Lab Results · 4 min read · Due Team
What Does a Normal Progesterone Level Look Like at 7 DPO?
A mid-luteal progesterone test is one of the simplest ways to confirm ovulation occurred. Here's how to read your result.
A progesterone blood test drawn around 7 DPO (days past ovulation) — sometimes called a "day 21 progesterone" — is the most direct way to confirm that ovulation actually occurred and that the corpus luteum is producing adequate hormone.
What progesterone does in the luteal phase
After ovulation, the follicle that released the egg becomes the corpus luteum and begins producing progesterone. Progesterone prepares the uterine lining for implantation, maintains early pregnancy if conception occurs, and suppresses further ovulation.
What the numbers mean
- Below 3 ng/mL: Suggests ovulation likely did not occur
- 3 to 10 ng/mL: Confirms ovulation occurred but may indicate suboptimal luteal function
- Above 10 ng/mL: Confirms ovulation with adequate luteal function
- Above 15 to 20 ng/mL: Associated with a well-supported luteal phase
Why timing is everything
Progesterone peaks mid-luteal phase — roughly 7 days after ovulation. If your cycle is irregular and ovulation happened later than expected, a "day 21" draw may not actually be 7 DPO. A low result on day 21 in someone who ovulated on day 18 is expected, not diagnostic.
The bottom line
A progesterone level above 3 ng/mL confirms ovulation occurred. Above 10 ng/mL suggests adequate luteal function. Timing the draw correctly — at true 7 DPO, not calendar day 21 — is essential for an accurate reading.
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