Fertomid: What It Is, How It Works, and What You Need to Know

When you're trying to get pregnant but ovulation isn't happening regularly, Fertomid, a brand name for clomiphene citrate, a selective estrogen receptor modulator used to stimulate ovulation. Also known as clomiphene citrate, it's one of the most prescribed fertility medications worldwide because it’s affordable, well-studied, and works for many women with irregular cycles. Fertomid doesn’t add hormones to your body—it tricks your brain into thinking estrogen levels are low, which triggers the release of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH). Those two hormones then tell your ovaries to produce and release an egg.

It’s not a magic pill, though. Fertomid works best for women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), unexplained infertility, or irregular periods due to low hormone signals. It won’t help if your ovaries are damaged, your partner has severe infertility, or you’re past your peak reproductive years. Doctors usually start with a 50mg dose for five days, right after your period ends. If that doesn’t trigger ovulation, they may increase it to 100mg. Most women who respond do so within the first three cycles.

Side effects are usually mild—hot flashes, mood swings, bloating, or headaches—but some women report blurred vision or multiple pregnancies. That’s why you need monitoring: blood tests and ultrasounds to track follicle growth. It’s not something to take without medical supervision. And while Fertomid is often the first step, it’s not the only one. If it doesn’t work after 6 months, doctors often move to stronger options like letrozole, gonadotropins, or even IVF.

What you’ll find below are real comparisons and deep dives into how Fertomid stacks up against other fertility treatments, what to expect during treatment, and how to spot when it’s time to try something else. You’ll also see how it connects to other medications like Clomid (its generic cousin), how lifestyle changes can boost its effectiveness, and what women actually experience when using it. This isn’t just theory—it’s what people are using, asking about, and living through right now.

  • Archer Pennington
  • 11

Fertomid (Clomiphene) vs Alternatives: Which Male Infertility Treatment Wins?

A clear comparison of Fertomid (clomiphene) with letrozole, tamoxifen, hCG and other male infertility options, covering how they work, costs, side‑effects and real‑world results.

Read more