TRT Diary guide

TRT First 12 Weeks: What to Track and Bring to Follow-Up

The first 12 weeks are a setup period for consistent tracking, not a time to guess at conclusions from one good or bad day.

Understand the first TRT monitoring period. Updated January 21, 2026 Educational guide CSV template included
Illustrated TRT first 12 weeks timeline with three follow-up periods.

First 12 weeks tracking categories

  • Baseline entry before treatment or before the treatment change.
  • Weekly symptom summaries for energy, mood, libido, sleep, and recovery.
  • Blood pressure readings and body measurements.
  • Side effects and any new symptoms.
  • Lab dates, report uploads, appointment notes, and clinician questions.

Free template

TRT first 12 weeks tracker XLSX

A 12-week follow-up planner for symptoms, vitals, labs, side effects, appointments, and questions. Styled XLSX opens in Excel, Numbers, and Google Sheets. CSV is still available.

Download XLSX

Weeks 1 to 4

Focus on consistency. Log symptoms, sleep, blood pressure, and any prescription schedule notes without trying to interpret every fluctuation.

Weeks 5 to 8

Look for patterns across several weeks. Note side effects, training changes, body measurements, and questions that keep coming up.

Weeks 9 to 12

Prepare for follow-up by summarizing your symptom trends, blood pressure pattern, lab results, side effects, and the specific questions you want answered.

12-week tracker outline

Field What to record
Week Week number and date range.
Symptom summary Energy, mood, libido, sleep, and recovery.
Vitals Blood pressure, pulse, weight, and waist.
Events Labs, appointments, prescription changes, or missed doses.
Questions Items to bring to follow-up.

FAQs

What should I track during the first 12 weeks of TRT?

Track baseline symptoms, weekly symptom changes, blood pressure, body measurements, side effects, labs, appointment notes, and clinician questions.

Should I expect steady progress every week?

Not necessarily. Symptoms can fluctuate for many reasons, so review trends with your clinician instead of judging one day at a time.

What should I bring to my first TRT follow-up?

Bring symptom summaries, blood pressure readings, lab reports, side-effect notes, treatment schedule context, and a short list of questions.

Sources

Medical note: This guide is for tracking and appointment preparation only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, treatment, dosage guidance, or emergency monitoring. Review symptoms, labs, blood pressure, and side effects with a licensed healthcare professional.