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AMH Level Interpreter 🌸

Enter your AMH result and age to see what it suggests about your ovarian reserve — in plain language.

This is a general interpretation, not a diagnosis. AMH reference ranges vary by lab and assay, and AMH measures egg quantity, not quality — it can't predict natural conception. Discuss your result with a fertility specialist. Calculated on your device.

Medically reviewed by Dr. Prachi · Physician

What AMH tells you — and what it doesn't

Anti-Müllerian Hormone (AMH) is made by the small follicles in your ovaries, so it gives an estimate of your remaining egg supply, or ovarian reserve. It naturally falls with age. AMH is helpful for planning and for guiding fertility treatment — for example, a very high value may point towards PCOS, while a low value may prompt an earlier conversation about options. What AMH cannot do is tell you about egg quality or whether you will conceive naturally.

Reading your result

Treat the band above as a starting point for a conversation, not a verdict. A fertility specialist will interpret your AMH together with your age, your cycle, an antral follicle count and other tests. If you are planning ahead, you may also find our ovulation calculator and IVF success estimator useful.

FAQs

What is a good AMH level?
Broadly, an AMH around 1.0–3.5 ng/mL is considered a normal ovarian reserve, below 1.0 is low, and very high values can be linked with PCOS. But 'good' depends on your age and goals — younger women typically have higher AMH, and the number should be read alongside your age and other tests.
Does a low AMH mean I can't get pregnant?
No. AMH reflects how many eggs you have (quantity), not their quality, and it does not predict natural conception. Many women with low AMH conceive. It is most useful for planning and for tailoring fertility treatment, not as a yes/no answer.
Why do labs report AMH in different units?
AMH is reported in ng/mL or pmol/L (1 ng/mL ≈ 7.14 pmol/L). This tool converts pmol/L to ng/mL for you. Reference ranges also vary between labs and assays, so compare against your own lab's range where possible.