How to Lower Cortisol Levels Quickly | Epicentre SA
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How to Lower Cortisol Levels Quickly: Test It, Then Fix It

Before you try to lower your cortisol, you should know whether it is actually high – and what damage it has already done to your blood sugar, thyroid, and hormones. A blood test gives you the numbers. Then you can act.

By Aimee Zuccarini · · Reviewed by Dr. Samantha Naidoo, MB ChB, FCP (SA)
✓ No doctor's referral✓ Results in 2 – 5 days✓ Build your own panel
80%
of doctor visits are estimated to involve stress-related complaints (Nerurkar et al., 2013). Yet cortisol – the hormone that drives the damage – is rarely measured.

Cortisol is your body's stress hormone. It is made by your adrenal glands and released whenever your brain detects a threat – whether that is a car accident, a deadline, financial pressure, or a bad night's sleep. In short bursts, cortisol is essential. It gives you energy, sharpens your focus, and helps you survive. The problem is when it stays high.

Chronic stress keeps cortisol elevated for days, weeks, or months. And high cortisol does not just make you feel stressed – it quietly damages multiple body systems: it raises your blood sugar, suppresses your thyroid, stores fat around your belly, weakens your immune system, disrupts your sleep, and breaks down muscle. Over time, these effects become conditions: insulin resistance, hypothyroidism, weight gain, frequent illness, and burnout.

That is why "just relax" is not a treatment plan. If your cortisol has been high for a long time, relaxation techniques alone will not undo the metabolic damage. You need to know your numbers – cortisol, blood sugar, thyroid, and the vitamins that stress depletes – so you can target the right things.

What High Cortisol Does to Your Body

1
Blood sugar spikes
Cortisol tells your liver to release glucose for energy. When cortisol stays high, glucose stays high too – even if you are eating well. Over time, this drives insulin resistance, the precursor to type 2 diabetes.
2
Belly fat accumulates
Cortisol directs fat storage specifically to your abdomen (visceral fat). This is not just cosmetic – visceral fat is metabolically active and produces its own inflammatory signals, creating a vicious cycle.
3
Thyroid slows down
Chronic cortisol suppresses your thyroid by reducing TSH and blocking the conversion of T4 into active T3. Result: fatigue, weight gain, brain fog, and cold intolerance – even if your thyroid itself is healthy.
4
Sleep breaks down
Cortisol should drop to its lowest at night. When it stays elevated, you either cannot fall asleep, cannot stay asleep, or wake up tired. Poor sleep then raises cortisol further the next day.
5
Immunity weakens
Cortisol suppresses your immune system. Short-term, this prevents overreaction. Long-term, it leaves you catching every cold, healing slowly, and developing more inflammation.
6
Muscle breaks down
Cortisol is catabolic – it breaks down muscle tissue for energy. Combined with belly fat storage, this changes your body composition even without changes in diet or exercise.

7 Ways to Lower Cortisol – and What Actually Works

⏰ Within minutes

Deep breathing. Slow, deep breaths (4 counts in, 7 counts hold, 8 counts out) activate your vagus nerve and directly reduce cortisol. This is one of the few techniques with a measurable, immediate effect on cortisol levels.

🚶 Within 30 minutes

Walk outside. A 20 – 30 minute walk – especially in nature or sunlight – lowers cortisol measurably. Sunlight also supports vitamin D production, which cortisol depletes.

🌙 Tonight

Protect your sleep. No screens for 60 minutes before bed. Cool, dark room. Consistent bedtime. Sleep is when cortisol is supposed to drop to its lowest – if you are not sleeping well, cortisol never fully resets.

🍴 At your next meal

Eat protein and fat, cut sugar. Cortisol spikes blood sugar, and sugar spikes cortisol back. Break the cycle with balanced meals: protein, healthy fat, and fibre at every meal. Avoid skipping meals – fasting raises cortisol.

💪 This week

Moderate exercise, not extreme. Gentle to moderate exercise (walking, swimming, yoga, light weights) lowers cortisol. Intense exercise – long runs, CrossFit, HIIT – temporarily raises it. If you are already stressed, intense training can make things worse.

☕ Over 2 – 4 weeks

Cut caffeine after midday. Coffee raises cortisol for 5 – 6 hours. If you drink coffee after lunch, it pushes cortisol into the evening when it should be dropping. Morning coffee only, or switch to rooibos.

📈 Right now

Test your levels. Everything above helps – but you are guessing unless you know your actual cortisol level, whether your blood sugar is already affected, whether your thyroid has been suppressed, and whether stress has depleted your magnesium, vitamin D, or B12. A blood test removes the guesswork.

Lifestyle changes are essential but not always enough. If your cortisol has been high for months, it may have already affected your thyroid, blood sugar, or hormonal balance. Breathing exercises will not fix insulin resistance. A blood test shows you what has been affected so you can address the right things – not just the stress itself, but the damage it has caused.

The Blood Tests That Measure Cortisol and Its Effects

These tests are available as two ready-made panels – the Essential (10 tests, R2,750) or Comprehensive (19 tests, R4,950) – or individually. The Essential covers the first six biomarkers below. The Comprehensive covers all nine.

Stress hormone

Cortisol (Morning Fasting)

The core test. Measures your cortisol level first thing in the morning, when it should be at its highest. Elevated morning cortisol confirms chronic stress response. Low morning cortisol can indicate adrenal fatigue – where your adrenals have been overworked for so long they can no longer produce enough.

Normal: 170 – 540 nmol/L (morning)
Cortisol balance

DHEA-S

DHEA is cortisol's counterbalance. When cortisol is chronically high, DHEA drops – and the cortisol:DHEA ratio is often more telling than cortisol alone. Low DHEA with high cortisol confirms your stress response has been running too long and your body's recovery system is depleted.

Thyroid

TSH & Free T4

Chronic stress suppresses your thyroid. TSH and Free T4 show whether cortisol has slowed your thyroid function – a common cause of fatigue, weight gain, and brain fog that is frequently missed because people attribute these symptoms to stress alone rather than testing the thyroid.

Blood sugar

Fasting Glucose, HbA1c & Fasting Insulin

Cortisol raises blood sugar. These three tests show whether that has tipped into insulin resistance. HbA1c reveals your 2 – 3 month average. Fasting insulin catches the problem early, often before glucose looks abnormal on paper.

Inflammation

CRP (C-Reactive Protein)

Chronic stress increases inflammation throughout the body. CRP shows how much. Elevated CRP in someone with high cortisol confirms the stress is not just a feeling – it is causing measurable physical damage.

Blood health

Full Blood Count (FBC)

Screens for anaemia (common in chronic stress), elevated white blood cells (indicating immune activation), and general blood health. Also helps rule out infection, which can mimic or worsen stress symptoms.

Vitamin / Mineral

Magnesium

Stress burns through magnesium fast. Low magnesium causes anxiety, muscle cramps, insomnia, and heart palpitations – symptoms that feel like more stress and create a vicious cycle. One of the easiest deficiencies to fix once identified.

Vitamin / Mineral

Vitamin D

Cortisol depletes vitamin D. Low vitamin D worsens mood, weakens immunity, and increases inflammation – all of which make stress harder to recover from. Deficiency is surprisingly common in South Africa despite the sunshine.

Vitamin / Mineral

Vitamin B12

B12 supports your nervous system and energy production. Deficiency causes fatigue, brain fog, numbness, and mood changes – symptoms that overlap heavily with burnout. If you are exhausted and stressed, low B12 could be making it worse.

Two ready-made panels or build your own. Epicentre offers a Stress & Cortisol Essential (10 tests, R2,750) covering the core stress response and its immediate metabolic effects, and a Stress & Cortisol Comprehensive (19 tests, R4,950) that maps the full downstream damage. You can also walk into any Epicentre branch and pick individual tests – every test above is available on its own. No doctor's referral needed.

Stress & Cortisol Panels

Stress & Cortisol Comprehensive – 19 Tests

The full stress damage map. Measures cortisol and DHEA-S, then checks every system chronic stress affects: thyroid function (including T4→T3 conversion), insulin resistance, inflammation, liver, kidneys, testosterone, cardiovascular risk, and the vitamins and minerals stress depletes. All from a single blood draw.
R4,950
or R1,238/mo × 4 with Payflex
Incl. VAT · Interest-free · No credit check
R4,950 · Payflex: 4 interest-free payments of R1,238.
R4,455 (10% student discount) · Payflex: 4 payments of R1,114. Valid student card required. Walk-in only.
R4,455 (10% pensioner discount) · Payflex: 4 payments of R1,114. All three branches.
Cortisol (Morning)DHEA-STSHFree T4Free T3Fasting GlucoseHbA1cFasting InsulinCRPFBCMagnesiumVitamin DVitamin B12ZincHomocysteineLipogramLFTTestosterone (Total)U&E & Creatinine
No doctor's referral Results in 2 – 5 days Fasting required Most comprehensive panel

Stress & Cortisol Essential – 10 Tests

The core stress investigation. Measures cortisol and DHEA-S (your stress response and its counterbalance), checks thyroid function, blood sugar impact, inflammation, and the two nutrients stress depletes fastest: magnesium and vitamin D.
R2,750
or R688/mo × 4 with Payflex
Incl. VAT · Interest-free · No credit check
R2,750 · Payflex: 4 interest-free payments of R688.
R2,475 (10% student discount) · Payflex: 4 payments of R619. Valid student card required. Walk-in only.
R2,475 (10% pensioner discount) · Payflex: 4 payments of R619. All three branches.
Cortisol (Morning)DHEA-STSHFree T4Fasting GlucoseHbA1cCRPFBCMagnesiumVitamin D
No doctor's referral Results in 2 – 5 days Fasting required Customisable – add or remove tests

Could Chronic Stress Be Affecting Your Health?

Cortisol & Stress Impact Checker
7 questions. Not a diagnosis – helps you decide if blood testing is worthwhile.

Stress and Cortisol in South Africa

Working Professionals

South Africa's economic pressures, long commutes, load-shedding stress, and high crime anxiety create a sustained cortisol environment that many people have simply normalised. "I'm always tired" and "I can't lose weight" are often treated as lifestyle issues without anyone ever measuring cortisol, thyroid, or blood sugar.

Women and Hormonal Health

Cortisol interacts with oestrogen, progesterone, and thyroid hormones. Women experiencing irregular periods, fertility issues, perimenopausal symptoms, or unexplained weight gain should consider cortisol as a contributing factor. Stress does not just feel bad – it measurably disrupts the hormonal systems that regulate these functions.

Students and Young Adults

Academic pressure, financial stress, poor sleep habits, and high caffeine intake create the conditions for chronically elevated cortisol at a young age. Symptoms like brain fog, anxiety, skin breakouts, and gut problems are frequently dismissed as "just being young and stressed" rather than investigated.

When to see a doctor urgently. If you have a round, swollen face (moon face), purple stretch marks on your abdomen, unexplained bruising, severe muscle weakness, or very high blood pressure alongside weight gain – these may indicate Cushing's syndrome, a medical condition requiring specialist investigation. Please see a doctor promptly.

Frequently Asked Questions

What Are the Symptoms of High Cortisol?
The most common signs are belly weight gain that does not respond to diet or exercise, difficulty sleeping (especially waking between 2 – 4am), anxiety or feeling "wired but tired", brain fog, sugar cravings, frequent illness, high blood sugar, and high blood pressure. Many of these overlap with thyroid problems and insulin resistance, which is why a blood test matters – you need to know which system is actually affected.
What Blood Tests Measure Cortisol?
A morning fasting cortisol is the starting point. DHEA-S measures the hormone that balances cortisol – the ratio between them is often more telling than either number alone. TSH and Free T4 check whether stress has suppressed your thyroid. Fasting glucose, HbA1c, and fasting insulin show whether blood sugar has been affected. Epicentre offers all of these individually or as a custom panel.
Can You Lower Cortisol Quickly?
Some strategies work within minutes: deep breathing (4-7-8 technique), splashing cold water on your face, or a short walk outdoors. These directly activate your vagus nerve and reduce cortisol. However, if cortisol has been elevated for weeks or months, quick fixes will not reverse the metabolic effects. You need to know what has been affected – blood sugar, thyroid, nutrient levels – to target the right things.
Does High Cortisol Cause Weight Gain?
Yes. Cortisol promotes fat storage specifically around the belly and face, increases appetite and sugar cravings, raises blood sugar (which triggers insulin and more fat storage), and breaks down muscle tissue. This creates a cycle where stress causes weight gain, weight gain causes more stress, and the cycle reinforces itself. Testing cortisol alongside insulin and blood sugar shows the full picture.
Is Cortisol the Same as Adrenaline?
No. Adrenaline is your fast stress response – it lasts minutes and makes your heart pound. Cortisol is your slow stress response – it lasts hours to days and handles the sustained aspects of dealing with a threat. The problem with modern life is that cortisol stays elevated chronically, causing the long-term metabolic damage that adrenaline does not.
Can Cortisol Affect Your Thyroid?
Yes. Chronic high cortisol suppresses TSH (the signal that tells your thyroid to work) and blocks conversion of T4 into active T3. This is why people under chronic stress often develop thyroid-like symptoms – fatigue, weight gain, brain fog, feeling cold – even when their thyroid tests look borderline normal. Testing thyroid alongside cortisol shows whether stress is the root cause.
Do I Need a Doctor's Referral?
No. Walk in Mon – Fri, 08:30 – 16:00 at Durban (Hillcrest), Cape Town (Observatory), or Johannesburg (Parktown North). Tell the team which tests you want and they will draw your blood on the spot. Every test is available individually or as a custom combination.

References

  1. Nerurkar, A. et al. (2013). When physicians counsel about stress. JAMA Internal Medicine, 173(1), 76 – 77.
  2. Hewagalamulage, S.D. et al. (2016). Stress, cortisol, and obesity: a role for cortisol responsiveness in identifying individuals prone to obesity. Domestic Animal Endocrinology, 56, S112 – S120.
  3. Thau, L. et al. (2023). Physiology, cortisol. StatPearls. National Library of Medicine.

Stress & Cortisol Panels

Comprehensive

Stress & Cortisol Comprehensive

19 tests, R4,950. Cortisol, DHEA-S, thyroid (TSH, FT4, FT3), insulin resistance, lipids, liver, kidneys, testosterone, B12, zinc, magnesium, vitamin D.

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Essential

Stress & Cortisol Essential

10 tests, R2,750. Cortisol, DHEA-S, TSH, Free T4, glucose, HbA1c, CRP, FBC, magnesium, vitamin D.

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Thyroid

Complete Thyroid Panel

TSH, Free T4, Free T3, antibodies – check whether stress has suppressed your thyroid.

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