How much does AMH test cost in India? (Quick answer, April 2026 prices)
An AMH test at India’s major private labs costs ₹1,910 to ₹2,909 in April 2026. Verified prices from each lab’s own booking site: Thyrocare ₹1,910 (cheapest major lab), Redcliffe ₹1,999, Dr. Lal PathLabs ₹2,150, Metropolis ₹2,400, and Apollo 24|7 ₹2,029–2,909 depending on your city. Government hospitals (AIIMS, state medical colleges) charge ₹300–500 but wait times are often weeks. AMH can be tested on any day of your cycle (unlike FSH or estradiol), no fasting required, results in 24–48 hours.
💚 Want a shortcut? Cheapest major lab: Thyrocare at ₹1,910 with free home collection. Best value overall: Apollo Fertility Profile (7 hormones including AMH) for ₹2,399, which tells you more than AMH alone.
Searching for “AMH test price” or wondering if this test is worth it? You’re not alone. AMH has become one of the most requested fertility tests in India, and for good reason.
But there’s a lot of confusion about what AMH actually tells you, how much it should cost, and whether a low number means you’re in trouble.
As an OB-GYN who reads AMH reports daily, let me give you the complete picture, the verified April 2026 cost, the meaning, and most importantly, what to actually do with your results.
For more on this, read our guide on How to Increase AMH Levels Naturally (OB-GYN Guide).
What Is the AMH Test?
AMH stands for Anti-Müllerian Hormone. It’s a protein produced by the small follicles (tiny fluid-filled sacs) in your ovaries that contain immature eggs.
What AMH measures: The size of your remaining egg pool, your ovarian reserve.
What AMH does NOT measure: Your egg quality, your ability to conceive naturally, or your overall fertility.
This distinction is critical. I’ll explain why later.
The test itself is simple, a single blood draw from your arm. Results typically come back within 24-48 hours.
One major advantage: Unlike FSH or estradiol tests, AMH can be tested on any day of your menstrual cycle. No need to time it with your period.
AMH Test Cost in India: Complete Price Guide (Verified April 2026)
AMH test prices vary significantly depending on where you get tested, from government hospitals to private lab chains to online aggregators. Prices change frequently, so every number in this guide was verified in April 2026 by checking each lab’s own website. Here’s the full picture.
At a glance: which lab is cheapest?
| Cheapest major lab | Thyrocare ₹1,910 |
|---|---|
| Most common price band | ₹1,900–2,400 (Thyrocare, Redcliffe, 1mg) |
| Premium labs | ₹2,400–2,909 (Metropolis, Apollo 24|7 Bangalore) |
| Government hospital | ₹300–500 (long wait) |
| Best value (full fertility check) | Apollo Fertility Profile: 7 hormones for ₹2,399 |
| Small aggregators | Some list ₹1,100–1,350, but verify the city booking page works before trusting it. Several AMH-specific aggregator pages we checked returned 404s in April 2026 |
Government Hospitals (₹300-500)
If budget is a major concern, government and teaching hospitals like AIIMS, state medical colleges, and district hospitals often offer AMH testing at ₹300-500: sometimes even free as part of a fertility evaluation. The trade-off: longer wait times (often weeks for an appointment), limited availability (not all government hospitals have the assay), and slower report turnaround. For most women, this isn’t practical for a routine check, but it’s worth knowing the option exists, especially if you’re already being treated at a government facility.
Private Lab Chains (₹1,910-2,900)
These are the labs most women use, walk-in or home collection, results in 24-48 hours. All prices verified April 2026:
| Lab | AMH Test Price | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Thyrocare | ₹1,910 | Free home collection; price up from ₹1,739 in 2025 |
| Dr. Lal PathLabs | ₹2,150 | Bengaluru verified price; varies by city; home collection only |
| Metropolis | ₹2,400 | Premium pricing; known for quality reports |
| Apollo 24|7 | ₹2,029–2,909 | Chennai ₹2,090, Delhi ₹2,457, Bangalore ₹2,909 (big city variation) |
| Redcliffe Labs | ₹1,999 | NABL-accredited; free home collection; VIP members ₹1,799 |
Prices are for AMH-only tests. Panels that include additional hormones cost more (see below).
Online Diagnostic Aggregators (₹1,849-2,100)
Aggregators partner with NABL-accredited labs and often arrange home collection. Verified working prices, April 2026:
| Platform | AMH Price | How It Works |
|---|---|---|
| Tata 1mg | ₹1,849–2,070 | Pune ₹1,849, Bangalore ₹1,899, Delhi ₹1,940, Mumbai ₹2,070. Free home collection |
| BookMyTest | ₹1,739 | Thyrocare partnership; free home collection |
| Medifee | ₹1,940 | Compare prices across labs in your city |
A note on even-cheaper options: Some smaller aggregators (Labofy, MFine/LabsAdvisor) list AMH at ₹1,100–1,350 on their summary pages, but when we checked the city-specific booking pages in April 2026 several returned 404 errors. If you find a listing under ₹1,500, click through to the actual city booking page to confirm it still works before relying on it. For a lab you can definitely book with today, Thyrocare (₹1,910) remains the cheapest reliable major option.
Fertility Clinic AMH Panels (and a better-value alternative)
Many fertility clinics and lab chains offer AMH as part of a complete fertility panel that includes FSH, LH, TSH, Prolactin, Estradiol, and sometimes a pelvic ultrasound:
| Panel | Price (April 2026) | Includes |
|---|---|---|
| AMH only | ₹1,100–2,900 | Just AMH |
| Apollo Fertility Profile (Female) | ₹2,399 | AMH + TSH + FSH + LH + Estradiol + Prolactin + Testosterone (7 tests) |
| Basic fertility panel (lab-chain) | ₹3,000-5,000 | AMH + FSH + LH + TSH + Prolactin |
| Complete fertility panel | ₹5,000-10,000 | All hormones + ultrasound + Vitamin D |
My recommendation: If you’re getting AMH tested to understand your fertility, don’t get just AMH. Ask for at least a basic fertility panel: AMH alone gives you one piece of the puzzle. The Apollo Fertility Profile at ₹2,399 for 7 hormones is currently the best value in the market. You pay ₹370 more than a standalone AMH at Thyrocare but get 6 additional hormones that together actually tell you something about your fertility.
💜 Want help interpreting your AMH report? Don’t Google your numbers and panic. Share your report with Dr. Suganya on WhatsApp. I’ll explain exactly what your numbers mean for YOUR situation.
Normal AMH Levels by Age
This is the table every woman looking up “AMH test” wants to see. But first, a caution: AMH varies hugely between individuals. A “low” AMH doesn’t automatically mean poor fertility. These are population averages:
| Age | Average AMH (ng/mL) | Expected Range |
|---|---|---|
| 25 | 3.0-4.0 | 1.5-6.0 |
| 28 | 2.5-3.5 | 1.2-5.5 |
| 30 | 2.0-3.0 | 1.0-5.0 |
| 32 | 1.8-2.8 | 0.8-4.5 |
| 35 | 1.5-2.0 | 0.5-3.5 |
| 37 | 1.0-1.5 | 0.3-2.5 |
| 40 | 0.5-1.0 | 0.1-1.5 |
| 43 | 0.2-0.5 | 0.05-1.0 |
| 45+ | <0.3 | Near undetectable |
What the Categories Mean
| AMH Level | Category | What It Means |
|---|---|---|
| >3.0 ng/mL | High | Large egg reserve. In some cases, may indicate PCOS |
| 1.0-3.0 ng/mL | Normal | Healthy egg reserve for your age |
| 0.5-1.0 ng/mL | Low | Reduced egg reserve, but natural conception still very possible |
| <0.5 ng/mL | Very low | Significantly reduced reserve, consult a fertility specialist |
Critical point: These categories are general guidelines. A 35-year-old with AMH of 0.8 ng/mL has a “low” AMH but could still conceive naturally. A 25-year-old with AMH of 5.0 ng/mL might have PCOS that actually makes conceiving harder. Context matters more than the number.
The Truth About Low AMH: What Research Actually Shows
This is where I need to correct a widespread misconception.
When women see a low AMH number, the first thought is usually: “I can’t get pregnant.” Many doctors reinforce this fear by immediately recommending IVF.
But the science tells a different story.
The JAMA Study That Changed Everything
In 2017, a landmark study published in JAMA (Steiner et al.) followed 750 women aged 30-44 who were trying to conceive naturally. They compared women with low AMH (<0.7 ng/mL) to those with normal AMH.
The result: There was no statistically significant difference in natural conception rates between the two groups.
Women with low AMH conceived naturally at nearly the same rate as women with normal AMH.
Why? Because AMH Measures Quantity, Not Quality
Think of it this way:
- AMH = how many eggs are in your basket
- Egg quality = how many of those eggs can become a healthy baby
You only need one good egg to conceive. Whether you have 50,000 eggs remaining or 10,000, if the egg that ovulates this month is chromosomally normal, you can get pregnant.
Egg quality is influenced by:
- Your age (most significant factor)
- Nutrition and lifestyle (90-day egg maturation window)
- Oxidative stress levels
- Supplements like CoQ10 and Vitamin D
Low AMH tells you: Your egg pool is smaller than average. You may have fewer years of fertility remaining. IVF may yield fewer eggs per cycle.
Low AMH does NOT tell you: That you can’t conceive. That you need IVF. That your eggs are bad quality.
When Should You Get an AMH Test?
Definitely get tested if:
- You’re planning pregnancy after 30: gives you a baseline understanding of your timeline
- You’ve been trying for 6+ months without success: part of a standard fertility workup
- You have PCOS symptoms: AMH is often elevated in PCOS
- You’re considering egg freezing: AMH predicts how many eggs can be retrieved
- You’re starting IVF: helps your doctor choose the right stimulation protocol
- Family history of early menopause: your mother or sister had menopause before 45
- You’ve had ovarian surgery: surgery can reduce ovarian reserve
You probably don’t need it if:
- You’re under 25 and not planning pregnancy soon
- You’re already pregnant
- You’re using it to “predict fertility” without understanding the limitations
How to Get the Best Price on Your AMH Test (April 2026)
Tips from years of guiding patients through this:
- Cheapest reliable major lab: Thyrocare at ₹1,910. Free home collection, NABL-accredited, 24–48 hour report.
- Consider a full panel instead of AMH-only: Apollo Fertility Profile for ₹2,399 gets you 7 hormones (AMH + FSH + LH + TSH + Prolactin + Estradiol + Testosterone). If AMH alone is ₹1,910–2,400, the extra ₹400–500 for 6 more hormones tells you much more about your fertility than AMH alone ever will.
- Check city-specific pricing before booking: Apollo 24|7 charges ₹2,090 in Chennai but ₹2,909 in Bangalore. Tata 1mg charges ₹1,849 in Pune but ₹2,070 in Mumbai. The same test can cost ₹1,000 more depending on where you book, so always check your own city.
- Home collection saves time and often costs less: Thyrocare, 1mg, Redcliffe, and Dr. Lal PathLabs all offer free doorstep blood collection. In some cases (Dr. Lal in Bengaluru), the home-collection price is the only price available, and it’s lower than walk-in hospital labs.
- Beware of “too cheap” aggregator listings: some smaller platforms advertise AMH at ₹1,100–1,350, but when we tried to book through the city-specific pages in April 2026, several returned 404 errors. If a price looks too good, click all the way through to the booking confirmation page before trusting it.
- Lab apps offer discounts: booking through a lab’s own app (Dr. Lal PathLabs, Metropolis, Apollo 247, Redcliffe) often gives 10–20% off walk-in prices.
- Insurance: most health insurance plans do NOT cover AMH testing unless it’s part of a diagnosed condition workup. Ask your insurer, but plan to pay out-of-pocket.
- Government hospitals: if you’re already being treated at a government facility, AMH testing is available at ₹300-500 or sometimes free. But for a routine check, the wait times (often weeks) make this impractical for most women.
💜 Not sure which tests to get? Before spending money on multiple tests, ask Dr. Suganya what’s actually needed based on your age and situation. Sometimes a basic panel is enough. Sometimes you need more. One conversation can save you ₹5,000 in unnecessary tests.
AMH and PCOS: The Other Side
While most women worry about low AMH, an unusually high AMH can also be significant.
Women with PCOS often have AMH levels of 4.0-10.0+ ng/mL. This is because PCOS ovaries have many small antral follicles, all producing AMH.
High AMH + PCOS means:
- You have a large egg reserve (good news for long-term fertility)
- BUT you may not ovulate regularly (the actual fertility challenge in PCOS)
- IVF stimulation needs to be very careful (risk of ovarian hyperstimulation)
If your AMH is above 4.0 ng/mL and you also have irregular periods, acne, or excess hair growth, ask your doctor about PCOS evaluation.
How to Read Your AMH Report
Your report will show:
- AMH value in ng/mL (some labs use pmol/L, multiply by 0.14 to convert to ng/mL)
- Reference range: this varies by lab, which causes confusion
Common lab reference ranges (ng/mL):
| Lab | Low | Normal | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Thyrocare | <1.0 | 1.0-3.5 | >3.5 |
| Dr. Lal PathLabs | <1.0 | 1.0-4.0 | >4.0 |
| SRL | <0.7 | 0.7-3.5 | >3.5 |
Important: Reference ranges are NOT age-adjusted. A 38-year-old with AMH of 1.2 is within the “normal” population range, but it’s actually slightly low for her age according to age-specific data. This is why your doctor’s interpretation matters more than the lab’s reference range.
What to Do After Getting Your AMH Results
If AMH is normal (1.0-3.5 ng/mL):
- Great baseline. No urgent action needed.
- Focus on lifestyle optimisation if planning pregnancy in the next 1-2 years
- Retest annually if tracking over time
If AMH is low (<1.0 ng/mL):
- Don’t panic. Natural conception is still very much possible.
- Do get a complete evaluation: FSH, ultrasound, thyroid, partner’s semen analysis
- Start a 90-day preconception protocol: CoQ10, Vitamin D, folate, healthy diet, sleep
- Consider your timeline: lower AMH suggests you may reach menopause earlier, so don’t delay if you want children
- IVF may yield fewer eggs: but fewer doesn’t mean none, and quality matters more than quantity
If AMH is very low (<0.3 ng/mL):
- Consult a fertility specialist
- Time is more of a factor, don’t wait months to “try naturally” without guidance
- IVF with natural/minimal stimulation may be appropriate
- Egg quality interventions (CoQ10, lifestyle) become critical
If AMH is high (>4.0 ng/mL):
- Evaluate for PCOS
- High AMH is actually reassuring for egg reserve
- Focus on addressing ovulation (the actual challenge with PCOS)
FAQ
How much does AMH test cost in India?
AMH test prices at India’s major private labs range from ₹1,910 to ₹2,909 in April 2026 (verified from each lab’s own booking page). Thyrocare is the cheapest major option at ₹1,910. Redcliffe Labs ₹1,999, Dr. Lal PathLabs ₹2,150 (Bengaluru), Tata 1mg ₹1,849–2,070 depending on city, Metropolis ₹2,400, Apollo 24|7 ₹2,029–2,909 (Chennai lowest, Bangalore highest). Government hospitals offer it for ₹300-500 but with longer wait times. The best-value full fertility panel is Apollo’s Fertility Profile (Female): 7 hormones for ₹2,399.
Can I get AMH tested on any day of my cycle?
Yes. Unlike FSH and estradiol (which must be tested on day 2-3 of your period), AMH can be tested on any day. It remains relatively stable throughout your cycle.
What is a good AMH level for getting pregnant?
There is no single “good” number, it depends on your age. Generally, AMH above 1.0 ng/mL is considered adequate for natural conception. But even women with AMH below 0.7 ng/mL conceive naturally (JAMA, 2017). The number alone does not determine your ability to get pregnant.
Does low AMH mean I need IVF?
No. Low AMH means a smaller egg reserve, but it does not mean you can’t conceive naturally. Many women with low AMH conceive with lifestyle changes and timed intercourse. IVF is one option, but it’s not always the first or best step.
Can AMH levels be improved?
AMH reflects your egg reserve, which naturally declines with age and cannot be significantly increased. However, some studies suggest Vitamin D supplementation and DHEA may modestly improve AMH in certain women. More importantly, focus on egg quality (which can be improved through lifestyle) rather than trying to raise the AMH number.
How often should I test AMH?
If you’re actively monitoring fertility, once a year is sufficient. AMH declines gradually, testing every few months will only cause unnecessary anxiety without providing useful information.
Is AMH testing covered by insurance in India?
Most standard health insurance plans in India do not cover AMH testing unless it’s part of a diagnostic workup for a specific condition (like infertility evaluation). Check with your insurer, but plan to pay out-of-pocket.
I’m 32 and my AMH is 1.2. Is that normal? Can I still conceive naturally?
Yes, an AMH of 1.2 ng/mL at age 32 falls within the normal range (0.8-4.5 ng/mL for that age). Natural conception is very much possible. A 2017 JAMA study (Steiner et al.) found no statistically significant difference in natural conception rates between women with low AMH (<0.7 ng/mL) and normal AMH. AMH measures egg quantity, not quality, and you only need one good egg to conceive.
Which lab is cheapest for AMH test in India in April 2026?
Among the major labs you can reliably book today, Thyrocare at ₹1,910 is the cheapest, followed by Redcliffe Labs at ₹1,999 and Dr. Lal PathLabs at ₹2,150. All three use NABL-accredited labs with free home collection and deliver reports in 24–48 hours. Some small aggregator websites list AMH at ₹1,100–1,350, but when we checked those city-specific booking pages in April 2026 several returned 404 errors, so verify the page works before relying on the quoted price. Avoid hospital labs for standalone AMH unless you’re already under their care: hospital lab AMH as a walk-in service typically costs ₹2,500–3,500.
My doctor says my AMH is low and I need IVF immediately. Should I panic?
No. Low AMH means a smaller egg reserve, but it does not mean you cannot conceive naturally. The JAMA 2017 study showed that women with AMH below 0.7 ng/mL conceived naturally at nearly the same rate as women with normal AMH. Low AMH does mean your fertility window may be shorter, so don’t delay, but “low AMH = IVF” is an oversimplification. A comprehensive evaluation (including FSH, ultrasound, partner’s semen analysis, and lifestyle assessment) should come before jumping to IVF.
What’s the difference between AMH and FSH?
Both measure ovarian reserve, but differently. AMH reflects the total pool of developing follicles (stable throughout your cycle). FSH measures how hard your brain is working to stimulate the ovaries (must be tested on day 2-3). High FSH + low AMH together suggest diminished reserve. AMH is generally considered more reliable and convenient.
At what age should I get AMH tested?
If you’re planning children, getting a baseline AMH at 28-30 gives you useful information about your timeline. If you have risk factors (PCOS, family history of early menopause, endometriosis), consider testing earlier. There’s no upper age limit, even women in their 40s benefit from knowing their AMH.
Dr. Suganya Venkat is an OB-GYN with 15+ years of clinical experience and founder of Fertilia, helping Indian women navigate fertility, PCOS, and pregnancy with evidence-based care.
Related Reading
- Fertility After 35: What the Science Really Says, how age affects egg reserve and what you can do
- PCOS Symptoms, Root Causes & Natural Treatment, PCOS often causes abnormally high AMH
- IUI vs IVF: When Do You Really Need It?, AMH levels influence which treatment path your doctor recommends
- How to Track Ovulation: Indian Woman’s Guide, understanding your cycle alongside your AMH
- How to Boost Fertility Naturally, evidence-based steps regardless of AMH level
- Thyroid and Fertility: The Connection, thyroid dysfunction can compound low AMH