Vibimine
ThyroidMetabolic

Free T4

Free thyroxine

Also known as: FT4, free thyroxine, T4

The main hormone the thyroid secretes a reservoir the body converts into the active T3.

What is Free T4?

Free T4 (thyroxine) is the primary hormone the thyroid gland releases. It acts largely as a prohormone, converted into the more active T3 in the tissues. The 'free' measurement reflects the unbound, available portion. Free T4 is paired with TSH to diagnose and stage thyroid disease.

Why it matters

Free T4 confirms and grades thyroid dysfunction found on TSH testing, distinguishes overt from subclinical disease, and helps monitor thyroid hormone replacement.

What it measures

The unbound fraction of T4 in serum, interpreted alongside TSH.

Reference & optimal ranges

Reference ranges vary by lab, assay, age, and sex. The ranges below reflect commonly published adult intervals and are for education only always interpret results with the range printed on your own lab report and a clinician.

Adultsng/dL
Standard range
High Free T4

High free T4 with low TSH indicates hyperthyroidism.

Common symptoms

  • Weight loss
  • Palpitations
  • Anxiety, tremor
  • Heat intolerance

Potential causes

  • Graves' disease
  • Toxic nodular goiter
  • Excess thyroid medication
  • Thyroiditis (early phase)
Low Free T4

Low free T4 with high TSH indicates overt hypothyroidism.

Common symptoms

  • Fatigue
  • Weight gain
  • Cold intolerance
  • Dry skin
  • Depression

Potential causes

  • Hashimoto's thyroiditis
  • Thyroid surgery/radiation
  • Pituitary dysfunction (with low TSH)
  • Iodine deficiency

How to improve your Free T4

Lifestyle

  • Consistent medication timing

    If on levothyroxine, take it consistently and retest per your clinician.

Nutrition

  • Balanced iodine intake

    Both deficiency and excess iodine impair thyroid function.

Exercise

  • Regular activity

    Supports metabolism while thyroid status is optimized.

Sleep

  • Adequate sleep

    Improves as thyroid status normalizes.

Frequently asked questions

Scientific references

Pending clinician reviewPublished Jul 2, 2026 · Updated Jul 2, 2026

Educational information, not medical advice. This page is for general education and does not replace diagnosis or treatment by a licensed clinician. Do not start, stop, or change any medication, supplement, or treatment based on this content. Reference and optimal ranges vary between laboratories interpret your results with the range on your own report and a qualified professional.

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