Anti-Müllerian Hormone— Normal Range & What Your Result Means

Normal Anti-Müllerian Hormone range (AMH, ng/mL)

  • Adults1–4 ng/mL

Ranges are typical adult values and vary between labs. Use the range on your own report.

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What is Anti-Müllerian Hormone (AMH)?

Anti-Müllerian Hormone is measured as part of a female hormones panel. Your AMH is in a typical range, suggesting a normal ovarian reserve for many women.

What does a high Anti-Müllerian Hormone mean?

Your AMH is high, which can be seen in PCOS. It's interpreted alongside your symptoms and ultrasound.

What does a low Anti-Müllerian Hormone mean?

Your AMH is low, which suggests a reduced ovarian reserve (fewer remaining eggs). This is one piece of the fertility picture and is best interpreted with your age and an ultrasound.

Understand your whole report, not just one number

A single value rarely tells the full story — Anti-Müllerian Hormone is best read alongside the rest of your panel. Paste your values or upload your report and get a plain-English explanation of every marker, with the important results flagged.

Anti-Müllerian Hormone: frequently asked questions

What is a normal Anti-Müllerian Hormone level?

A normal Anti-Müllerian Hormone (AMH) level is 1–4 ng/mL for adults. Reference ranges vary slightly between laboratories, so always compare against the range printed on your own report.

What does a high Anti-Müllerian Hormone mean?

Your AMH is high, which can be seen in PCOS. It's interpreted alongside your symptoms and ultrasound.

What does a low Anti-Müllerian Hormone mean?

Your AMH is low, which suggests a reduced ovarian reserve (fewer remaining eggs). This is one piece of the fertility picture and is best interpreted with your age and an ultrasound.

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