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

You’re not falling apart. You’re not suddenly anxious, lazy, or losing your mind. If you’ve been googling a bewildering list of symptoms — some of which feel completely unrelated to each other — and no one has pointed you toward perimenopause yet, this article is for you. Perimenopause symptoms are notoriously wide-ranging, and most women are blindsided by them because the full picture is almost never explained in advance. We’re changing that right now.

Below you’ll find 40 signs that your hormones may be shifting, organised so they actually make sense, plus a plain-English explanation of why your body is doing what it’s doing — and what you can do about it.

What’s Actually Happening: The Factory Metaphor

Think of your reproductive hormonal system as a highly sophisticated factory that has been running on a precise, well-calibrated schedule for decades. It produces estrogen and progesterone in specific quantities at specific times each month — and every other system in your body has been built around that schedule.

Perimenopause is the factory beginning its gradual wind-down. It doesn’t switch off overnight. Instead, the production line becomes erratic. Some weeks it overproduces; some weeks output crashes. Quality control — progesterone, which normally smooths things out — drops off first and fastest. The result? The rest of the factory — your brain, your heart, your gut, your joints, your skin, your sleep department — starts receiving inconsistent signals. Things misfire. Things break down in ways that seem completely unconnected.

That’s why perimenopause symptoms can feel so random. They’re not. They’re all coming from the same source: a factory in transition, sending mixed messages to every department at once. According to The Menopause Society, perimenopause can begin in a woman’s early-to-mid 40s — sometimes even late 30s — and last anywhere from a few years to more than a decade.

The 40 Perimenopause Symptoms

Cycle and Bleeding Changes (the first clues)

These are often the earliest factory signals — the production schedule starts shifting before anything else.

Any unexplained change in your menstrual pattern is worth noting and discussing with a doctor — particularly heavy bleeding or spotting, which can also have other causes that need ruling out.

Vasomotor Symptoms (the factory’s thermostat goes rogue)

Sleep (the night shift falls apart)

Mood and Mental Health (the messaging system scrambles)

This is the category most women are told has nothing to do with hormones — and that is, frankly, wrong. Estrogen and progesterone both interact directly with the brain’s mood-regulating chemistry.

If low mood is significant or persistent, please do speak to a doctor. Hormonal mood changes are real and treatable — and a professional can help you work out what’s driving them. If you’re ever having thoughts of self-harm, reach out to a crisis service or your GP urgently.

Cognitive Symptoms (the office floor loses its filing system)

You can read more about perimenopause brain fog and why it happens — it is genuinely one of the most distressing and least-discussed symptoms of this transition.

Physical and Body Symptoms (the factory floor feels the disruption)

Genitourinary and Sexual Symptoms (the most under-reported department)

These symptoms affect a significant proportion of women but are talked about least — often because women feel embarrassed or assume nothing can be done. Both assumptions are worth challenging.

What Makes Perimenopause Symptoms So Hard to Identify

The factory metaphor explains the biology — but it doesn’t explain why so many women spend years collecting symptoms without anyone joining the dots. There are a few reasons.

There’s no single test that confirms it. Hormone levels fluctuate so dramatically during perimenopause that a blood test on any given day may look completely normal. The NHS and NICE guidelines acknowledge that perimenopause is primarily a clinical diagnosis — meaning it’s based on your age, your cycle history, and your symptoms, not a number on a lab result.

Symptoms overlap with everything else. Anxiety looks like an anxiety disorder. Fatigue looks like burnout. Brain fog looks like depression. Heart palpitations send women to cardiology. Joint pain goes to rheumatology. Because no single symptom screams “hormones,” women often accumulate multiple specialist appointments without anyone asking about their cycle.

The conversation starts too late. Most women are not told perimenopause can begin in their late 30s or early 40s. By the time they’re experiencing symptoms, they’re not even considering it as a possibility.

What Actually Helps

The reassuring truth is that most perimenopause symptoms are manageable — often significantly so — once they’re correctly identified. Here’s a realistic overview.

Lifestyle approaches

Regular weight-bearing and cardiovascular exercise helps with mood, sleep, weight distribution, bone density, and cognitive symptoms. A diet with adequate protein, calcium, and reduced ultra-processed food supports hormone metabolism. Reducing alcohol — which disrupts sleep and can worsen hot flashes — is consistently recommended by clinicians. Stress management matters too: chronic stress worsens hormonal imbalance and amplifies almost every symptom on this list.

Non-hormonal options

Cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) has strong evidence for hot flashes, sleep, and mood symptoms. Some non-hormonal medications — discussed with and prescribed by a doctor — can help with specific symptoms like vasomotor changes. Mind-body practices including yoga and mindfulness have emerging evidence for quality of life.

Hormonal options (HRT and beyond)

Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) — which replaces the estrogen and progesterone the factory is no longer reliably producing — is the most effective treatment for the majority of perimenopause symptoms, and current guidance from The Menopause Society and NICE supports its use for most healthy women under 60 or within 10 years of menopause. It’s not right for everyone, and risks and benefits need to be discussed individually with a qualified clinician. Vaginal estrogen specifically addresses genitourinary symptoms and is considered very low risk. A doctor who specialises in menopause is best placed to guide you.

When to See a Doctor

Please don’t wait until symptoms are unbearable. You should see a doctor if:

You are entitled to say: “I’d like to discuss whether this could be perimenopause.” If your GP isn’t engaging with that question, ask for a referral to a menopause specialist. The British Menopause Society has a Find a Menopause Specialist directory.

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the first signs of perimenopause?

Cycle changes are often the earliest signal — shorter cycles, heavier periods, or irregular gaps. But for many women, mood shifts (irritability, anxiety, low mood) or sleep disruption arrive just as early. Because progesterone drops first, emotional and sleep symptoms can precede any obvious menstrual change.

Can perimenopause symptoms start in your late 30s?

Yes. While the average age of onset is the mid-40s, it’s entirely possible for perimenopause to begin in the late 30s — sometimes even earlier. This is called early perimenopause and is worth discussing with a doctor, particularly if symptoms are affecting your wellbeing or you’re thinking about fertility.

How do I know if it’s perimenopause or something else?

Many perimenopause symptoms overlap with thyroid conditions, anaemia, anxiety disorders, and other health issues — so it’s important to see a doctor and get relevant tests. That said, if you’re in your 40s and experiencing several symptoms on this list together, perimenopause is a very plausible explanation worth putting on the table.

Will all my symptoms come at once?

Unlikely. Most women accumulate symptoms gradually over months or years, and not everyone experiences all of them. Symptoms also come and go — some weeks the factory is almost running normally; others, multiple departments break down at once. The pattern is unpredictable, which is part of what makes it so exhausting.

Do I need a blood test to confirm perimenopause?

Not necessarily. According to NICE guidelines, perimenopause in women over 45 is diagnosed clinically — based on symptoms and cycle history — without relying on hormone tests, because levels fluctuate so widely. Blood tests may be used to rule out other conditions or for women under 45 where the diagnosis is less clear-cut.

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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