Quick answer: An adiponectin test measures the blood level of adiponectin, a hormone secreted by fat cells that improves insulin sensitivity and reduces inflammation. Normal adiponectin ranges roughly from 5 to 30 micrograms per milliliter in adults, though optimal levels trend higher, especially for metabolic protection. Low adiponectin is closely linked to insulin resistance, type 2 diabetes risk, and cardiovascular disease, making it a more forward-looking marker than fasting glucose alone.
What Is Adiponectin and Why Does It Matter?
Adiponectin is a protein hormone produced almost exclusively by adipose tissue, the technical term for body fat, but it behaves nothing like what most people expect from a fat-derived signal. Unlike leptin, which rises as fat mass increases and drives hunger suppression, adiponectin works in the opposite direction: the more visceral fat you carry, the less adiponectin your fat cells produce. That inversion is the entire reason this hormone is worth testing.
Adiponectin works through two main receptors, AdipoR1 and AdipoR2, found in skeletal muscle and the liver. When adiponectin binds to those receptors, it activates AMPK, an enzyme that tells cells to burn fatty acids for fuel and take up glucose more efficiently. The downstream result is improved insulin sensitivity at the tissue level. People with chronically low adiponectin essentially have faulty fuel-switching, their muscles resist glucose uptake even when insulin is present, which forces the pancreas to pump out more insulin to compensate.
Adiponectin also has anti-inflammatory properties that are independent of its metabolic effects. It suppresses TNF-alpha and IL-6, two cytokines that drive both atherosclerosis and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease. This dual role, metabolic and inflammatory, is why some cardiologists describe it as one of the more underutilized biomarkers in cardiovascular risk assessment.
Adiponectin Normal Range: What the Numbers Mean
Most US clinical labs report adiponectin in micrograms per milliliter (mcg/mL), and the population reference range spans a wide corridor. Here is what you typically see:
| Group | Population reference range | Optimal metabolic zone |
|---|---|---|
| Adult women | 5 to 30 mcg/mL | 10 to 25 mcg/mL |
| Adult men | 3 to 25 mcg/mL | 7 to 20 mcg/mL |
| Postmenopausal women | 6 to 30 mcg/mL | 12 to 28 mcg/mL |
| Adults with obesity | Often 2 to 8 mcg/mL | Target above 10 mcg/mL |
A few points worth understanding about those ranges. First, women run about 30 to 40 percent higher than men at similar body fat percentages, a sex difference driven partly by estrogen’s upregulation of adiponectin expression. Second, the wide reference interval, 5 to 30 mcg/mL, reflects the enormous variation in the population, including many people who are already insulin-resistant. Being “within range” at 6 mcg/mL is not reassuring if your hemoglobin A1c is trending up. Third, there is no universally agreed “high” cutoff for clinical concern, because higher adiponectin is generally protective, with some studies suggesting levels above 15 mcg/mL significantly lower type 2 diabetes incidence over a decade.
Labs can also report adiponectin in nanograms per milliliter (ng/mL), which is 1000 times smaller numerically. Confirm the units on your lab report before comparing to any reference range you find online. That said, the most common US reporting format remains mcg/mL.
Low Adiponectin Causes: What Drives Levels Down
The single strongest predictor of low adiponectin is excess visceral fat, the deep abdominal fat that wraps around the liver, pancreas, and intestines. Visceral fat cells secrete inflammatory cytokines that suppress adiponectin gene expression through a feedback loop involving TNF-alpha. This is different from subcutaneous fat, the fat you can pinch under the skin, which has a much weaker suppressive effect on adiponectin.
Other confirmed causes of low adiponectin include:
- Insulin resistance itself: It creates a vicious cycle. Low adiponectin worsens insulin resistance, which promotes fat storage, which further suppresses adiponectin.
- Hypothyroidism: Thyroid hormone directly stimulates adiponectin production. An underactive thyroid can drop levels even in the absence of significant weight gain.
- Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS): Women with PCOS have adiponectin levels roughly 30 to 40 percent lower than weight-matched controls, partly because of the hyperinsulinemia that characterizes the condition.
- Sleep apnea: Intermittent hypoxia from untreated sleep apnea suppresses adiponectin through oxidative stress pathways independent of body weight.
- Smoking: Tobacco use consistently associates with lower adiponectin in population studies, likely through inflammatory mechanisms.
- Certain medications: Glucocorticoids (prednisone and similar) and beta-blockers can modestly reduce levels. Thiazolidinediones (a class of diabetes drugs) notably raise adiponectin.
Genetic factors also play a role. Variants in the ADIPOQ gene, which encodes adiponectin, account for a meaningful fraction of inter-individual variation even among people with similar body composition. If your levels are persistently low despite a lean physique and good metabolic habits, a genetics panel might reveal why. Understanding what suppresses this hormone also clarifies what lifestyle changes can raise it, which we cover below.
Adiponectin and Insulin Resistance: A Tighter Link Than Fasting Glucose
Adiponectin often drops years before fasting glucose rises, which is precisely why ordering this test alongside a standard metabolic panel can catch insulin resistance in an earlier, more reversible window. By the time fasting glucose crosses 100 mg/dL into the pre-diabetes range, most people have already had low adiponectin for three to seven years and accumulated significant compensatory hyperinsulinemia.
The mechanism runs in both directions. Low adiponectin reduces AMPK activation in muscle, so cells require more insulin to move glucose out of the blood. The pancreatic beta cells compensate by producing more insulin, often keeping blood glucose normal for years. That masking effect is exactly why fasting glucose looks fine on a standard metabolic panel while the underlying fuel-handling pathology is already progressing.
The most informative combination to run alongside adiponectin is fasting insulin, which lets you calculate HOMA-IR (homeostatic model assessment of insulin resistance), plus hemoglobin A1c and a fasting lipid panel. Low adiponectin tends to cluster with elevated triglycerides, low HDL, and high small-dense LDL particles, the classic dyslipidemia of insulin resistance. If all five markers are pointing in the same direction, the metabolic picture becomes hard to argue with even if fasting glucose is still technically normal. You can read more about pairing these markers in our guide to the best biomarkers to test for metabolic health.
Adiponectin also predicts cardiovascular events independently of LDL cholesterol, a finding replicated across multiple large prospective cohorts. High-molecular-weight (HMW) adiponectin, a specific oligomeric form, appears to carry the strongest cardiovascular signal, and some specialty labs report this subfraction separately. For most people, total adiponectin is sufficient, but if cardiovascular risk stratification is the primary goal, ask whether your lab offers HMW adiponectin.
The Leptin-to-Adiponectin Ratio: A Better Metabolic Snapshot
The leptin-to-adiponectin ratio, often abbreviated LAR, has emerged as a more sensitive metabolic marker than either hormone alone. Leptin rises with fat mass, adiponectin falls, so in people with significant visceral obesity, the LAR can be dramatically elevated even when each individual value looks borderline.
A LAR below 1.0 is considered normal in most published frameworks. A ratio between 1 and 5 suggests emerging metabolic dysfunction. Above 5 is a strong signal of insulin resistance and elevated cardiometabolic risk, and some endocrinology researchers treat a ratio above 10 as a near-certain marker of significant metabolic syndrome.
Here is an example of how the ratio behaves in clinical practice:
- Person A: leptin 8 ng/mL, adiponectin 12 mcg/mL, LAR = 0.67 (healthy).
- Person B: leptin 22 ng/mL, adiponectin 5 mcg/mL, LAR = 4.4 (borderline concerning).
- Person C: leptin 40 ng/mL, adiponectin 3 mcg/mL, LAR = 13.3 (high metabolic risk).
Person B and Person C might both have “normal” fasting glucose. Person B might even pass a standard annual physical without a single flagged value. The LAR surfaces the underlying hormonal imbalance that individual thresholds miss. A complete blood panel paired with adiponectin and leptin gives a much fuller picture than any single marker in isolation.
The practical challenge is that few standard panels include both hormones. Ordering them together usually requires a specialty lab or a clinician who works in functional or precision medicine. Cash-pay or direct-to-consumer lab services are often the most accessible path, discussed below.
Adiponectin Test Cost: What to Expect in 2026
The adiponectin test is not part of any standard insurance-covered panel in the US, and most major health plans will only cover it with a specific diagnostic code tied to a documented metabolic condition. For most people ordering proactively, this is an out-of-pocket expense.
| Route | Typical cash price | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Direct-to-consumer labs (Quest, Labcorp order) | $45 to $90 | No physician visit required. Results in 3 to 5 business days. |
| Functional or integrative medicine physician | $80 to $150 including office order | Context and interpretation included. |
| Insurance-covered (with diagnosis) | $0 to $30 copay | Requires obesity, PCOS, or insulin resistance diagnosis code. |
| Comprehensive specialty panels | $200 to $500 (adiponectin included) | Includes leptin, insulin, HbA1c, and lipid fractionation. |
HSA and FSA dollars can be used for lab tests ordered by a physician or through a direct-to-consumer service that provides an itemized receipt. If you are planning a full metabolic workup anyway, bundling adiponectin with a broader panel draw is almost always cheaper per marker than ordering it alone. If you are getting blood drawn anyway, it is often smarter to capture a full baseline at once. Here is how a full-body panel compares when you want adiponectin alongside a complete metabolic picture.
Medicare covers adiponectin testing only under specific circumstances, generally as part of managing an existing diagnosis of type 2 diabetes or documented cardiovascular disease. Medicare Advantage plans vary by carrier. If you are on traditional Medicare, ask your clinician to document the specific clinical indication before ordering.
Turnaround time is typically two to five business days from most reference labs. The test requires a standard blood draw (venipuncture), ideally fasting for at least eight hours to reduce lipemia that can interfere with some assay formats, though many labs accept non-fasting samples for adiponectin specifically.
How to Raise Low Adiponectin: What the Evidence Shows
Adiponectin is one of the few metabolic markers where lifestyle changes consistently move the needle in a measurable direction over three to six months. The most powerful interventions are:
Lose visceral fat
Even a five to ten percent reduction in total body weight correlates with a 20 to 30 percent increase in adiponectin, though the effect is most pronounced when the weight lost comes disproportionately from the visceral depot. Moderate caloric restriction combined with aerobic exercise achieves this better than diet alone, because exercise independently boosts adiponectin through AMPK activation in muscle regardless of weight loss.
Aerobic exercise, especially zone 2
Sustained moderate-intensity exercise, the pace where you can hold a conversation but feel some effort, consistently raises adiponectin over eight to twelve weeks of regular training. High-intensity interval training also helps, but zone 2 cardio for 150 to 200 minutes per week appears to be the minimum effective dose based on available trial data. Resistance training has a modest positive effect, mainly through improving insulin sensitivity and reducing visceral fat over time.
Dietary composition
A Mediterranean-style diet rich in monounsaturated fats (olive oil, avocado), omega-3 fatty acids, and fiber is associated with higher adiponectin in observational studies. Trans fats and high fructose intake both independently suppress adiponectin. Reducing refined carbohydrate load, not just total calories, raises adiponectin even without significant weight loss, likely through the reduction in hyperinsulinemia that comes with lower glycemic load eating.
Sleep optimization
Treating obstructive sleep apnea with CPAP raises adiponectin within three months of consistent use. Getting consistent seven to eight hours of non-fragmented sleep is also associated with higher adiponectin independent of apnea status, with the largest effect seen in people who move from chronic sleep restriction (under six hours) to adequate sleep.
Medications and supplements
Thiazolidinediones (pioglitazone and rosiglitazone) are the most potent pharmacologic raisers of adiponectin, capable of two- to four-fold increases. GLP-1 receptor agonists (semaglutide, tirzepatide) raise adiponectin modestly through weight loss and improved insulin sensitivity. Metformin has a modest positive effect. Among supplements, fish oil (omega-3 at 2 to 4 grams per day EPA plus DHA) shows the most consistent evidence for a small but real increase in adiponectin. Talk to a clinician before starting any supplement or medication specifically for adiponectin modulation.
Where to Get an Adiponectin Test in the US
Getting an adiponectin test in 2026 is far more accessible than it was a decade ago, when it was largely limited to research settings. Your main options:
- Direct-to-consumer lab ordering: Services that let you order Quest or Labcorp draws without a physician visit are the most common cash-pay path. You pay online, get a lab requisition, go to a draw site, and results come to your online account. Major draw sites include Quest and Labcorp patient service centers, and many CVS MinuteClinic locations for basic draws.
- Primary care or endocrinology: Any physician can order this test. Insurance coverage depends on your plan and the documented indication. If your clinician is skeptical about ordering it, framing it as part of a metabolic syndrome workup alongside fasting insulin and HOMA-IR assessment often helps.
- Precision medicine or functional medicine practices: These typically include adiponectin in comprehensive metabolic panels alongside other markers that standard labs omit. More expensive but the interpretation is usually more actionable.
- Urgent care: Generally not a route for this test. Urgent care labs run standard metabolic panels but rarely carry adiponectin assays.
Pairing adiponectin with an albumin test and alkaline phosphatase test as part of a comprehensive metabolic picture gives clinicians more context for interpreting liver and nutritional status alongside the metabolic signal adiponectin provides. An ApoA1 test is also worth considering if cardiovascular risk is the primary driver, since low adiponectin and low ApoA1 often cluster together in the same patients.
FAQ
What is a dangerously low adiponectin level?
There is no single universally agreed “dangerous” threshold, but adiponectin below 4 mcg/mL in women or below 3 mcg/mL in men is considered significantly low in most clinical literature and warrants a full metabolic workup. Values that low, especially when combined with elevated fasting insulin and visceral obesity, represent a high-risk metabolic profile. Discuss results with a clinician rather than treating any single number in isolation.
Can a normal-weight person have low adiponectin?
Yes, and this is one of the underappreciated aspects of adiponectin biology. People with “metabolically obese normal weight” (MONW) carry excess visceral fat relative to their total body weight and can have adiponectin levels in the 4 to 7 mcg/mL range despite a normal BMI. PCOS, hypothyroidism, and genetic variants in the ADIPOQ gene can also suppress adiponectin without significant excess weight.
Does adiponectin testing require fasting?
Fasting is preferred but not strictly required for most assays. Lipemia (fat in the blood after a meal) can interfere with some immunoassay formats, and fasting also allows you to collect fasting insulin and glucose on the same draw. If you are bundling adiponectin with a metabolic panel, an eight-hour fast makes the most sense. Ask the specific lab you are using about their specimen requirements.
How is adiponectin different from leptin?
Leptin signals fullness and rises with fat mass. Adiponectin signals metabolic protection and falls with fat mass. They are essentially counter-regulatory hormones in the adipokine system. Leptin resistance (where the brain stops responding to leptin’s fullness signal) often coexists with low adiponectin in people with obesity, creating a dual problem of impaired satiety signaling and impaired insulin sensitivity simultaneously.
What is the leptin-to-adiponectin ratio and how do I interpret it?
The LAR divides your leptin level (in ng/mL) by your adiponectin level (in mcg/mL). A ratio below 1 is considered low-risk, 1 to 5 is borderline, and above 5 suggests meaningful metabolic risk. A ratio above 10 is a strong indicator of metabolic syndrome. The ratio captures the combined signal of both hormones and tends to be more sensitive for early insulin resistance than either value alone.
Will high adiponectin cause any problems?
Genuinely elevated adiponectin above 30 mcg/mL is uncommon and usually benign. Some research associates very high adiponectin with certain metabolic conditions including end-stage renal disease, anorexia nervosa, and advanced heart failure, where tissue breakdown rather than metabolic health may be driving the elevation. In otherwise healthy lean individuals, high adiponectin is generally considered protective. Interpreting high values requires clinical context.
Is adiponectin testing available through Medicare?
Medicare covers adiponectin testing only with a documented clinical indication, typically an established diagnosis of type 2 diabetes, metabolic syndrome, or cardiovascular disease. Proactive preventive testing for adiponectin is not a covered benefit under traditional Medicare Part B. Medicare Advantage plans vary, so check your Evidence of Coverage document or call your plan’s member services line before ordering.
How quickly can adiponectin levels change with lifestyle interventions?
Measurable changes typically appear within eight to twelve weeks of consistent lifestyle changes, with the largest improvements seen after three to six months. A five to ten percent body weight reduction combined with regular aerobic exercise can raise adiponectin by 20 to 50 percent in many studies. Retesting at three to six months after a structured intervention gives a meaningful signal about whether the approach is working.
Should I test adiponectin alongside other hormones?
The most clinically useful combination is adiponectin plus fasting insulin, fasting glucose, hemoglobin A1c, and a lipid panel. Adding leptin allows calculation of the LAR. If PCOS or thyroid dysfunction is suspected, thyroid-stimulating hormone and free testosterone add important context. A thorough review of which markers make the most sense for your specific goals is covered in our guide to the best biomarkers to test.

