Medically reviewed by Chandre Tina May, Registered Nurse & Menopause Society Certified Practitioner (MSCP). See our editorial policy.
You’ve been dealing with chin hair you shave in secret, acne that won’t respond to face wash, and a hairline that’s quietly shifting — and your doctor has just handed you a prescription for a blood pressure tablet. It feels strange. It might even feel like you’ve been fobbed off. You haven’t. Spironolactone for PCOS is one of the most evidence-backed anti-androgen treatments available, and the reason it works has everything to do with what PCOS is actually doing inside your body.
This post explains the real mechanism, what you can expect, and how to have a better conversation with your doctor about whether it’s right for you.
What’s Actually Happening: The Noisy Neighbour in Your House
Think of your body as a house. Androgens — hormones like testosterone and DHEAS — are tenants who have perfectly legitimate roles: they support bone density, energy, and libido. In PCOS, though, these tenants start playing music too loud. Androgen levels are elevated, and your body’s cells are often extra-sensitive to them too, so the noise is amplified throughout the whole house.
The result? Hair follicles on your scalp shrink (producing thinner, shorter hairs), while follicles on your face and body do the opposite — they grow coarser, darker hairs in places you don’t want them. Skin glands overproduce oil, leading to persistent hormonal acne, often along the jaw and chin.
Spironolactone doesn’t turn down androgen production itself. Instead, it works like soundproofing: it blocks androgen receptors — the “doors” through which testosterone and its derivatives enter your cells and cause their effects. Less signal gets through, the noise quiets down, and over time, the skin and hair follicles can begin to recover.
Why a Blood Pressure Pill? Understanding Spironolactone’s Origins
Spironolactone was originally developed as a diuretic — a medication that helps the kidneys process fluid — and it does still lower blood pressure modestly. That’s why it can feel like a mismatch when a dermatologist or gynaecologist prescribes it for hair and acne. But its anti-androgen properties were recognised early, and decades of clinical use have built up a strong body of evidence for its effectiveness in androgen-driven conditions like PCOS.
According to Verity, the UK’s PCOS charity, spironolactone is one of the main anti-androgen medications used to manage the cosmetic and dermatological symptoms of PCOS, particularly hirsutism and acne, when other approaches haven’t been enough.
It’s worth knowing it is used “off-label” for PCOS in many countries — meaning it was licensed as a diuretic, not specifically for PCOS. This is common and legal in medicine, and its use for androgen excess is well-established in clinical guidelines.
What Spironolactone Can — and Can’t — Do for PCOS Symptoms
Hirsutism (unwanted hair growth)
This is where the evidence is strongest. Clinical studies consistently show that spironolactone reduces the rate of new hair growth and, over time, causes existing terminal (coarse, dark) hairs to become finer. It won’t make established hairs vanish overnight — you’ll likely still need to manage hair in the short term — but many women notice a real reduction in regrowth after several months.
Hormonal acne
Jaw, chin, and neck acne driven by androgens often responds well to spironolactone. Because it reduces the androgen signal to sebaceous (oil) glands, pores produce less sebum and breakouts become less frequent and less severe. Dermatologists frequently prescribe it for this reason even in women without PCOS.
Hair thinning on the scalp
Female-pattern hair loss linked to androgen sensitivity can improve, though results are more variable here. It’s one piece of a puzzle that might also involve thyroid health, iron levels, and nutritional factors — all worth investigating alongside any medication. You can read more about why PCOS causes hair thinning and what actually helps.
What it doesn’t do
Spironolactone doesn’t address insulin resistance, regulate your cycle on its own, or treat the metabolic aspects of PCOS. It’s targeted at androgen-driven symptoms. Many women use it as one part of a broader management plan.
Side Effects: What to Actually Expect
Because spironolactone acts on the kidneys, the most common side effects are related to fluid and electrolytes. These include:
- Increased urination, especially in the first few weeks
- Breast tenderness or slight breast tissue changes
- Irregular periods — it’s often prescribed alongside a combined contraceptive pill to regulate the cycle and provide contraception (see below)
- Low blood pressure symptoms in some women — dizziness when standing up quickly
- Elevated potassium — your doctor will likely monitor this with a blood test, particularly when you start
Most side effects are mild and settle within the first couple of months. Serious side effects are uncommon at the doses used for PCOS, but your prescriber will discuss your individual risk profile.
Spironolactone and pregnancy: a critical point
Spironolactone must not be taken during pregnancy. Because it blocks androgen receptors, it can potentially affect the development of a male foetus. For this reason, most prescribers will only prescribe it alongside effective contraception — usually the combined oral contraceptive pill — and will ask you to stop immediately if there’s any possibility you’re pregnant. This isn’t a reason to avoid it; it’s a reason to have a clear conversation with your doctor about your contraception plan.
For a fuller picture of PCOS treatments and how they interact, take a look at our guide to PCOS treatment options and what the evidence actually says.
What Actually Helps: Making the Most of Spironolactone
Give it real time
Hair and skin respond slowly to hormonal change — most clinicians advise waiting at least three to six months before judging results. Acne often improves sooner than hirsutism. If you stop early because nothing seems to be happening, you may be quitting just before the turning point.
Pair it with lifestyle support
Spironolactone works on androgen receptors, but insulin resistance drives androgen production in many women with PCOS. An anti-inflammatory diet, regular movement, and good sleep all reduce that upstream driver. They won’t replace medication for significant symptoms, but they do work alongside it.
Use complementary approaches for hair and skin
While spironolactone addresses the hormonal cause, minoxidil (for scalp hair) or topical retinoids (for acne) may help with the symptoms you’re managing in the meantime. These are decisions to make with your prescriber, not something to self-manage.
Track your symptoms
A simple monthly photo diary of your hairline and skin makes it much easier to see gradual change — and to have an evidence-based conversation with your doctor at review appointments. Hormonal change is slow and our memories are unreliable.
When to See a Doctor
See your GP or a specialist if:
- You have significant unwanted hair growth, persistent hormonal acne, or noticeable hair thinning that’s affecting your confidence or daily life
- You’ve been on spironolactone for six months or more and haven’t noticed any improvement
- You experience dizziness, muscle weakness, or heart palpitations on spironolactone — these can indicate potassium or blood pressure changes that need checking
- You want to try for a pregnancy — you’ll need a plan to come off spironolactone safely before conception
- You’re currently undiagnosed but recognise the pattern of symptoms — irregular periods, androgen-driven skin and hair changes — and want to explore whether PCOS is the cause
If you’re unsure whether your PCOS diagnosis is complete, our overview of how PCOS is diagnosed and what tests to ask for can help you prepare for that appointment.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does spironolactone take to work for PCOS?
Most women see early changes in acne within two to three months, but hirsutism and scalp hair thinning typically take longer — often four to six months for noticeable improvement. Hair grows slowly, and hormonal changes at the follicle level take time to translate into visible results. Patience, and a photo diary, really help here.
Do I have to take the pill alongside spironolactone?
Not always, but most prescribers strongly recommend it. The combined contraceptive pill provides reliable contraception (essential given spironolactone’s risks in pregnancy), can regulate your cycle, and adds its own mild anti-androgen effect. If you can’t take oestrogen-containing contraceptives, your doctor will discuss other options with you.
Will my symptoms come back if I stop taking spironolactone?
For many women, yes — androgen-driven symptoms like hirsutism and acne can gradually return after stopping, because spironolactone manages the receptor-level effect rather than fixing the underlying hormonal overproduction. Some women use it long-term; others find their symptoms have improved enough to manage differently. It’s a conversation to have with your prescriber.
Can spironolactone help with PCOS hair loss as well as body hair?
It can help with both, because both are driven by androgen sensitivity. However, scalp hair thinning has more variable results than hirsutism. It may be more effective when started earlier, and it works best as part of a broader approach that rules out other contributing factors like iron deficiency or thyroid issues.
Is spironolactone the same as a “hormone tablet”?
Not exactly. Spironolactone doesn’t contain hormones — it’s an anti-androgen, meaning it blocks the effect of your existing hormones at receptor level. It’s chemically unrelated to oestrogen or progesterone. Some women find this distinction reassuring; others have concerns about any hormonal medication — both responses are valid, and worth raising with your doctor.
This article is for general information and is not medical advice. It was reviewed by a certified healthcare professional in line with our editorial policy, and we update our content as the science evolves — but every woman’s body is different, so please speak to a qualified healthcare professional about your own symptoms.