The problem coming off has to solve
While you were on a protocol, exogenous androgen suppressed the top of the HPG axis — LH and FSH ran near zero, and the testes idled. Come off abruptly and you land in a hole: no exogenous testosterone, and an axis that hasn't been signaling. The job of post-cycle therapy is to get the body's own production running again before symptoms (low mood, low libido, fatigue, muscle loss) set in and stick. Understanding which tool does what is the whole chapter, because they work at different points in the loop.
hCG bypasses the axis; SERMs restart it
This distinction is routinely blurred and it matters:
- hCG acts as an LH mimic with a longer half-life. It stimulates the Leydig cells in the testes directly, driving testosterone production and keeping the testes responsive — but it works below the pituitary. It does not restart the hypothalamic-pituitary signal; it bypasses it. Its role is keeping the testes awake (and is also the tool for preserving testicular function and fertility during a protocol, not just after).
- SERMs (clomiphene, tamoxifen) work at the top of the loop. They block estrogen's negative feedback at the hypothalamus, which increases GnRH pulsatility, which raises the body's own LH and FSH — genuinely restarting the endogenous signal. This is the part that gets you signaling again rather than relying on an external LH mimic.
So hCG keeps the testes responsive; SERMs restart the brain's signal. A restart uses both, but for different jobs.
Sequence matters — don't run them blindly together
A practical nuance the forums often miss: running hCG concurrently with a SERM can blunt the SERM. High-dose hCG drives high intratesticular testosterone, which aromatizes to estradiol locally — and that estrogen is exactly the feedback the SERM is trying to block at the hypothalamus. The conventional approach therefore sequences them: use hCG first to bring the testes back online, taper it off, then run the SERM to restart the central signal — rather than stacking both at full dose simultaneously. The point isn't a fixed protocol (this is educational, not a prescription); it's that the two tools can work against each other if timed carelessly.
Confirm recovery with bloodwork, not vibes
The only honest way to know the axis has recovered is the lab sheet. A successful restart shows LH and FSH climbing back off the floor and testosterone recovering on its own — measured weeks after the protocol, off all the restart tools. Symptoms are a poor proxy: people feel rough during the transition for reasons unrelated to whether the axis is technically recovering. Pull LH, FSH, and testosterone, and let the trend over repeat draws tell you whether you've actually restarted or just feel like you have.
The honest caveat
Recovery is not guaranteed, and it gets less reliable with longer, heavier, or repeated suppression — which is the strongest argument in the whole course for the restraint chapter one preached. The man most likely to restart cleanly is the one who ran the minimum effective dose for a defined period and addressed fertility during the protocol, not the one improvising a rescue after years of unmonitored use. Coming off is far easier to plan before you go on than to fix afterward.
Educational content, not individual medical advice.