One of the first decisions a man faces after being diagnosed with testosterone deficiency is how he wants to receive his treatment. When considering Testosterone Gel vs Injections, two delivery methods dominate UK clinical practice: testosterone gel applied daily to the skin, and testosterone injections administered weekly, fortnightly, or every 10–14 weeks. Both are effective, both come with genuine advantages and limitations, and the right choice ultimately depends on the individual rather than a one-size-fits-all protocol.
At Vitalis Luxe Clinic in Hull, preparation choice is discussed in detail with every patient at the initial consultation. The decision is made collaboratively, based on lifestyle, clinical profile, monitoring requirements, and personal preference. This article sets out the comparison honestly — so that men across Yorkshire can approach that conversation informed.
Table of Contents
Testosterone Gel: How It Works

Testosterone gel, most commonly Testogel (50mg per sachet) or Tostran (10mg per actuation) in the UK — is applied daily to the shoulders, upper arms, or abdomen. Testosterone absorbs through the skin into the bloodstream over 24 hours, producing relatively stable daily testosterone levels without the peaks and troughs of weekly injections.
- Takes only 2–3 minutes daily to apply
- Gel dries quickly within 2–5 minutes
- Wash hands thoroughly after application
- Avoid skin contact with partners or children until the gel fully dries to prevent transference
- Testosterone levels are absorbed consistently in most men, though individual absorption may vary
- Some men achieve excellent hormone levels, while others may absorb less effectively
- Dosage is adjusted in small increments (one sachet or actuation up or down) based on blood test results
Testosterone Injections: How They Work

Injectable testosterone in UK private practice is most commonly testosterone enanthate (short-acting, injected every 7–14 days) or testosterone undecanoate (Nebido) (long-acting, injected every 10–14 weeks after loading doses). A third option increasingly used in private practice is testosterone cypionate (similar profile to enanthate). Each has a distinct pharmacokinetic profile:
- Testosterone enanthate/cypionate: injected subcutaneously (into fat) or intramuscularly every 7–14 days; produces a peak 24–48 hours post-injection and trough before the next injection; more frequent dosing (weekly) reduces the peak-trough variation
- Nebido (testosterone undecanoate 1000mg/4ml): injected every 10–14 weeks by a clinician; very long-acting; significant variation between peak and trough — some men feel excellent mid-cycle and symptomatic at the trough; less dose flexibility
- Subcutaneous injection technique (thin needle into fat on abdomen or thigh) is simple, near-painless, and suitable for home self-injection with training
Head-to-Head Comparison
| Factor | Testosterone Gel | Injectable (Enanthate/Cypionate Weekly) | Nebido (10–14 Weekly) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Level Stability | Excellent — daily application produces stable levels without significant peaks/troughs | Good with weekly dosing; fortnightly produces more peak-trough variation | Poor — significant peak at 2–4 weeks post-injection; trough symptoms common before next injection |
| DHT Conversion | Moderate — skin 5AR type 1 converts some testosterone to DHT | Moderate — peripheral 5AR conversion | Similar to enanthate |
| Erythrocytosis Risk | Lower than injectable — more gradual, stable delivery | Higher — peak testosterone drives higher EPO stimulation | Moderate — less frequent peaks |
| Convenience | Daily routine required; travel with multiple sachets; transfer risk to partner/children | Weekly self-injection; minimal daily burden; no transfer risk | Clinic visit every 10–14 weeks; no home administration |
| Flexibility | Dose adjustable in small increments; absorption variability can be challenging | Very flexible — dose, frequency, and route easily adjusted | Limited — large fixed doses; poor fine-tuning ability |
| Cost (Private) | More expensive per month on private prescription | Most cost-effective private TRT option | Moderate — fewer injections but higher per-dose cost |
| Monitoring Requirement | Same core panel — testosterone, haematocrit, PSA, oestradiol — less erythrocytosis risk | Same core panel; haematocrit attention important | Same core panel; timing of blood test relative to injection critical |
| Suitable for Self-Administration | Applied at home; no injection required | Yes — subcutaneous self-injection with training is straightforward | No — clinic administration only |
| Who It Suits Best | Men preferring no injections; men with low erythrocytosis risk; men with stable daily routines | Men wanting maximum control and flexibility; men who prefer weekly self-injection; men on private prescription | Men who cannot self-inject; men preferring infrequent clinic visits; older men with stable requirements |
Absorption Variability: The Gel Challenge

One limitation of gel that is frequently underappreciated is individual absorption variability. Most men absorb gel predictably, but a meaningful minority are poor absorbers — applying the correct dose daily but achieving substantially lower blood testosterone levels than expected. In these men, gels produce inadequate clinical response despite apparently correct dosing. Blood testing is the only way to identify poor absorption, and switching to injectable TRT typically resolves it.
Conversely, some men absorb gel very efficiently and achieve levels at the higher end of normal from standard doses — with higher associated erythrocytosis risk. Dose reduction or switching to a lower-dose gel achieves control in these men.
The Scrotal Cream Option: A Special Mention
Testosterone cream applied to the scrotal skin is a distinct preparation increasingly available through private clinics. Scrotal skin has very high type 1 5-alpha reductase activity, producing significantly elevated DHT alongside testosterone — which some men find enhances libido and other DHT-mediated effects. However, the markedly higher DHT elevation carries substantially greater hair loss risk in genetically predisposed men (as discussed in our hair loss blog). Scrotal cream is a legitimate option for specific clinical profiles but is not suitable for men with androgenic alopecia predisposition.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which is better — testosterone gel or injections?
Neither is universally better the right choice depends on the individual. Gels provide excellent level stability with no injections required but carry absorption variability and partner transfer risks. Injectable enanthate/cypionate offers maximum flexibility, lower cost on private prescription, and reliable absorption with weekly self-injection. Nebido is convenient for men who prefer clinic administration but offers poor dose flexibility and significant peak-trough variation. At Vitalis Luxe Clinic, preparation choice is made collaboratively based on your clinical profile and preferences.
Does testosterone gel work as well as injections?
For most men, gel provides effective testosterone replacement with comparable clinical outcomes to injections — improvements in libido, energy, mood, and body composition are achievable on gel in good absorbers. The primary limitations of gel are absorption variability (some men are poor absorbers and achieve inadequate levels), transfer risk, and slightly higher erythrocytosis risk profile than weekly injections. For men who absorb poorly or who need finer dose control, injections are typically more reliable.
Can I self-inject testosterone at home?
Yes, subcutaneous self-injection of testosterone enanthate or cypionate is safe, simple, and suitable for home administration. The technique uses a very fine needle into the fatty tissue of the abdomen or thigh — similar to insulin injection. At Vitalis Luxe Clinic, full self-injection training is provided at the clinic before home administration begins. Most men become comfortable within 1–2 sessions.
How often do you inject testosterone?
Injectable testosterone enanthate or cypionate is typically injected every 7–14 days. Weekly dosing produces more stable levels — lower peaks and higher troughs — than fortnightly, and is the preferred protocol at Vitalis Luxe Clinic for men on enanthate. Nebido is injected every 10–14 weeks by a clinician after the initial loading doses. Frequency can be adjusted based on blood test results and clinical response.
Does testosterone gel cause skin irritation?
Skin irritation from testosterone gel is reported by a minority of users — typically mild redness or itching at the application site. Rotating the application site daily reduces localised irritation. Most men tolerate gel well. If persistent irritation occurs, switching application site, reducing the contact time before covering, or switching preparation entirely are management options.
What is the most convenient TRT option?
Convenience depends on personal preference. Nebido requires only a clinic visit every 10–14 weeks — minimal active burden, but the level instability and poor dose flexibility are limitations. Testosterone gel requires daily application but no injections. Weekly subcutaneous enanthate has a weekly administration burden but maximum control and flexibility. Most of our patients who self-inject find the weekly routine quickly becomes seamless.
Which TRT preparation is available in Hull and Yorkshire?
Vitalis Luxe Clinic in Hull prescribes the full range of testosterone preparations on private prescription — testosterone enanthate (weekly subcutaneous), testosterone cypionate, Testogel, Tostran, Nebido, and testosterone cream — based on individual clinical suitability. We discuss preparation options at every initial consultation and can adjust or switch preparations based on your response and preferences throughout treatment.





