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

You’ve been eating well for years, and now, out of nowhere, you’re reaching for crisps at 10pm, adding extra salt to everything, or craving foods you haven’t thought about in decades. It’s strange, it feels almost compulsive — and if no one has ever connected it to menopause, that makes it even more unsettling.

Here’s the truth: menopause cravings, especially for salty foods, are a well-recognised but rarely discussed symptom of hormonal change. You are not losing control of yourself. Your body is responding to a massive internal shift, and once you understand what’s driving it, it becomes a lot less frightening — and a lot more manageable.

What’s Actually Happening: Your Body’s Factory Is Recalibrating

Think of your hormonal system as a large, finely tuned factory. For decades, it has been running on a reliable production schedule — oestrogen, progesterone, and cortisol all coming off the line in predictable quantities, keeping every other system (appetite, mood, fluid balance, energy) ticking along smoothly.

During perimenopause and menopause, the factory’s core output — oestrogen — starts to fluctuate and then decline sharply. This doesn’t just affect your periods or your temperature regulation. It disrupts the entire factory floor. Oestrogen plays a role in regulating the hormones that govern appetite and salt balance, including aldosterone (which controls how much sodium your kidneys retain) and cortisol (your stress hormone). When oestrogen falls, the factory’s fluid and sodium management department goes a bit haywire — and your brain starts sending urgent requests for salt to compensate.

At the same time, falling oestrogen affects serotonin and dopamine pathways. These are the brain’s reward chemicals, and salty, crunchy, or savoury foods give them a reliable short-term boost. The craving, in other words, is the factory putting in a very insistent supply order.

Why Salt Specifically?

It’s not random. There are several overlapping reasons why menopause tends to drive salt cravings in particular.

Adrenal changes and aldosterone

As ovarian function declines, your adrenal glands take on more of the hormonal workload. When the adrenal system is under pressure, aldosterone levels can fluctuate — and lower aldosterone means the kidneys excrete more sodium. Your body notices the deficit and tells you to eat salty food to restore balance. This is a genuine physiological signal, not a lack of willpower.

Cortisol and stress

Menopause is a genuinely stressful time for the body, even if your life feels calm. Elevated cortisol — which can accompany the hormonal turbulence of this transition — is directly linked to cravings for high-salt and high-fat foods, according to research published in peer-reviewed nutrition journals. The brain interprets stress as a need for fast, dense fuel.

Poor sleep making everything worse

Night sweats and insomnia are close companions of menopause, and sleep deprivation reliably increases cravings — particularly for salty and sweet foods. The NHS notes that even modest sleep disruption alters the hunger hormones leptin and ghrelin, amplifying appetite signals. If you’re waking at 3am drenched in sweat, your cravings the next day are not a character flaw; they’re a predictable metabolic response.

What Else Could Be Going On? Ruling Out Other Causes

While hormonal change is the most common driver of sudden salt cravings in midlife women, it’s worth knowing about a few other possibilities so you can have an informed conversation with your doctor.

Understanding these possibilities also matters because it affects how you talk to your doctor — and knowing how to advocate for yourself at a menopause appointment can make all the difference in getting the right tests done.

What Actually Helps

The goal here is not to white-knuckle your way through cravings. It’s to address what’s causing them.

Lifestyle approaches

Nutritional support

You might also find it useful to read about how menopause affects appetite and weight more broadly, because cravings rarely exist in isolation from these changes.

Medical options

When to See a Doctor

Mention your salt cravings to a GP or menopause-specialist if:

These symptoms together can point to thyroid or adrenal conditions that are treatable — but only if they’re investigated. You have every right to ask for blood tests. If a doctor dismisses you, ask again or seek a second opinion.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is it normal to have intense food cravings during menopause?

Yes, and more common than most women are told. Declining oestrogen disrupts appetite-regulating hormones, sleep, and the brain’s reward pathways — all of which drive cravings. Salt cravings, sweet cravings, and general appetite changes are all recognised menopause symptoms, even if they rarely appear on symptom lists.

Could my salt cravings be a sign of something serious?

In most cases they reflect hormonal change, dehydration, or poor sleep. However, persistent and intense salt cravings can occasionally signal a thyroid or adrenal condition. If cravings feel extreme or come with dizziness and fatigue, it’s worth mentioning to your GP so the right tests can be done.

Will HRT help with menopause cravings?

It can, indirectly. HRT addresses the hormonal deficit that underlies many menopause symptoms, including sleep disruption and mood changes — both of which drive cravings. Some women find cravings ease significantly once their sleep and hormonal stability improves. A menopause specialist can advise on whether HRT is suitable for you.

Why do I crave salt more at night during menopause?

Night sweats cause real fluid and electrolyte loss, which can trigger salt cravings in the evening and overnight. Poor sleep also elevates cortisol and disrupts hunger hormones, making late-night cravings for salty or high-calorie foods much stronger the following day.

What’s the best thing to eat when I’m craving salt?

Try options that satisfy the craving without a heavy sodium load: olives, miso soup, a small portion of cheese, or lightly salted nuts. Pairing them with protein helps stabilise blood sugar and reduces how quickly the craving returns. Drinking a glass of water first is also worth trying — thirst and salt cravings often overlap.

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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