What is Free T3?
Free T3 (triiodothyronine) is the biologically active thyroid hormone and the most potent driver of metabolic rate. Most T3 is produced by converting T4 in the tissues. The 'free' measurement reflects the unbound, active portion. It helps clarify thyroid status when TSH and T4 are inconclusive, especially in hyperthyroidism.
Why it matters
Free T3 directly controls how fast cells use energy, affecting heart rate, temperature, weight, and mood. It's useful for diagnosing hyperthyroidism and understanding conversion problems.
What it measures
The unbound, active fraction of T3 in serum, interpreted with TSH and free T4.
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.
High free T3 usually indicates hyperthyroidism and often rises before free T4 in early or T3-predominant disease.
Common symptoms
- Palpitations, rapid heartbeat
- Weight loss
- Anxiety, tremor
- Heat intolerance
Potential causes
- Graves' disease
- Toxic nodules
- Excess thyroid medication
Low free T3 can reflect hypothyroidism or 'low T3 syndrome' seen during serious illness, fasting, or stress.
Common symptoms
- Fatigue
- Cold intolerance
- Weight gain
- Sluggishness
Potential causes
- Hypothyroidism
- Non-thyroidal illness (low T3 syndrome)
- Severe caloric restriction
- Impaired T4-to-T3 conversion
How to improve your Free T3
Lifestyle
Address the underlying thyroid condition
Free T3 normalizes when thyroid status is treated.
Nutrition
Adequate calories and selenium
Severe restriction lowers T3; selenium supports T4-to-T3 conversion.
Exercise
Moderate activity
Extreme energy deficits can suppress T3.
Sleep
Adequate rest
Supports recovery and metabolic hormone balance.
Frequently asked questions
Scientific references
- T3 (Triiodothyronine) Tests Testing.com
- T3 Thyroid Hormone Test MedlinePlus, U.S. National Library of Medicine
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.
