Medically reviewed by Chandre Tina May, Registered Nurse & Menopause Society Certified Practitioner (MSCP). See our editorial policy.

You noticed it quietly at first — maybe a little uncomfortable friction, a dryness that felt odd and unfamiliar. Then it got harder to ignore: discomfort during sex, a persistent irritation, or a soreness that makes you shift in your seat. And if you’ve mentioned it to a doctor at all, there’s a reasonable chance they changed the subject, handed you a leaflet about lubricants, or — worse — said nothing about menopause at all.

You are not imagining this. Menopause vaginal dryness is one of the most common symptoms of the menopause transition, affecting the majority of women at some point — and yet it remains one of the least discussed. This article is here to change that. We’re going to explain exactly what’s happening in your body, what the real options are, and how to have the conversation your doctor should already have started.

What’s Actually Happening: The House Analogy

Think of the tissues of your vagina, vulva, and bladder as the interior walls of a house that has been carefully maintained for decades by a very specific heating system: oestrogen. That system kept the walls supple, the surfaces moisturised, and the whole structure resilient and well-cushioned.

When oestrogen levels fall during menopause — and they fall significantly — the heating goes off. Without it, those tissues gradually lose their natural moisture, their elasticity, and some of their thickness. The walls thin. The interior becomes dryer, more sensitive, and more easily irritated. The structure is still your house; it just needs a different kind of maintenance now.

This is not a malfunction. It is a physiological change driven by one thing: the drop in oestrogen. And crucially, unlike hot flashes, which often ease over time, vaginal dryness tends to worsen without treatment. That matters, because it means it is very much worth addressing — and the sooner, the better.

The clinical term is Genitourinary Syndrome of Menopause, or GSM. The Menopause Society uses this name because the changes often affect not just the vagina but the bladder and urethra too — which is why some women find they’re also dealing with more frequent urinary tract infections, needing the loo more urgently, or feeling discomfort when they urinate. All the same house, all the same heating system.

What It Actually Feels Like (Because It’s More Than Just “Dryness”)

The word “dryness” undersells it. Women describe GSM in a lot of different ways, and all of them are valid:

If you’ve been treated for thrush five times in a year and the treatments aren’t really working, please ask your doctor whether GSM could be behind it. It is a very common misdiagnosis — and the treatments are entirely different.

Why Doesn’t Anyone Tell You This Is Coming?

Hot flashes get talked about. Night sweats get talked about. Even mood changes and brain fog have started entering the conversation. But vaginal dryness and GSM? They’re still largely absent from the information women receive at perimenopause — from their doctors, from public health campaigns, from their own mothers, who were often too embarrassed to say anything either.

Research consistently shows that the majority of women with GSM symptoms don’t seek help — often because they don’t realise treatment exists, because they feel embarrassed, or because a previous attempt to raise it was brushed off. According to The Menopause Society, GSM affects up to half of all postmenopausal women, yet it is dramatically undertreated.

The silence is not a sign that your symptoms are trivial. It is a sign that women’s health has historically been underprioritised. You have every right to treatment, and you are allowed to ask for it directly.

What Actually Helps

The good news — and there genuinely is good news here — is that GSM is one of the most treatable symptoms of menopause. Unlike some other symptoms, it doesn’t just need managing; it can actually be reversed with the right treatment.

Everyday comfort measures

Non-hormonal prescription options

For women who prefer to avoid hormones, or for whom systemic hormones are not suitable, there are non-hormonal prescription options worth discussing with your clinician. Ospemifene is an oral tablet licensed for moderate to severe GSM in postmenopausal women. It’s not suitable for everyone, but it’s a real option that many women don’t know exists.

Vaginal oestrogen (local hormonal treatment)

This is the gold-standard treatment for GSM, recommended by The Menopause Society, NICE, and the NHS. Vaginal oestrogen — available as a cream, pessary, ring, or gel — delivers oestrogen directly to the local tissue in very low doses. Because it acts locally rather than systemically, it’s considered safe for the vast majority of women, including many who are advised against or choose not to use systemic HRT.

It takes four to twelve weeks to see the full benefit, so don’t give up at week two. Used consistently, it genuinely rebuilds the tissue — the walls of the house get re-insulated. The NHS and NICE both confirm that vaginal oestrogen can be used long-term; there is no standard reason to stop.

Systemic HRT

If you’re already on HRT for other menopause symptoms — or considering it — systemic HRT (patches, gels, tablets) raises oestrogen levels throughout the body and often helps GSM too, though some women on systemic HRT still benefit from adding vaginal oestrogen locally. Your clinician can advise on what combination is right for you.

Pelvic floor physiotherapy

If dryness has led to pain during sex that hasn’t fully resolved with other treatments, a pelvic floor physiotherapist can be a genuinely transformative addition. Tension in the pelvic floor muscles often develops as a protective response to painful sex, and a physio can help you work through that — safely, gently, at your pace.

When to See a Doctor

Please make an appointment if:

When you go, you don’t have to wait for the doctor to bring it up. You can say: “I’ve been experiencing vaginal dryness and discomfort that I think may be related to perimenopause or menopause. I’d like to talk about treatment options, including vaginal oestrogen.” Those words are yours to use. You are allowed to name it and ask for it by name.

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.

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