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Cortisol at 7am: what a morning cortisol tells you about your entire year

The single most predictive biomarker for burnout - and when to measure it.

EllaDx Team·Mar 17, 2026·6 min read

The cortisol awakening response - the spike that occurs in the 30 to 45 minutes after you open your eyes - is the most information-dense single hormonal event of the day. It primes your immune system, consolidates memory from the night before, and calibrates your stress tolerance for everything that follows. Miss it and you've missed a third of what cortisol testing can tell you.

A single morning blood cortisol - the kind drawn at a lab, usually mid-morning - captures a value somewhere on the decline from peak. It can tell you whether your HPA axis is catastrophically under- or over-active, but it cannot tell you whether your awakening response is blunted, exaggerated, or absent. Those distinctions matter enormously for burnout, anxiety, and recovery.

What the awakening response actually measures

The cortisol awakening response (CAR) is not simply the morning level - it is the magnitude of rise from waking to peak. A healthy CAR rises 50–100% above the baseline waking sample and peaks around 30–45 minutes post-waking. This surge is largely anticipatory: it amplifies when you face a challenging day and flattens when the HPA axis is exhausted.

Three patterns and what they mean

Exaggerated CAR (>100% rise)

Associated with anxiety disorders, hypervigilance, and early-stage chronic stress. The HPA axis is overreactive. These individuals often report waking up 'already behind,' with racing thoughts before they've left bed. Inflammatory markers are typically elevated alongside.

Blunted CAR (<30% rise or flat)

The hallmark of HPA exhaustion. Seen in clinical burnout, chronic fatigue syndrome, and late-stage perimenopause. Symptoms include profound morning fatigue that doesn't improve with sleep, difficulty initiating tasks, and emotional flatness. Notably, evening cortisol can remain elevated in this pattern - which explains the 'wired but tired' paradox.

Absent or inverted CAR

Rare in the general population; more common in night-shift workers, those with severe sleep fragmentation, and postpartum women. The circadian anchor is disrupted. No meaningful CAR can occur without a consistent wake time.

How to measure it correctly

The CAR requires salivary cortisol, not blood. You collect at waking (before getting up, before light exposure, before any food or liquid), then again at exactly 30 minutes. The two-point CAR gives you the rise magnitude. A four-point panel - adding noon and bedtime - completes the diurnal picture and shows whether evening cortisol clears appropriately.

  • Do not eat, drink, brush your teeth, or use mouthwash before the waking sample.
  • Collect at the same time for at least two consecutive days for reliability.
  • Avoid testing during acute illness - it will elevate the baseline and obscure the pattern.
  • Oral contraceptives raise cortisol-binding globulin; note them at intake.

A single morning blood draw ordered as 'cortisol' by your GP tells you roughly whether your adrenals are producing at all. A timed salivary panel tells you how your stress axis is shaped - and shape is the signal for intervention.

Sources

Peer-reviewed citations behind this piece.

  1. [1]
    Fries E, Dettenborn L, Kirschbaum C. The cortisol awakening response (CAR): facts and future directions.
    Int J Psychophysiol, 2009; 72(1): 67–73
  2. [2]
    Wüst S, Wolf J, Hellhammer DH, et al. The cortisol awakening response - normal values and confounds.
    Noise Health, 2000; 2(7): 79–88
  3. [3]
    Pruessner JC, Hellhammer DH, Kirschbaum C. Burnout, perceived stress, and cortisol responses to awakening.
    Psychosom Med, 1999; 61(2): 197–204
  4. [4]
    Clow A, Hucklebridge F, Stalder T, Evans P, Thorn L. The cortisol awakening response: more than a measure of HPA axis function.
    Neurosci Biobehav Rev, 2010; 35(1): 97–103
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