Clofi 25 mg (Clomiphene) is a prescription fertility medicine that contains clomiphene 25 mg, a lower strength option used to support ovulation in women who are not ovulating regularly. It is often used as a gentle starting dose or for patients who respond strongly to clomiphene. Because clomiphene tablets are taken on specific cycle days and response varies, Clofi 25 mg should be used only with clinician guidance and follow-up.
Clofi 25 mg (Clomiphene) is a clomiphene tablet that’s often used when a clinician wants to start gently. Fertility treatment is already stressful enough. The last thing most people want is to jump into a dose that feels too strong, causes side effects, or creates an over-response. That’s one reason clomiphene 25 mg exists. It gives your provider more control and a safer “start low, learn your response” approach.Clomiphene citrate is a long-standing fertility medicine used to help induce ovulation. It is especially helpful when the main challenge is irregular ovulation or anovulation. If ovulation is the missing piece, clomiphene can improve your chances by helping the ovaries mature and release an egg.
What Clofi 25 mg is used for
Clofi 25 mg is commonly used for:
Irregular ovulation or inconsistent cycles
Ovulation induction in women who don’t ovulate regularly
A cautious starting point for people who are sensitive to hormonal shifts
Patients who have responded strongly to clomiphene in the past and need a lower dose
It may also be used in PCOS-related fertility plans, depending on your clinician’s approach and your previous cycle history.
How clomiphene works
Ovulation is driven by signals from the brain to the ovaries. Clomiphene works by encouraging your body to release more hormones that stimulate follicle growth. The goal is to help a follicle mature and release an egg, so conception becomes possible.This is important: clomiphene is not a “pregnancy pill.” It mainly helps with ovulation. Pregnancy still depends on sperm health, fallopian tube function, the uterine environment, and timing.
Why a 25 mg dose might be chosen
A lot of people associate clomiphene with 50 mg, which is often a typical starting dose. But 25 mg can be the better option when:
Your clinician wants to minimize the risk of multiple follicles developing
You’ve had strong reactions to fertility meds before
You tend to get side effects easily
Your ovulation issue is mild and may not need a bigger dose
The aim is to find the lowest effective dose. That’s how you balance results with safety.
How Clofi 25 mg is usually taken
Clomiphene tablets are usually taken for a short period each cycle, often for 5 days early in the menstrual cycle. Your clinician will choose:
The start day (commonly around cycle day 3 to 5)
The number of days
Whether you need monitoring
Monitoring may include ultrasound to track follicle growth and confirm that ovulation is likely to happen. Some clinics also confirm ovulation with blood tests. At-home ovulation predictor kits can help too, but they don’t replace medical monitoring when your clinician wants a clearer view.Following the schedule matters. If you take it late, early, or inconsistently, it can change your results.
Side effects and what you should not ignore
Many people tolerate low-dose clomiphene pretty well, but side effects can still happen:
Hot flashes
Mood swings or irritability
Bloating
Headache
Breast tenderness
Nausea
Visual changes are a bigger red flag. If you notice blurry vision, flashes, or spots, stop the medication and contact your clinician promptly.Also, if you have severe pelvic pain, swelling, or sudden weight gain, get medical advice. These are uncommon but should be checked.
Twins and multiple pregnancy risk
Clomiphene can increase the chance of twins, because it can sometimes lead to more than one follicle maturing. The risk is generally lower at 25 mg than at higher doses, but it’s not zero. This is another reason clinicians often like to start low and monitor.
A quick note on mindset
Fertility medication can turn your month into a math problem. Dates, symptoms, tests, and timing can take over. If you can, treat each cycle as information. Even when it doesn’t end in pregnancy, you and your clinician learn how your body responds, which can guide the next step.
Reviews
There are no reviews yet.