiety, tremor, diarrhea, insomnia — are usually more obvious than hypothyroid symptoms but can be mistaken for anxiety or menopause.

Why one TSH is rarely the whole story

TSH varies considerably across testing conditions:

  • Time of day — peaks early morning, lowest mid-afternoon. Differences of 30–50% are normal.
  • Recent illness — acute illness suppresses TSH; recovery rebounds.
  • Biotin supplements — high-dose biotin (often in hair/nail/skin supplements) interferes with the assay and can falsely lower TSH. Stop biotin for at least 48 hours before testing.
  • Recent thyroid hormone dose change — TSH takes 6–8 weeks to fully reflect a new levothyroxine dose.
  • Pregnancy — different normal ranges per trimester.

For a borderline result, the right move is usually to repeat the test 6–8 weeks later under standardized conditions (morning draw, no biotin, no recent illness). About 50% of borderline TSHs come back to normal on retest.

Track this biomarker over time in AskAnything.health — upload your lab results and see trends at a glance.

When to act on TSH

  • TSH above 10 mIU/L — confirm with a repeat; treatment usually indicated.
  • TSH above 4 mIU/L on two separate tests with symptoms or anti-TPO antibodies — typically treated.
  • TSH below 0.1 mIU/L — evaluate; usually warrants treatment.
  • Any abnormal TSH in pregnancy or while planning pregnancy — refer to an endocrinologist or maternal-fetal specialist.
  • New atrial fibrillation, unexplained osteoporosis, or unintentional weight loss — check TSH; subclinical hyperthyroidism is on the differential.

This information is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice. Always consult your healthcare provider about your lab results.

Tests that complete the thyroid picture

  • Free T4 — the active circulating thyroid hormone. Combined with TSH, it confirms whether a thyroid abnormality is "primary" (thyroid problem) or "central" (pituitary problem).
  • Free T3 — the more biologically active thyroid hormone. Useful when hyperthyroidism is suspected.
  • Anti-TPO antibodies — confirm Hashimoto's thyroiditis. Often elevated for years before TSH abnormalities appear.
  • TSH receptor antibodies (TRAb) — confirm Graves' disease.
  • Reverse T3 — sometimes ordered, but rarely useful in routine practice.

Patterns to recognize

Combinations of values that together point at a specific clinical picture. One number rarely tells the whole story.

Primary hypothyroidism (likely Hashimoto's)

  • TSH >10 mIU/L
  • Free T4 below reference
  • Anti-TPO antibodies positive
  • Possible mild macrocytosis
  • Possible LDL elevation

The thyroid is failing and the pituitary is shouting — anti-TPO points to autoimmune destruction.

Next: Start levothyroxine, recheck TSH at 6–8 weeks, then annually once stable.

Subclinical hypothyroidism

  • TSH 4–10 mIU/L
  • Free T4 within reference
  • Anti-TPO often positive
  • Symptoms vague or absent

Early or evolving Hashimoto — about half of borderline TSHs come back to normal on a confirmed retest.

Next: Repeat in 6–8 weeks; treat if symptomatic, anti-TPO positive, pregnant, or planning pregnancy.

Primary hyperthyroidism (Graves')

  • TSH suppressed (<0.1 mIU/L)
  • Free T4 elevated
  • Free T3 elevated
  • TSH-receptor antibodies positive

Both active hormones high with suppressed TSH — Graves until antibodies or uptake scan say otherwise.

Next: Beta-blocker for symptoms, endocrinology referral, decide between antithyroid drugs, radioiodine, or surgery.

Central (pituitary) hypothyroidism

  • TSH low or inappropriately normal
  • Free T4 below reference
  • Other pituitary hormones often abnormal

The thyroid is normal but the pituitary is not driving it — a discordant TSH/Free T4 pattern.

Next: Pituitary MRI, full anterior pituitary panel (cortisol, ACTH, prolactin, LH/FSH, IGF-1), endocrinology referral.

Sick euthyroid syndrome

  • TSH normal or low
  • Free T3 low
  • Free T4 normal or low-normal
  • Patient acutely ill or hospitalized

Adaptive shutdown of T4-to-T3 conversion during severe illness — not a thyroid disease.

Next: Treat the underlying illness; do NOT start thyroid hormone, repeat after recovery.

Frequently Asked Questions

Most labs use 0.4–4.0 mIU/L as the reference range. The optimal range for most healthy adults sits between 0.4 and 2.5 mIU/L. Pregnancy uses tighter cutoffs — first trimester upper limit is approximately 2.5 mIU/L. Older adults may run slightly higher TSHs without it being clinically meaningful.

It is in the subclinical hypothyroidism range. Whether it warrants treatment depends on age, symptoms, anti-TPO antibody status, and whether the value is reproducible on a second test. Many borderline TSHs return to normal on a repeat draw — about half do.

Because the relationship between TSH and thyroid hormone is logarithmic — small changes in thyroid hormone produce large changes in TSH. This makes TSH the most sensitive single indicator of thyroid function. Free T4 and Free T3 add detail when TSH is abnormal but are usually not needed if TSH is solidly normal.

Acutely, no — stress and acute illness usually lower TSH. Chronic stress can shift TSH modestly through cortisol effects but rarely produces clinically significant abnormalities. Persistent elevation of TSH is much more likely to reflect autoimmune thyroid disease than stress.

For someone on a stable levothyroxine dose, annually is enough. During dose titration, every 6–8 weeks. For someone with no thyroid history but a family history of thyroid disease, every 5 years is reasonable. Pregnancy planning warrants a test before conception and every trimester.

For most patients, yes — levothyroxine is bioidentical T4 and the body converts it to T3 as needed. A minority of patients feel better on combination T4/T3 therapy, though randomized trials have not consistently confirmed an advantage. New extended-release T3 formulations are in development.

Yes. High-dose biotin (often found in hair/nail/skin supplements at 5–10 mg) can interfere with the TSH assay and produce falsely low values. The American Thyroid Association recommends stopping biotin for at least 48 hours before any thyroid testing.

Suppressed TSH almost always indicates hyperthyroidism — Graves disease, a toxic nodule, thyroiditis, or excess thyroid hormone replacement. It warrants free T4, free T3, and often antibody testing to identify the cause. Untreated subclinical hyperthyroidism in older adults raises the risk of atrial fibrillation and osteoporosis.

Track your lab results over time

Upload your blood work and see trends, reference ranges, and AI-powered insights — all in one place.

Get Started

Not medical advice. AskAnything.health is an AI-powered second-opinion tool designed to help you understand your health data. It does not diagnose, treat, or replace professional medical care. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before making medical decisions. Your data is processed securely and never shared with third parties — see our Privacy Policy.